High-Net-Worth Individual (HNWI) Liquidity & Asset Allocation Workbench

Deploy a fiduciary-grade balance sheet diagnostic to underwrite your true liquid net worth. Separate Tier 1 cash equivalents from restricted Tier 3 alternative investments. Stress-test your asset allocation against modeled illiquidity discounts (DLOM), monthly cash flow burn rates, and market drawdowns to ensure adequate capital reserves for estate taxes, private equity capital calls, and generational wealth transfer.

True liquid net worth 30 / 90 / 365-day access Sell versus borrow Tax friction and haircuts Business-owner liquidity realism Accredited-investor style view
1Tier 1 & Tier 2 Capital & Outstanding Liabilities
Checking, savings, treasury bills, and immediate near-cash.
Public equities and fixed income before estimated sale tax friction.
401(k), IRA, defined benefit (applies access friction haircut).
Estimated penalty, ordinary tax, and age-based access friction.
Excluded from standard SEC accredited-investor liquidity tests.
Mortgages, margin debt, personal loans, and other obligations.
2Tax Friction & Time-to-Liquidity Execution
Used to calculate net after-tax proceeds from brokerage liquidation.
Higher cost basis minimizes capital-gains tax friction upon sale.
Friction/market impact for exiting concentrated positions rapidly.
Discount for Lack of Marketability in a short-window exit.
Standard liquidity haircut for a longer, controlled exit window.
Used to evaluate borrowing against assets vs. forced liquidation.
3Tier 3 Illiquid Assets & Cash Flow Constraints
Estimated current equity value in private operating businesses.
Direct investment real estate equity (excludes primary residence).
Restricted stock, pre-IPO shares, or heavily weighted employer stock.
Estimated pledgeable asset access against Tier 2 brokerage.
Operating cash required for lifestyle, debt service, and office support.
Anticipated private equity capital call, tax event, or acquisition.
This underwriting workbench isolates true spendable liquidity from “paper” net worth. It applies SEC accredited-investor logic, capital gains tax friction, and actuarial Discounts for Lack of Marketability (DLOM) to generate a realistic survival timeline.
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Enter liquid assets, illiquid holdings, liabilities, haircuts, and risk-event needs to estimate true liquid net worth, accessible capital windows, concentration risk, and liquidity coverage.

⚙️Navigating the HNWI Liquidity Underwriting Engine: Tiered Asset Tranches

1

Reconcile Tier 1 & Tier 2 Capital Equivalents

Enter cash, taxable brokerage, retirement accounts (with access haircut), and total liabilities. This forms the base for true liquid net worth after friction.

2

Underwrite Tax Friction & DLOM Execution Haircuts

Set your capital gains rate and cost basis. The calculator applies sale-friction discounts per time window — 0–30, 31–90, and 91–365 days — to model realistic accessible capital at each horizon.

3

Isolate Tier 3 Illiquid Assets & Concentrated Positions

Enter private business equity, investment real estate, and single-stock concentration. Illiquid discount rates per time window are applied to estimate proceeds under realistic exit timelines.

4

Model SBLOC & Pledged-Asset Borrowing Capacity

The calculator estimates pledged-asset credit line capacity against your marketable securities using your stated borrow percentage — offering a sell-versus-borrow comparison for concentrated positions.

5

Stress-Test Liquidity Coverage Ratios (LCR) Against Capital Calls

Annual lifestyle burn and one-time event obligations (estate tax, capital call, acquisition) are measured against 30/90/365-day liquidity to compute a coverage ratio and operational buffer in months.

6

Generate SEC Accredited-Investor & Qualified Purchaser Diagnostics

The primary residence is excluded from the accredited-investor-style net worth view. A blocker-scoring system ranks the five highest-risk issues and surfaces the most critical as the verdict banner.

Core Liquidity Engine — Key Formulas

After-Tax Brokerage = Brokerage − (Brokerage × (1 − Basis%) × Cap Gains Rate)
Accessible Retirement = Retirement × (1 − Haircut%)
True Liquid Net Worth = Cash + After-Tax Brokerage + Accessible Retirement − Liabilities

30-Day Liquidity = Cash + 65% After-Tax Brokerage + 5% Accessible Retirement + 30% Concentrated Stock × (1 − 30-Day Discount) + Borrow Capacity − Liabilities
90-Day Liquidity = Cash + 90% After-Tax Brokerage + 10% Accessible Retirement + 60% Concentrated × (1 − 30-Day Discount) + 10% Business + 10% RE + Borrow Capacity − Liabilities
365-Day Liquidity = Cash + After-Tax Brokerage + 20% Accessible Retirement + 85% Concentrated × (1 − 365-Day Discount) + 35% Business + 35% RE + Borrow Capacity − Liabilities

