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June 12, 2025 • 4 minutes
When you think about your financial future, you probably picture a number: the sum of your savings, investments, and home equity, minus your debts. That’s your net worth. But here’s the problem: that number only tells part of the story.
Net worth is a widely used financial metric, but it’s also a limited one. It undercounts the assets and guarantees that provide true long-term financial stability. If you’re not including Social Security, Medicare, potential inheritance, or other earned-but-not-liquid benefits, you’re underestimating what your future can look like.
Net worth calculations are typically straightforward:
That math gives you a snapshot of your current financial standing. But it leaves out some of the most financially significant resources—your future benefits and income streams.
These often-overlooked assets include:
These aren’t “spendable” today—but they could be worth hundreds of thousands, even millions, over your lifetime.
Net worth gets used everywhere—as a personal scoreboard, a retirement readiness test, or even a way to compare yourself to others. But it was never designed to measure future financial security. It tells you what’s in your portfolio, not what’s coming to support you over the next 20–30 years.
By focusing only on today’s assets and liabilities, net worth undercalculates your true financial flexibility. It excludes the guaranteed income and healthcare protections that reduce the amount you need to save or spend. That’s not just misleading—it can cause people to work longer, save more, or delay retirement unnecessarily.
Use the Boldin Retirement Planner to track your net worth over time. See today’s net worth and well as your net worth at retirement, longevity, and every year in between.
Most of these resources are excluded from traditional net worth calculations because they’re not liquid or directly owned:
These are technically not “assets” on a balance sheet—but they absolutely function as financial support. Ignoring them means missing the full picture.
NOTE: Tools like the Boldin Retirement Planner help surface these hidden strengths, so you can make smarter, more confident decisions based on the full picture—not just your account balances today.net worth tallies.
Let’s look at how much these hidden assets could add to a typical 60-year-old’s net worth, using three scenarios: Low, Medium, and High benefit cases.
While difficult to predict, over 70% of Baby Boomers and Gen Xers expect to receive some inheritance. Here’s a rough breakdown:
Keep in mind: inheritance timing and taxes vary widely.
At Boldin, we help people plan using a broader, more realistic definition of wealth—one that includes these future benefits. Tools like the Boldin Planner surface these “invisible” resources so you can model different retirement ages, spending scenarios, and life choices with confidence.
Your real financial strength isn’t just about what you own today. It’s about what you’ll have access to tomorrow. Don’t let a narrow number hold you back from seeing the full picture—or from living the life you’ve earned.
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