Financing the Six-Figure Wedding:
The Cost of Capital for Luxury Events
A $120,000 wedding funded by liquidating your index fund portfolio does not cost $120,000. After long-term capital gains tax at 20%, it costs $150,000 in gross portfolio value, plus the compounding return you permanently forfeit on the $150,000 you no longer have invested. A Portfolio Line of Credit changes the math entirely.
1. The Liquidation Trap: Why Selling Investments Is the Most Expensive Wedding Financing Option
The instinctive funding sequence for a high-net-worth couple facing a $120,000 wedding bill is often: we have the money in investments, we will sell enough to pay for it. This instinct is understandable but financially costly. Portfolio liquidation to fund personal expenditure is the most expensive wedding financing option available to an investor with appreciated holdings, for two compounding reasons.
First, any portfolio position held more than one year triggers long-term capital gains tax at 15% or 20% (plus 3.8% net investment income tax for high earners). A $120,000 cash need from a portfolio with a 20% blended LTCG rate requires liquidating $150,000 in gross portfolio value, paying $30,000 to the IRS, and pocketing $120,000 for the caterer. The wedding effectively costs $150,000 before a single vendor is paid.
Second, the $150,000 removed from the portfolio is permanently gone from the compound growth engine. At a 7% average annual return, $150,000 doubles approximately every 10 years. Removing it at age 45 to fund a wedding foregoes $150,000 in compound growth by age 55 and $300,000 by age 65.
2. The Portfolio Line of Credit: Structure, Access, and Cost
A Portfolio Line of Credit (PAL, also called a securities-backed line of credit or SBLOC) is a revolving credit facility collateralized by the borrower’s investment portfolio without requiring the portfolio to be liquidated. The portfolio stays invested, continues to generate dividends and appreciation, and serves as collateral for the loan.
Key mechanics:
- Advance rate: Lenders typically advance 50% to 70% of eligible equity portfolio value and up to 95% against Treasury securities. A $200,000 equity portfolio at 60% advance rate supports a $120,000 credit line.
- Interest rate: Typically 3% to 6% floating (pegged to SOFR, Prime, or an institution-specific benchmark) for wealth management PAL programs at Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, and major private banks. Margin loan rates at retail online brokerages can be 6% to 13%, making institutional PAL programs significantly more efficient for large balances.
- No scheduled principal payments: PALs are typically structured as revolving lines with interest-only payments during the draw period, and full balance repayment on the lender’s schedule or at the borrower’s discretion.
- Margin call risk: A significant portfolio decline can trigger a maintenance margin call requiring additional collateral or partial repayment within 24 to 72 hours. See FAQ for mitigation approach.
The FINRA investor guidance on margin accounts provides a clear overview of how securities-backed lending works, the risks involved, and what borrowers should understand before using portfolio assets as collateral for a personal loan.
Don’t Trigger an Unbudgeted Tax Event to Pay Your Caterer
Use our Wedding Budget Calculator to sequence your vendor payments and model your exact cost of capital across PAL, HELOC, and personal loan alternatives.
3. The HELOC: Mechanics, Rates, and Interest Deductibility Reality
A Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) is a second lien on the borrower’s primary or secondary residence, providing access to the accumulated home equity as revolving credit. Current HELOC rates as of mid-2025 range from approximately 7% to 10% for strong-credit borrowers with substantial equity, down from 2023 peaks but still considerably higher than institutional PAL rates.
The interest deductibility question is frequently misstated. Under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, IRS guidance on home mortgage interest deductibility clarifies that home equity loan interest is only deductible when the proceeds are used to buy, build, or substantially improve the taxpayer’s home. HELOC proceeds used to fund a wedding are personal expenditure and are NOT deductible. Many borrowers incorrectly assume HELOC interest is universally deductible.
The HELOC is still a legitimate mid-tier financing option for wedding expenses when no qualifying investment portfolio exists for PAL access. It offers a fixed credit line, revolving repayment flexibility, and rates typically below personal loans, though above institutional PAL rates.