Concentration Ratio = (Business Equity + Concentrated Stock) ÷ Total Wealth
Coverage Ratio = 365-Day Liquidity ÷ (Annual Burn + Estate/Event Need)
Buffer Months = 90-Day Liquidity ÷ (Annual Burn ÷ 12)
Accredited-Style Net Worth = Total Wealth − Primary Residence − Liabilities

⏱️Asset Tranche Liquidity Matrix: Time-to-Liquidity Execution Modeling

Asset Type Liquidity Window Typical Friction / Discount Key Access Risk How This Workbench Treats It
Cash & Cash Equivalents 0–1 Day None FDIC coverage limit above $250K per institution Counted at 100% face value in all windows
Taxable Brokerage (Public Securities) 1–3 Days Capital gains tax on embedded gain Market timing, short-term volatility at forced sale After-tax proceeds applied using your gain rate and basis
Retirement Accounts (IRA / 401k) 3–7 Days Income tax + 10% early withdrawal penalty if under 59½ Penalty window, required plan distribution rules Reduced by your stated haircut % across all windows
Securities-Backed Credit Line 1–5 Days Borrowing rate (model default: 6.5%) Margin call risk during market drawdown Shown as borrow capacity vs sell comparison
Concentrated Single Stock 7–30 Days 8% fast-exit discount + capital gains Block-sale market impact, insider restrictions, lockup 30% released at 30-day window with 30-day discount
Investment Real Estate 90–180 Days 15% short-window discount; 8% at 365 days Illiquid market, closing timeline, 1031 restrictions 10% accessible at 90 days; 35% accessible at 365 days
Private Business Equity 180–365+ Days 15% short-window discount; 8% at 365 days No public market, buyer sourcing, due diligence, drag-along 10% accessible at 90 days; 35% accessible at 365 days
Primary Residence Equity 90–180 Days 6% sale commission + transfer costs + capital gains above exclusion Disrupts housing stability; excluded from accredited-investor view Shown separately; excluded from liquid net worth calculation
Liquidity windows and discounts in this table reflect general market conditions. Actual exit timelines and proceeds vary by asset quality, market environment, counterparty availability, and legal restrictions. This table is for planning reference only.

📖Institutional Glossary: Deconstructing HNWI Liquidity Parameters

LiquidityTrue Liquid Net Worth

Cash, after-tax brokerage proceeds, and accessible retirement account balances minus all liabilities. This is the amount you could realistically access within days — not total net worth on paper.

LiquidityTime-to-Cash Windows

The 30-, 90-, and 365-day liquidity estimates model how much capital you could raise within each timeframe given realistic exit timelines, discounts, and friction costs for each asset class.

TaxCapital Gains Tax Friction

Embedded capital gains in a taxable brokerage account reduce actual after-tax proceeds. The higher your unrealized gains relative to cost basis, the wider the gap between paper value and cash in hand.

TaxRetirement Access Haircut

A simplified friction factor applied to retirement balances to approximate income tax and, if applicable, the 10% early withdrawal penalty for account holders under age 59½.

RiskConcentration Risk

The percentage of total wealth held in private business equity and single-stock positions. Concentration above 35–40% means a significant portion of your wealth is both illiquid and undiversified — increasing downside volatility.

RiskLiquidity Coverage Ratio

365-day accessible capital divided by the sum of annual lifestyle/business burn plus any one-time event obligation. A ratio above 1.0x means modeled needs are covered. Below 1.0x signals a potential liquidity shortfall.

BorrowSecurities-Backed Lending

A pledged-asset credit line (SBLOC) or margin loan against marketable securities — typically providing access to 50–70% of portfolio value without triggering a taxable sale event. Subject to margin call risk during market drawdowns.

BorrowSell vs. Borrow Signal

When borrowing capacity against marketable assets exceeds 85% of after-tax sale proceeds, borrowing may preserve more long-term after-tax value than selling — avoiding a taxable event while maintaining market exposure.

EstateEstate Liquidity Coverage

The portion of 365-day liquid capital earmarked to cover a modeled one-time obligation — such as federal estate tax (due within 9 months of death), an acquisition, or a capital call from a private fund.

