Women Could Be The Biggest Winners Of The Wealth Transfer
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The largest wealth transfer in history is underway. Over the next two decades, trillions of dollars will change hands as Baby Boomers pass assets to younger generations through inheritance, gifts and business transitions.
While much of the conversation has focused on the size of the transfer, a more important question may be who will ultimately control that wealth. Increasingly, the answer is women.
Women are inheriting wealth, becoming primary financial decision-makers and acquiring businesses at growing rates. This convergence of trends creates a significant opportunity for women to accelerate wealth creation and build long-term financial security.
Women Are Taking a Larger Role in Wealth Management
Historically, men were often viewed as the primary financial decision-makers within households. That dynamic has shifted dramatically. Women are increasingly managing family finances, making investment decisions and working directly with financial advisors.
Demographic trends are helping drive this change. Women generally live longer than men, meaning many will inherit wealth from spouses and family members. At the same time, women have achieved higher levels of education and workforce participation than previous generations, increasing both their earning power and financial influence.
McKinsey expects women to control much of the approximately $30 trillion in financial assets currently held by Baby Boomers by 2030. This represents one of the largest reallocations of wealth in modern history and positions women to become one of the most influential investor groups in the economy.
But inheriting wealth is only part of the opportunity. The bigger question is how that wealth will be used.
Business Ownership May Be the Greatest Opportunity
One of the most overlooked aspects of the wealth transfer is the transition of privately owned businesses.
Millions of business owners are expected to retire over the next decade, yet many lack formal succession plans. As these owners exit, profitable businesses will need new leadership.
For women, this presents a unique wealth-building opportunity. Buying an existing business offers advantages over starting one from scratch. Established businesses already have customers, revenue, employees and operating systems in place. Rather than spending years validating a business idea, owners can focus on growth.
Entrepreneurship through acquisition has gained momentum because it allows buyers to purchase proven cash flow rather than build it from zero. For women who inherit capital or have access to financing, acquiring a profitable business may be one of the fastest paths to creating substantial wealth.
Inheritance Alone Does Not Create Wealth
Receiving an inheritance can provide a financial foundation, but it does not guarantee long-term prosperity.
Wealth preservation requires intentional planning, financial literacy and disciplined decision-making. Women who receive inherited assets may benefit from developing a comprehensive strategy that includes investing, tax planning and business ownership opportunities.
The goal should not simply be to protect wealth but to grow it.
This distinction matters because wealth is not created by holding assets alone. It is created by putting those assets to work.
Turning Wealth into Wealth Creation
The greatest advantage of the wealth transfer may be the options it creates.
Access to capital gives women the ability to invest, purchase businesses, support entrepreneurial ventures and create additional income streams. It also provides the flexibility to take calculated risks that may not have been possible otherwise.
Many women are already demonstrating what this looks like in practice. According to the Wells Fargo Women’s Business Report, women now own more than 40% of U.S. businesses, generating approximately $2.8 trillion in revenue and employing 12.6 million people. The report also found that the number of women-owned businesses grew 12% between 2022 and 2025.
This growth reflects a broader trend. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy, women-owned businesses contribute trillions of dollars to the economy and support millions of jobs. These figures suggest that women are increasingly using entrepreneurship and business ownership as a path to wealth creation rather than simply wealth preservation.
The Bottom Line
The Great Wealth Transfer is often discussed as an inheritance story, but it may ultimately become a business ownership story.
Women are increasingly positioned to inherit assets, make financial decisions and acquire businesses at a time when unprecedented opportunities are emerging. Those who approach this moment strategically may find themselves in a position not only to preserve wealth but to multiply it.
For women willing to think beyond inheritance and focus on ownership, investing and entrepreneurship, the wealth transfer could become one of the most significant wealth-building opportunities of a generation.
Melissa Houston, CPA, CEPA, is a Business Value & Financial Strategy Advisor and a Forbes.com contributor who writes about building profitable, sellable businesses.
With more than 25 years of experience in finance and accounting, she helps entrepreneurs increase profit, improve cash flow, and build companies that create long-term wealth. Her work focuses on financial leadership, profit optimization, and increasing business valuation through strategic decision-making.
Melissa is a Certified Exit Planning Advisor (CEPA), specializing in helping founders understand and close the gap between their current business value and its full potential. She works with business owners to strengthen financial performance, reduce risk, and position their companies for successful exits.
A published author of Cash Confident: An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Creating a Profitable Business, Melissa is a recognized voice in financial strategy and entrepreneurial wealth-building.
The opinions expressed in this article are not intended to replace professional accounting or tax advice.
