- Americans aged 55 and older control about $110 trillion in wealth, making them the dominant holders of U.S. household assets.
- The “great wealth transfer” is real, but it is likely to happen slowly as boomers and older Gen Xers live longer and continue spending, investing, and transferring money in smaller stages.
- Gen X, not millennials, may be the biggest near-term beneficiary, with Cerulli projecting Gen X to inherit the most money over the next 12 years.
- For wealth managers and fintech platforms, the opportunity may be less about waiting for a sudden inheritance boom and more about serving older wealthy households, spouses, Gen X heirs, and multigenerational planning needs now.
What Happened?
Older Americans are sitting on roughly $110 trillion in wealth, but their heirs may not receive it anytime soon. The Wall Street Journal reports that while financial advisory firms often frame the “great wealth transfer” as a major upcoming event, the reality may look more like a slow drip than a sudden wave of inheritance. Baby boomers and Gen X currently hold the most wealth, while many boomers still have decades of life ahead of them.
A major reason is longevity. Wealthier Americans tend to live longer, are spending more on health, travel, retirement communities, and lifestyle, and in many cases are already giving money gradually to children and grandchildren for homes, tuition, or vacations. When older Americans do pass away, much of the money may first go to spouses within the same generation rather than immediately flowing to younger heirs.
Why It Matters?
This challenges the popular assumption that millennials are about to receive a massive, near-term inheritance windfall. The wealth transfer will happen, but the timing and recipients may be misunderstood. According to the article, bequeathable wealth rose sharply from 256% of GDP in 1997 to 424% in 2021, with most of the increase driven by households aged 55 and older. A large share of those gains came from the wealthiest 10% of older households, meaning the opportunity is concentrated among affluent families rather than evenly distributed across the population.
For investors and wealth managers, this has important implications. The biggest immediate opportunity may not be millennials suddenly inheriting money, but older clients who are still accumulating wealth, surviving spouses who inherit first, and Gen X heirs who are next in line. Firms focused only on younger investors may be early, while platforms that support estate planning, tax strategy, retirement income, healthcare costs, and family wealth transfers could be better positioned.
What’s Next?
The next phase of the wealth transfer is likely to favor Gen X. Cerulli projects that Gen X will inherit the most money of any generation over the next 12 years, while millennials may have to wait longer than many financial firms expect.
The key thing to watch is how older Americans balance longevity, spending, gifting, and estate planning. Rising healthcare and long-term care costs could reduce what heirs ultimately receive, while continued stock-market gains could increase the size of future inheritances. For the wealth management industry, the winners may be firms that can serve the full family balance sheet across generations — not just chase the headline of a one-time $110 trillion transfer.