EstateAccredited-Investor Style View

A simplified net worth calculation that excludes the primary residence — mirroring the SEC’s accredited investor rule. Qualifies above $1,000,000 in net worth excluding primary residence. Used here as a wealth-positioning benchmark.

💡Fiduciary Directives: Tactical Liquidity Stress-Testing & Allocation

Maintain 12–24 Months Operating Cash in Tier 1 Treasury Equivalents

Cash and after-tax brokerage should cover at least 12 months of household and business operating costs before relying on any illiquid or friction-heavy asset. Business owners with variable revenue should target 18–24 months. This buffer prevents forced selling of concentrated or illiquid assets at the worst time.

Execute SBLOC Leverage Prior to Liquidating Highly Appreciated Capital Assets

If your taxable brokerage has a low cost basis, pledging the portfolio as collateral for a securities-backed line of credit (SBLOC) avoids the capital gains tax event entirely. You access liquidity at borrowing cost rather than at 23.8% federal capital gains. The key risk is margin calls during a drawdown — maintain a substantial cushion above the loan-to-value threshold.

Bifurcate Statutory Net Worth from Usable Liquidity Coverage Ratios (LCR)

Your wealth manager’s net worth statement shows total asset value — not accessible capital. A $20M net worth with $15M in private business equity and real estate may have only $2–3M in genuinely accessible 30-day capital. Run this workbench alongside your quarterly net worth review to track the gap between headline wealth and true liquid access.

Capitalize an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) for Estate Tax Liquidity

Federal estate tax (40% above the exemption) is due within 9 months of death — not after assets are sold. For illiquid estates, this creates a forced-liquidation crisis. An Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) funds a life insurance policy held outside the taxable estate that pays the exact estate tax obligation at death, without adding to the estate or requiring any asset sale.

Monitor Concentration Above 35% Continuously

When private business equity plus concentrated stock represents more than 35% of total wealth, a single adverse event — bankruptcy, lockup extension, failed acquisition — can wipe out a disproportionate share of net worth. Systematic diversification strategies include Rule 10b5-1 trading plans for public stock, exchange funds, charitable remainder trusts, and staged secondary sales of private equity.

Plan Liquidity Around Specific Risk Events, Not Averages

The most dangerous liquidity crisis for high-net-worth households is the simultaneous occurrence of two events — for example, a business downturn and a capital call from a private fund in the same quarter. Build your liquidity plan around the worst credible combination of your specific risk events, not around average historical scenarios.

🧑‍💼Systemic Wealth Modeling: Comparative UHNWI Balance Sheet Case Studies

Tech Founder — Pre-IPO Lockup
Net Worth: $18M Liquid: $1.2M Single

$14M in company equity locked for 180 days post-IPO. $2.5M in taxable brokerage (low basis), $500K cash, $1.2M in retirement. Annual burn $420K. Capital gains rate 23.8%.

⚠ 30-day liquidity covers only 3 months of burn. SBLOC against brokerage is critical. Illiquid until lockup expiry.
Real Estate Developer — Diversified Portfolio
Net Worth: $12M Liquid: $3.4M MFJ

$7M across 5 investment properties, $1.5M cash, $2M brokerage (45% basis), $1.5M retirement. Annual burn $380K. One-time capital call risk $1M. Cap gains rate 23.8%.

⚡ 365-day coverage ratio 2.1x — adequate. However 90-day liquidity covers only 7 months. HELOC on primary as emergency backstop recommended.
Corporate Executive — RSU Concentration
Net Worth: $9M Liquid: $4.1M MFJ

$5.5M in single-employer stock (very low basis from $200K cost), $2M brokerage, $1.2M cash, $800K retirement. Annual burn $310K. Concentration ratio 61%.

⚠ Concentration ratio 61% is critical. A 10b5-1 trading plan or exchange fund needed immediately. True liquid net worth is healthy — concentration risk is the primary threat.
Business Owner — Approaching Exit
Net Worth: $22M Liquid: $2.8M MFJ

$16M private business equity, $1.8M cash, $3M brokerage, $1.2M retirement. Annual burn $500K. Estate tax need $3.4M. One-time event: potential business sale within 24 months.

⚡ Estate liquidity gap of $600K at 365 days. ILIT recommended to pre-fund estate tax. Liquidity improves materially at business sale — plan bridge financing in the interim.
Retired HNW Couple — Income-Generating Portfolio
Net Worth: $8.5M Liquid: $6.2M MFJ

$4.5M taxable brokerage (60% basis), $1.8M cash, $2.2M retirement (no penalty), $2.5M primary residence. Annual burn $180K. No illiquid holdings. Cap gains rate 20%.

