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Could your children pass the inheritance ‘stress test’?

“Leave children enough so they can do anything, but not enough that they can do nothing.”

Warren Buffet’s words capture a truth often overlooked. Transferring wealth is simple; ensuring someone is ready to manage it responsibly is much more complex.

You devote years of your life working, saving and investing, striving to build a legacy that outlives you and gives your children a meaningful head start.

But that intention is colliding with a new reality. Younger Australians are struggling with money more than ever, with 62% of young women and 48% of young men feeling overwhelmed by financial decisions.

That sits in stark contrast with the A$5.4 trillion in wealth many are set to inherit, which raises an uncomfortable but necessary question: Are my children actually ready to inherit?

Readiness is not about age. It is about confidence, judgement and the ability to maintain composure when the stakes are high. These skills are not innate. They need to be taught, practiced and reinforced over time.

Yet too often, families only spot these gaps once the paperwork is signed and responsibility falls on heirs who have never been tested. By then, the consequences can be costly.

That’s why assessing readiness early isn’t just sensible - it’s fundamental. The right questions can reveal blind spots before they become a problem and give families time to build capability long before the money changes hands.

Before any wealth moves to the next generation, here are six questions every parent should ask themselves:

1. Do they have the right attitude?

Attitude shapes every financial decision that follows.

Look for humility, curiosity and respect for the effort that created the wealth in question. These traits are far more predictive of long-term success than technical skill.

If an heir sees the inheritance as a fuel for opportunity, rather than a shortcut or entitlement, they’re more likely to preserve – not deplete – what you’ve built.

2. Are they stable and self-reliant in their own life?

Wealth amplifies a person’s underlying habits.

If your children can manage work, bills, relationships and day-to-day responsibilities without intervention, an inheritance could strengthen an already-stable foundation.

But if they’re relying on the promise of future wealth as a Plan A, rather than support for Plan B, more preparation is needed to instil discipline.

3. Do they understand and live by the family’s core values?

Money brings opportunity, but values give direction.

If your children understand why the wealth exists – what your family stands for, what it rejects and how it defines ‘enough’ – they will be better equipped to make decisions aligned with legacy.

Without this anchor, wealth can drift into spending, conflict or directionless choices.

4. Can they make decisions confidently and without constant validation?

Managing wealth rests on one skill above all; the ability to make sound choices – to exercise independent judgement and to know where specialist guidance can lead to a better outcome.

An heir must also strengthen their own decision-making muscle: learning to weigh competing options and commit to a path, so their engagement with expert financial advice becomes genuinely collaborative.

If your child needs reassurance for every financial choice or freezes without direction, they’ll likely feel overwhelmed by the pressure and ambiguity that come with substantial wealth.

5. Are they prepared for the risks that come with inheriting significant wealth?

Significant wealth attracts attention, and not all of it is welcome.

Heirs need the judgement to recognise when something feels off, whether it’s a scam, a pushy investment pitch, a manipulative relationship or someone trying to exert influence for their own gain. That ‘street smart’ instinct is a critical form of protection.

If your children already show an ability to pause, think things through and seek a second opinion in other areas of life, that’s an encouraging sign. Good decision-making often starts with slowing down, assessing the situation and choosing deliberately.

6. Are they financially literate, and do they know the difference between lifestyle money and long-term capital?

They don’t need to be investment experts, but they do need to understand the fundamentals: compounding, inflation, spending rules, taxation, risk and time horizons.

Most importantly, they must understand the boundary between everyday spending and capital that must last for decades.

With around 45% of Australian adults struggling with basic financial concepts, it’s important to be realistic about where your children sit. If they’re not confident now, focused education and guidance can make all the difference.

A successful wealth transfer isn’t about how much you leave, but how confidently the next generation can stand on their own two feet. When young adults can shoulder responsibility, make sound decisions and seek guidance wisely, wealth becomes a launchpad for their lives rather than a burden handed to them too soon.

 

Bruce Kluk is the Founder and Director of Principal Edge Financial Services. Also contributing to this article was Marshall Brentnall, Principle Edge’s Chief Investment Officer and Director.