4. The Capital Sequencing Model: Four Options Ranked by True Cost
5. Full Cost-of-Capital Comparison: $120,000 Wedding
| Financing Route | Rate / Cost | 12-Month Total Cost | 24-Month Total Cost | Tax Event? | Portfolio Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAL at 4% | 4% annual floating | $4,800 interest | $9,600 interest | None | Portfolio stays invested; $150K compounding |
| PAL at 6% | 6% annual floating | $7,200 interest | $14,400 interest | None | Portfolio stays invested |
| HELOC at 8% | 8% variable | $9,600 interest | $17,000 interest est. | None | No portfolio impact; home equity pledged |
| Personal Loan at 9% | 9% fixed, 24 months | N/A (fixed term) | $11,449 total interest | None | No portfolio or home impact |
| Portfolio Liquidation (20% LTCG) | Effective 25% cost | $30,000 tax paid | $30,000 tax (permanent) | Yes: LTCG event | $150K permanently removed from portfolio; $175K+ in foregone 10-yr compound |
$120,000 Wedding: PAL vs. Liquidation Over 10 Years
Sequence Your Wedding Capital Correctly
Our Wedding Budget Calculator models the vendor payment schedule, compares the true cost of capital across PAL, HELOC, and personal loan alternatives, and generates a financing recommendation based on your asset profile and timeline.
Open Wedding Budget Calculator →Frequently Asked Questions
True Liquidation Cost = Wedding Budget / (1 minus Effective Capital Gains Rate). For a $120,000 wedding at 20% LTCG rate: $120,000 / 0.80 = $150,000 in gross portfolio value liquidated, with $30,000 paid in tax. The capital gains drag inflates the true cost by 25% and permanently removes $150,000 in compounding investment capital.
A PAL (securities-backed line of credit) allows borrowing against an investment portfolio without selling it. The portfolio stays invested. Typical rates are 3% to 6% at wealth management institutions. A $200,000 equity portfolio at 60% advance rate supports a $120,000 credit line. Interest is paid on drawn amounts; no capital gains tax is triggered. The risk is margin calls if the portfolio drops significantly.
No. Under the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, HELOC interest is only deductible when proceeds are used to buy, build, or substantially improve the taxpayer’s home. Proceeds used to fund personal events like a wedding are personal expenditure and are not deductible. Do not assume HELOC interest is deductible without verifying use-of-proceeds requirements with a tax professional.
From lowest to highest effective cost: (1) Sinking fund savings if planning lead time exists; (2) PAL if a qualifying investment portfolio exists; (3) HELOC if sufficient home equity exists; (4) High-limit fixed personal loan; (5) Portfolio liquidation as last resort. Liquidation is listed last because tax drag makes it the most expensive option for any investor with appreciated holdings.
A PAL at 4% on $120,000 for 12 months costs $4,800 in interest. A personal loan at 9% over 24 months costs approximately $11,449 in total interest. The PAL saves $6,649 in interest, plus the portfolio continues earning its own return on the unliquidated investments during the same period.
At a 60% advance rate on equity holdings, approximately $200,000 in eligible securities is required to support a $120,000 credit line. Minimum qualifying portfolio requirements vary by institution, generally $100,000 to $250,000 in investable assets. For borrowers below this threshold, a HELOC or personal loan is the appropriate alternative.
If the underlying portfolio declines significantly (typically 20 to 35%), the lender can issue a margin call requiring additional collateral or partial repayment within 24 to 72 hours. Mitigation: borrow at 50% to 75% of the maximum PAL limit, maintaining a buffer against moderate market declines. Never use the full advance capacity for a one-time expenditure like a wedding.
Beyond the immediate capital gains tax, the $150,000 removed from the portfolio loses its compound growth permanently. At 7% average annual return, $150,000 becomes $295,000 over 10 years. The wedding funded through liquidation costs not just $120,000 in spending but $30,000 in tax plus $145,000 in foregone compound wealth over a decade. The PAL route’s total 10-year cost is $4,800 in interest.
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