✓ Coverage ratio 8.4x. Accredited-style net worth $6.2M well above threshold. Primary risk: rising cap gains tax rate on brokerage — harvest losses annually and consider Roth conversion ladder.
Private Equity Partner — Capital Call Exposure
Net Worth: $15M Liquid: $2.1M Single

$9M in PE fund commitments (partially drawn), $1.2M cash, $2M brokerage, $800K retirement, $3M in carried interest (not yet vested). Annual burn $380K. Capital call risk $1.5M in 90 days.

⚠ 90-day capital call plus burn of $1.65M versus $2.1M accessible — dangerously thin. Establish SBLOC immediately. Avoid any additional commitments without liquidity rebuild.
Medical Professional — High Earner, Late Accumulator
Net Worth: $4.2M Liquid: $1.8M MFJ

$2.2M retirement accounts, $800K brokerage, $400K cash, $1.4M primary residence equity. Annual burn $290K. No illiquid holdings. Retirement haircut 28%.

⚡ Retirement-heavy concentration is an access-friction risk before age 59½. Prioritize taxable brokerage and HSA growth alongside retirement contributions for liquidity flexibility.
Family Office — Multi-Generational Wealth
Net Worth: $45M Liquid: $14M MFJ

$18M private business, $8M real estate, $9M taxable brokerage, $4M cash, $2M retirement, $4M concentrated stock. Annual burn $1.1M. Estate obligation $6.5M. Cap gains rate 23.8%.

✓ Coverage ratio 1.6x after estate need. Concentration ratio 49% warrants active monitoring. Dynasty Trust and GRAT structures recommended for the private business equity — estate planning is the primary lever at this wealth level.