 

  •   26 November 2025
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19 Comments
Mark
November 27, 2025

If they pass 3 tests, they will get half an inheritance?

If they fail 3 tests, their half inheritance will last half as long?

4
Dudley
November 27, 2025



Then the test to pass is in court.

'To contest a will, you can either challenge its validity or claim you have not been provided with adequate provision, and you must file a claim with the Supreme Court, typically within a specific timeframe and after notifying the executor.'

3
Laurent
November 27, 2025

I am quite confused about the usefulness or even the relevance of those tests. I would love my three kids to behave exactly like I would want them to. Unfortunately they are going their own way and I have to admit that I am often quite worried.
I am 58 so hopefully inheritance is 30-40 years away. Here is my plan so far :
- I have given two of my kids a big chunk of their home deposit when they bought their first home. I have promised the same to the third one when she buys her house. Note that she is the elder one so things don’t go as I would have planned. Buying a house is an investment I approve so I am happy to help.
- I have decided to update my will and leave my assets to all my descendants in equal share (children and grandchildren). Note that I don’t have any grandchildren yet, so this is wishful thinking from my part. I am quite impatient to become a grandfather but I don’t see anything coming for the time being. So those tests seem a bit foolish to me. I will leave my wealth to my descendants in equal share whether they go the way I think is best for them or whether they go in a different - frightening to me - way.

5
Noel Whittaker
November 27, 2025

This was a great article, but it's important to understand that strategies such as having a testamentary trust, can take some of the pain out of families. Noel Whittaker author of Wills, death & taxes  made Simple

5
Gary
November 28, 2025

Testamentary Trusts can be a useful, just be keep in mind the potential for any beneficiaries requiring future income support from Centrelink. I can't tell you how many families I have seen fracture and become divided from the assessment of attributed income and assets from these structures, especially when a commercial trustee is involved.

Dudley
November 28, 2025


Testamentary Company; comes into existence on the death of a Will-maker.
Tax rate 25%(?), franking credits attached to dividends.
Can retain profits.
Each beneficiary becomes a shareholder with different class of share to allow tax optimisation.
If beneficiaries taxable income is less than tax free threshold then no effective capital gains tax on realising gains.

What is not to like?

2
Maggie
November 30, 2025

Luke, who has the right to spend your money now? You or your future beneficiaries?
Your "selfish" father's money was surely his to spend??

5
AlanB
November 30, 2025

I would have failed the first test on humility. At age 20 I had answers for everything, my father was always wrong and I knew more than him. However, by age 30 I was amazed by how much he had learnt.

4
Stan Holloway
November 27, 2025

It doesn't matter if the children pass or fail the above tests. You will still leave your assets for their use.

3
Luke
November 30, 2025

I would’ve past the inheritance test, however I was left with nothing in my fathers will nor my siblings. For the fact he squandered his money on pleasure and was a very selfish man. Not everyone are as fortunate as some.

1
stan bec
November 27, 2025

Timing is key

Lisa Romano
November 27, 2025

Bruce, thanks for your advice. You may recall guiding me decades ago in the field of leveraged shares – happy to report that modest initial profit has resulted in a sizeable long term portfolio!

Bruce Kluk
November 28, 2025

good to hear the strategy worked

Mark
November 28, 2025

Then the test to pass is in court.

If the court then decide on a 50/50 inheritance adjudication outcome for both parties, then the end result of the 6 tests is that we have 3 passes and 3 fails?

Dudley
November 29, 2025


"the court then decide on a 50/50 inheritance adjudication outcome":

The court might decide that those failing the tests are in greater need?

1
Mark
December 04, 2025

The court might decide that those failing the tests are in greater need of self-education?

John
November 30, 2025

Try to heed the old adage: 'Better to give with a warm hand than a cold one." The counter argument is that if you wait until your Will is read, you won't be disappointed with what your inheritors do with your wealth.

Kaye
December 02, 2025

Great article Bruce - but also a very pointed one - has the baby Boomer generation been too soft on ther offspring. A major generalisation, I realise, but worth thinking about.

 

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