
Something has been happening that’s surprising to many Americans. Like snow falling quietly overnight, wealth has a way of sneaking up: steadily increasing salaries, 401(k) contributions, stock options, rising home equity, inheritances. It accumulates while you’re busy living. If your financial identity hasn’t kept pace—understandably shaped more these days by inflating prices, competing tugs on your discretionary dollars, and that familiar feeling of “I’d be comfortable if I made more“—you’re not alone. A Vanguard survey found that almost 30% of millionaires feel their finances control their lives.
That said, a seven-figure net worth amassed over time comes with a set of financial benefits and complexities that can easily turn into missteps—like a surprise tax bill or family fallout after an inheritance. Recognizing that your financial life has outgrown the way you see yourself (my husband and I have been there!) is the first step.
If you’ve found yourself in the fortunate position of “hidden millionaire,” here are three common pitfalls we see, and simple ways to get ahead of them.
Mistake #1: Sitting on excess cash, or other uses of savings, while still paying high-interest debt.
Many people feel better holding a large cash cushion, especially after periods of volatility. But if your credit card interest rate is higher than what you are earning on your cash, the math flips. You can lose far more than you gain.
Even maximizing retirement contributions should be questioned when carrying high interest debt. We often see this from disciplined savers. These trade-offs can quietly erode longer-term wealth.
The fix: Pay off any debt above, roughly, 8% interest, before increasing long-term 401(k) contributions. Always meet your employer’s match (it’s free money!) but direct the rest to pay down high-interest balances. Maintain at least three months or more for emergencies in a competitive-yield account, and invest the rest with a long-term, tax-efficient approach. Automate where you can and rebalance periodically.
Mistake #2: Not updating your tax strategy for your new normal.
When wealth grows gradually, we see many people assume their tax situation remains simple. But as complexity grows, so do the opportunities to miss optimizing or to make mistakes. Vested stock creates taxable income. Dividends and capital gains accumulate. Tax-advantaged accounts become relatively more valuable. Tax-efficient diversification, and strategic placement across account types, becomes both possible and critical.
Hidden millionaires often overlook powerful tools to help reduce taxes, build flexibility, and strengthen long-term wealth.
The fix: Do a proactive tax check-in outside of the April tax scramble. Review when your stock awards fully belong to you, the timing of your bonus, and any anticipated gains so you’re not surprised at tax time. Use tax-advantaged accounts strategically: maximize Health Savings Accounts, evaluate Roth conversions, contribute to a 529 for state tax benefits, and evaluate your approach toward taxable and tax-advantaged accounts. Treat tax efficiency like found money—because it is.
Mistake #3: Failing to create or update your financial or estate plan.
Once you recognize you’re a “hidden millionaire,” it’s time to protect what you’ve built. You’ve created something meaningful, and you get to shape how it endures. To spare your family financial or emotional strain, prepare your plan now. Nearly a quarter of millionaires have no estate planning documents—your family will appreciate not being part of that statistic.
The fix: If you don’t have a will, beneficiaries, or healthcare directives, start there. If you do, update them every three years or after any major life changes. Review your insurance coverage to ensure your assets and family are adequately protected. And if you expect to receive or pass down wealth, prepare early for taxes, timing, and structure.
Sounds complicated? It doesn’t have to be.
Most people feel “not that wealthy” even when numbers start to tell a different story. Rising costs, market volatility, and financial anxiety can crowd out financial identity. If you don’t have the time, experience, or (let’s be honest!) the interest to navigate your financial details, you don’t have to go at it alone. Advice can save time, reduce costly mistakes and stress, and prevent your emotions from driving your decisions.
If you’re thinking “this is me,” take a breath and acknowledge the progress you’ve made. Now is the time to align how you see your financial life with what it actually is. Your future self—and your family—will thank you.
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This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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