Fiduciary FAQ: Margin Calls, SBLOC Covenants & Private Equity Lock-Ups

Total net worth includes every asset at estimated fair market value — your home, private business, retirement accounts, real estate, concentrated stock, and everything else. True liquid net worth strips that down to what you could actually access in days or weeks. Several large deductions occur: (1) your primary residence cannot be converted to cash without finding a buyer and closing over 60–90 days; (2) private business equity requires a buyer, due diligence, and often 6–18 months to realize; (3) taxable brokerage accounts with a low cost basis lose 15–23.8% to capital gains tax on sale; (4) retirement accounts lose income tax and potentially a 10% early withdrawal penalty. The gap between total net worth and true liquid net worth is often $5M–$15M for high-net-worth households — and it’s the number that matters most in a crisis.
A securities-backed line of credit (SBLOC) — also called a pledged asset line or non-purpose loan — lets you borrow against the value of your brokerage portfolio without selling securities. Lenders typically extend 50–70% of portfolio value at an interest rate currently around 5–7% for large balances. The primary advantage is that you avoid a taxable sale event entirely — your portfolio stays invested, dividends and appreciation continue, and no capital gains tax is triggered. The primary risk is a margin call: if the portfolio value drops, the lender can demand immediate repayment or liquidate positions to restore the collateral ratio — often at the worst possible time. SBLOCs work best when portfolio volatility is modest and borrowing is temporary. This workbench flags when borrowing capacity exceeds 85% of after-tax sale proceeds as a signal to prefer borrowing over selling.
The coverage ratio is 365-day accessible capital divided by the sum of your annual burn plus your one-time event need. A ratio of 1.0x means 365-day liquidity exactly covers your modeled obligations — no margin. A ratio of 1.5x or higher means you have 50% more 365-day liquidity than your modeled needs — generally comfortable. A ratio below 1.0x signals a potential liquidity shortfall: even after a full year of asset mobilization, your accessible capital does not cover your obligations. This matters most for business owners with large capital calls or households facing an imminent estate tax obligation. The coverage ratio should be reviewed quarterly — not just annually — because one-time events and burn rates change.
For a business owner with 60% or more of total wealth in a single private company, concentration risk means that one adverse business event can permanently destroy a majority of lifetime wealth. Unlike a diversified portfolio where a single position collapse reduces net worth by 2–5%, a concentrated private business represents an existential liquidity and wealth risk simultaneously. Practical mitigation strategies include: (1) partial secondary sale — selling a minority stake to a private equity firm or secondary market buyer to diversify while retaining operating control; (2) dividend recapitalization — having the business borrow to pay a large dividend to the owner, effectively extracting liquidity without selling equity; (3) ESOP structure — selling to an Employee Stock Ownership Plan, which provides liquidity and significant tax benefits for C-corp owners; (4) key-person insurance — providing a liquidity buffer if the business’s value is dependent on the owner’s continued participation.
Federal estate tax is due within 9 months of death — not after assets are sold. For a $25M estate with $18M in private business equity, the estate tax bill could be $4.4M+ and there may be insufficient liquid assets to pay it without forcing an emergency sale of the business at a distressed valuation. The primary solutions are: (1) Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) — life insurance owned by the trust pays the estate tax at death without being included in the taxable estate; (2) IRC Section 6166 election — if more than 35% of the estate is a closely-held business interest, the estate can elect to pay estate tax over up to 14 years in installments at a favorable interest rate; (3) Graegin loan — a single-payment promissory note from a related party that is deductible as an estate administration expense; (4) pre-death gifting strategy — systematic annual exclusion gifts and lifetime exemption gifts that reduce the taxable estate before death occurs.
The SEC’s accredited investor definition under Regulation D specifically excludes the value of the primary residence from the $1,000,000 net worth threshold — recognizing that home equity is illiquid, non-income-generating, and subject to disruption if liquidated. This workbench mirrors that treatment to provide a more conservative and realistic view of investable wealth. The primary residence often represents 20–40% of a household’s stated net worth — particularly for homeowners in high-cost markets like New York, San Francisco, or Miami. Including it in a liquidity analysis overstates accessible capital because converting it requires finding a buyer, disclosing the property, completing a 60–90 day closing process, paying 6% in brokerage commissions, and arranging alternative housing — not a realistic short-term liquidity source.
The retirement access haircut is a simplified combined friction factor that approximates the cost of accessing retirement funds, expressed as a percentage reduction to the account balance. The default is 25%. How to set your haircut: if you are under age 59½, a traditional IRA or 401(k) withdrawal triggers ordinary income tax plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty — a combined effective cost of 30–45% for most high-earners, so use 30–40%; if you are over age 59½, only ordinary income tax applies — use 20–30% depending on your marginal rate; if you hold a Roth IRA with contributions available penalty-free, use 0–5% for the contribution portion and 20–30% for converted/earned amounts. The haircut is a planning approximation — it does not model Required Minimum Distributions, 72(t) SEPP elections, or specific plan distribution rules. For a precise analysis, consult a CPA or financial planner.
