Skip to main content

Even if you think of yourself as having “enough” rather than “more than enough,” if you are spending at a conservative rate from your savings, the reality is that you may well be unlikely to deplete your assets during your lifetime. Which means that, financially speaking, “enough” might turn out to be “more than enough.”

In More Than Enough: A Brief Guide to the Questions That Arise After Realizing You Have More Than You Need, author Mike Piper provides a framework for how to approach the “problem” of having more financial resources than you may need.

Topics include:

  • Do you have more than enough?
  • Who gets the money?
  • Talking with your kids and other heirs
  • Giving and spending during your lifetime
  • Learning to spend and give more

The value in Piper’s short book is not that it provides an answer key for solving the more-than-enough “problem”. Instead, for those who have saved well and lived within their means, it poses questions for self-reflection and introduces ideas that individuals may wish to consider in conjunction with their advisors, including tax professionals, estate planning attorneys, and financial planners.

Piper is a Missouri Licensed CPA, and the author of several personal finance books and the blog Oblivious Investor.