Yes — enter your expected capital call amount in the “Estate One-Time Obligation Need” field. The calculator treats this as a one-time liquidity demand alongside your annual burn and measures it against 30/90/365-day accessible capital. A few important nuances for PE fund capital calls: (1) calls are typically on short notice (10–15 business days) — model them against the 30-day liquidity figure, not the 365-day figure; (2) failing to fund a capital call can result in severe dilution, loss of fund interest, or legal action — treat the full committed-but-uncalled amount as a contingent liability; (3) if you have multiple simultaneous fund commitments, model the worst-case scenario of concurrent calls across all funds. As a general rule, total PE fund commitments (drawn and undrawn) should not exceed 50% of your 30-day accessible capital to maintain adequate liquidity headroom.
Net worth is total assets minus total liabilities — a snapshot figure that includes everything from the primary residence and private business to retirement accounts and personal property. It is the headline number on a wealth statement. Investable assets are the subset of net worth that is actively deployed in financial markets — brokerage accounts, retirement accounts, cash, and marketable securities — typically excluding the primary residence, personal property, and business equity. For financial planning, investable assets is the more actionable figure because it drives portfolio construction, fee-only advisor charges, and institutional investment minimums. For liquidity planning, true liquid net worth is the most important figure — it answers the question “how much money could I actually access this week?” rather than “how wealthy am I on paper?” High-net-worth households frequently confuse the three, which is the central reason this workbench was built.
A margin call occurs when the market value of your pledged portfolio falls below the lender’s required maintenance threshold — typically 25–35% of the portfolio’s loan value. When triggered, the lender demands that you either (1) deposit additional cash or securities within a very short window (often 24–72 hours), (2) sell positions in the portfolio to reduce the loan balance, or (3) repay a portion of the loan directly. The critical problem is that margin calls arrive during market downdowns — exactly when selling is most expensive and raising cash is most difficult. Protective strategies include: keeping the loan-to-value ratio well below 50% of borrowing capacity rather than drawing the maximum available; diversifying the pledged portfolio across uncorrelated asset classes so a single sector collapse doesn’t breach the threshold; maintaining a cash reserve equal to at least 20% of the outstanding loan balance outside the pledged account; and stress-testing the portfolio against a 30–40% drawdown before establishing the line. A securities-backed line used conservatively — drawing no more than 30–40% of capacity — significantly reduces margin call risk without eliminating it.
High-concentration single-stock positions are one of the most complex problems in personal finance because every exit strategy involves either tax friction, restricted-trading compliance, or liquidity risk. The main strategies are: (1) Rule 10b5-1 trading plan — a pre-scheduled sale program established when not in possession of material non-public information, allowing insiders to sell on a predetermined schedule. (2) Exchange fund — contributing the concentrated stock to a partnership with other concentrated-stock holders; after 7 years, you receive a diversified portfolio share with no taxable event at contribution. (3) Variable prepaid forward contract — selling the future right to deliver shares in exchange for upfront cash while deferring the taxable event by 2–3 years. (4) Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) — donating the concentrated stock to a CRT, which sells it tax-free and reinvests in a diversified portfolio, paying you income for life with the remainder going to charity at death. (5) Protective put options — buying put options as downside insurance while retaining ownership and deferring the taxable event. Each strategy involves significant legal and tax complexity — a wealth advisor with concentrated position experience is essential.
A dividend recapitalization (div recap) is a transaction where a private business takes on new debt — typically from a bank, private credit fund, or PE sponsor — and uses the borrowed proceeds to pay a large special dividend to the equity owners (the business owner). The owner receives immediate cash liquidity without selling any equity stake or giving up control of the business. The debt sits on the business’s balance sheet and is repaid from future operating cash flows. When it works well: the business has strong, predictable EBITDA that can service the new debt; leverage ratios remain conservative (typically below 3–4x EBITDA); and the owner has a clear plan for deploying the liquidity — often diversification into financial assets, real estate, or estate planning structures. Risks: adding leverage increases business risk; if operating performance deteriorates, debt service can strain the business; and lenders typically impose financial covenants limiting future flexibility. Div recaps are most common in businesses generating $2M+ in annual EBITDA where a traditional bank loan or private credit facility can be secured at reasonable rates.
A 1031 like-kind exchange under IRC Section 1031 allows a real estate investor to sell one investment property and reinvest the proceeds into another “like-kind” property while deferring all capital gains and depreciation recapture taxes. The deferred tax is carried forward indefinitely until the replacement property is eventually sold without another 1031 exchange. Impact on liquidity planning: 1031 exchanges dramatically reduce the after-tax proceeds available on a real estate sale — because you must reinvest proceeds into a replacement property within 180 days to avoid the taxable event, you cannot pocket the cash. For liquidity planning purposes, a real estate holding subject to a high embedded gain should be modeled with significant tax friction if you want to extract cash rather than reinvest. The only way to permanently eliminate the deferred gain without paying tax is to hold the property until death — at which point the step-up in basis resets the cost basis to fair market value, eliminating all deferred gain for the estate.
Private business equity is the most difficult asset class to liquidate accurately because exit proceeds depend on factors no calculator can model: quality of earnings, customer concentration, key-person dependency, industry multiples at the time of sale, deal structure (cash vs earn-out), and buyer competition. As a starting framework for liquidity planning: Under 90 days: assume a 25–40% discount to your stated equity value — you are a distressed seller competing on a compressed timeline with limited buyer discovery. 90–365 days: assume 10–20% discount — a well-run sale process with banker representation can approach fair value, but timing uncertainty and due diligence complications compress proceeds. Full market process (12–24 months): closest to full stated value, but still subject to market conditions. The calculator’s default 15% discount at 90 days and 8% at 365 days are conservative estimates for a well-performing business in a stable market — real discounts for distressed, highly cyclical, or key-person-dependent businesses can easily reach 30–50%. For a precise estimate, engage a business valuation firm or M&A advisor annually.
The Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) is a 3.8% surtax under IRC Section 1411 that applies to investment income — including capital gains, dividends, interest, and rental income — for individuals with Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ). For high-income investors, long-term capital gains are taxed at 20% federal rate plus 3.8% NIIT — producing a combined 23.8% federal rate, which is the default in this workbench. State capital gains tax is additional — California imposes an additional 13.3%, producing a combined effective rate exceeding 37% for California residents. NIIT planning strategies: tax-loss harvesting to offset gains; installment sales to spread gain recognition across multiple years and potentially keep each year’s MAGI below the threshold; qualified opportunity zone investments that defer and potentially reduce capital gains; and charitable giving of appreciated securities that avoids the capital gains and NIIT entirely while generating a full fair-market-value deduction.
A Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC) provides revolving access to home equity at a variable interest rate — typically prime plus a spread, currently 8–10% for most borrowers. For liquidity planning purposes, an undrawn HELOC is a contingency liquidity source that should be treated similarly to an undrawn SBLOC: available but not counted in baseline accessible capital, reserved for genuine emergencies rather than routine use. In this workbench: do not include undrawn HELOC capacity as a liquid asset — it is a borrowing facility, not an owned asset. If you have drawn on a HELOC, the outstanding balance should be included in your total liabilities input, which reduces true liquid net worth. The key practical point: HELOCs can be frozen by lenders during a real estate market decline — the same market conditions that would prompt you to draw on the line may be exactly when the bank reduces or eliminates your available credit. This pro-cyclical risk means HELOCs are a less reliable emergency liquidity source than a pre-established SBLOC backed by marketable securities.
A Qualified Opportunity Zone (QOZ) investment under IRC Section 1400Z-2 allows an investor to defer — and potentially reduce — capital gains tax by reinvesting gains into a Qualified Opportunity Fund (QOF) within 180 days of the sale. The primary tax benefits are: (1) deferral of the original gain until the earlier of the QOF investment sale or December 31, 2026; (2) exclusion of 100% of appreciation on the QOF investment itself if held for 10+ years. Liquidity implications: QOZ investments are almost entirely illiquid — QOFs typically have 10-year lock-up periods with limited or no secondary market. For liquidity planning purposes, treat any QOZ/QOF investment as essentially inaccessible for the full hold period. The liquidity trade-off — exchanging liquid capital gains proceeds for 10 years of illiquidity — should be modeled explicitly in this workbench before committing. QOZ investments work best for investors with existing Tier-1 and Tier-2 liquidity already adequate to cover burn and obligations without the reinvested capital.
This is one of the highest-stakes liquidity planning scenarios because most of the owner’s wealth is illiquid until the sale closes, but retirement spending needs begin immediately. A practical modeling approach for this workbench: Pre-sale (today): enter the business equity at your realistic sale price using a conservative 15–20% discount to account for sale process friction and deal uncertainty. Model your post-retirement annual burn — which may be significantly higher than current business-funded expenses — as the annual burn input. Set the estate obligation to any known transaction costs, taxes, or estate obligations that arise at exit. Post-sale (update after closing): move the after-tax sale proceeds into the cash and brokerage fields, set business equity to zero, and re-run the workbench to see the transformed liquidity profile. The gap between the two runs tells you how dependent your retirement liquidity is on a successful, full-value exit. If the pre-sale run shows a coverage ratio below 1.0x, you need bridge liquidity — a SBLOC against any existing brokerage, a seller note facility, or partial secondary sale before the main exit.
For high-net-worth households with illiquid assets, active business interests, or PE commitments: quarterly at minimum, monthly during periods of elevated risk. The key triggers that should prompt an immediate re-run are: (1) a significant market drawdown of 15% or more — recalculate after-tax brokerage proceeds at the new lower value; (2) a new capital commitment or unexpected obligation — add it to the estate/event need field immediately; (3) a material change in business performance — update the private business equity value and recheck concentration ratio and coverage ratio; (4) a change in borrowing costs or SBLOC terms — recalculate the borrow-vs-sell signal; (5) a change in tax law affecting capital gains rates — update the cap gains rate input. The coverage ratio and buffer months are the two numbers to watch most closely — a coverage ratio declining below 1.5x or buffer months falling below 12 should trigger a conversation with your wealth advisor and estate planning attorney about corrective action before a crisis develops.

🔗Related Wealth Management & Portfolio Stress-Test Workbenches

⚠ Legal Disclaimer

SEC/FINRA Compliance, E-E-A-T Standards & Legal Disclaimer

The High-Net-Worth Liquidity, Accessible Capital & Risk Workbench is provided by USFinanceCalculators.com for educational and informational purposes only. All outputs are simplified planning estimates based on user-provided inputs and deterministic models. They do not constitute financial advice, a professional liquidity analysis, a formal investment recommendation, a tax opinion, or a guarantee of any asset value, access timeline, or liquidity outcome.

This calculator intentionally omits or simplifies: mark-to-market fluctuations in portfolio values between calculation and execution; forced sale discounts that vary significantly by market conditions, asset quality, and buyer availability; margin call mechanics and specific SBLOC covenant terms; IRC Section 6166 installment payment rules for closely-held business estates; state-level estate and inheritance taxes with varying exemptions; qualified opportunity zone investments; non-recourse debt on real property; irrevocable trust distribution restrictions; and specific partnership or operating agreement liquidity restrictions on private business interests.

Liquidity planning for high-net-worth households involves complex, fact-specific analysis that cannot be captured in a general-purpose calculator. The consequences of a liquidity shortfall during a business crisis, market drawdown, or estate settlement can be severe and in some cases irreversible. Before making any borrowing, sale, trust formation, insurance, or asset allocation decision based on this tool, consult a fee-only Certified Financial Planner (CFP), a licensed estate planning attorney, and a CPA with high-net-worth experience. By using this tool, you acknowledge that USFinanceCalculators.com is not liable for any financial loss, tax assessment, legal challenge, or asset impairment arising from reliance on calculator outputs.

See our full site disclaimer and privacy policy for complete terms of use.

📋 Editorial Transparency Data Sources & Methodology

The accredited investor net worth threshold of $1,000,000 excluding primary residence is sourced from SEC Regulation D, Rule 501(a), as amended by the SEC’s August 2020 final rule expanding accredited investor criteria. The capital gains tax rates (0%, 15%, 20%, and 23.8% including the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax) are per IRS Tax Topic No. 409 and IRC Sections 1(h) and 1411. The 10% early retirement withdrawal penalty is per IRS Tax Topic No. 558 and IRC Section 72(t).

The estate tax 9-month payment deadline is per IRC Section 6075(a). The Section 6166 installment payment election for closely-held businesses is per IRS guidance on IRC Section 6166. Liquidity discount assumptions used in the time-to-cash model (8–15% for illiquid assets) reflect general market practice in private wealth management literature and are not derived from any single authoritative source — they are planning assumptions subject to wide real-world variation.

USFinanceCalculators.com does not receive compensation from any financial institution, wealth manager, insurance company, private equity firm, or lender for the strategies, products, or tools referenced on this page. All scenario figures are independently modeled for illustrative planning purposes only.

📎 Official Government & Authoritative Resources
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SEC — Accredited Investor Definition

Official SEC guidance on the accredited investor standard under Regulation D — including the $1,000,000 net worth threshold excluding primary residence that underpins this workbench’s accredited-investor-style view.

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IRS Tax Topic No. 409 — Capital Gains & Losses

Official IRS guidance on capital gains tax rates — 0%, 15%, 20% — and the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) that produces the maximum 23.8% federal rate applied in this workbench’s after-tax brokerage calculation.

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IRS Tax Topic No. 558 — Early Retirement Distributions

Official IRS guidance on the 10% additional tax on early withdrawals from IRAs and 401(k)s before age 59½ — the primary component of the retirement access haircut modeled in Panel 1.

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IRS — Estate and Gift Taxes Overview

Official IRS landing page covering the federal estate tax system — 40% rate, exemption thresholds, 9-month payment deadline, and Form 706 filing requirements. The estate obligation input in this workbench flows directly from estate tax liability estimates.

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IRS — Section 6166 Estate Tax Installment Payments

Official IRS guidance on the Section 6166 election allowing estates with closely-held business interests exceeding 35% of the gross estate to pay estate tax in installments over up to 14 years — a critical liquidity tool for illiquid business-owner estates.

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FINRA — Margin Accounts: What Investors Need to Know

Official FINRA investor education on margin accounts and securities-backed borrowing — covering margin calls, maintenance requirements, and the risks of pledging portfolio assets as collateral for a line of credit.

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SEC — Rule 10b5-1 Trading Plans

SEC guidance on Rule 10b5-1 pre-planned trading arrangements — the primary mechanism by which corporate insiders and executives systematically diversify concentrated single-stock positions without running afoul of insider trading restrictions.

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IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-40 — 2025 Inflation-Adjusted Figures

Official IRS Revenue Procedure providing inflation-adjusted thresholds for capital gains rate brackets, estate tax exemption, and annual gift exclusion — the source data underlying the tax friction calculations in this workbench.

All external links open official government or regulatory websites (irs.gov, sec.gov, finra.org) in a new tab. USFinanceCalculators.com is not affiliated with the IRS, SEC, FINRA, or any government agency. Links are provided for reference and independent verification purposes only.