If you have too little cash, life becomes a string of small emergencies. You swipe a card, sell investments at the wrong time, or borrow because you have no choice.

If you have too much cash, you pay a quieter cost. You lose purchasing power to inflation. You miss opportunities. You stay stuck because everything feels risky.

Most people do not have a cash problem. They have a cash system problem.

This article gives you a simple private-banking-style framework for liquidity planning. It helps you answer three questions:

  1. How much cash should you keep
  2. What that cash is supposed to do
  3. Where you should hold it so it stays useful

You do not need a complicated spreadsheet. You need clear buckets, clear rules, and a plan you can actually follow.

If you want the short version: cash is a tool, not a position. Use it on purpose.

If you want to see how this fits into our broader process, start with How We Work.

Why “just keep six months” is not enough

You have heard the standard advice. Keep three to six months of expenses in cash.

That is not wrong. It is just incomplete.

Cash needs change based on:

A retiree living on portfolio withdrawals has a different cash need than a dual-income household with stable paychecks. A business owner has a different cash need than a W2 executive with equity compensation.

This is why we treat cash as part of private-banking coordination. It is not only about “safety.” It is about liquidity, control, and timing.

Vanguard makes the tradeoff clear:

“An allocation to cash as part of an investment portfolio can make sense, but that comfort can come at the cost of lower market returns over time.”

So the goal is not “more cash.” The goal is the right cash, held in the right places, for the right reasons.

The Clarity Sweep — what “cash” really means

When people say “cash,” they often mean four different things:

  1. Spending cash. Checking account money that pays bills.
  2. Buffer cash. Money that prevents a surprise from becoming a crisis.
  3. Opportunity cash. Money you might deploy into a goal or a market event.
  4. Goal cash. Money reserved for a specific near-term need (home purchase, taxes, tuition, renovation, business investment, a known large expense).

If you mix these, you end up with a single pile of money that feels safe but behaves poorly. It either sits idle forever, or it gets spent accidentally, or both.

So the first step in liquidity planning is naming the job.

The private-banking framework — three buckets of cash

This is the core system. Three buckets, three jobs, three rules.

Bucket 1 — Operating cash (the bill-paying bucket)

Purpose. Pay the monthly machine of life.

Rule. Keep it boring and accessible.

Where. Checking plus a small overflow buffer.

A practical starting point:

This is not “investing cash.” This is operating cash. Its job is to prevent overdrafts, avoid late payments, and reduce stress.

If your checking balance regularly balloons beyond that, you are probably using checking as a savings account. That is usually a sign your system needs a second bucket.

Bucket 2 — Stability cash (the emergency buffer)

Purpose. Handle surprises without selling long-term investments.

Rule. The money must be there when you need it.

Where. High-yield savings, money market, or short-term Treasury ladder, depending on your preferences.

This is your shock absorber.

A practical range:

This bucket is where most people should hold “peace of mind” cash. Not in checking. Not in the investment account that you will be tempted to deploy on a whim.

If you want a clean starting guideline for emergency savings, Fidelity often frames it as building toward “three to six months of essential expenses.”

Key point: this bucket is about reliability, not return.

Bucket 3 — Decision cash (near-term goals and opportunities)

Purpose. Fund known upcoming decisions without stress.

Rule. Match the cash to the time horizon.

Where. Depends on when you will need it.

This bucket is where most people get stuck. They keep a huge amount in cash “just in case,” but they cannot explain what the case is.

So we force specificity:

If the time horizon is:

This is also where a lot of retirement planning lives, especially for people who are about to retire or have already retired.

The So What Sweep — what changes after you apply this framework

After you set these buckets, three things happen.

1. You stop guessing. You know what cash is for, so you stop debating it every month.

2. You reduce forced selling risk. You are less likely to sell investments during a downturn just to fund normal life events.

3. You make better investment decisions. Because your investment portfolio no longer has to double as an emergency fund.

That is the whole point. Cash is supposed to support good decisions, not compete with them.

Where should you hold cash — a plain-English guide

Once you know the bucket, you can pick the container. Here are the common options, with simple rules.

Checking

Best for operating cash. Weak for anything else. Why — convenience, not yield.

High-yield savings account

Best for emergency buffer and short-term flexibility. Why — simple, liquid, often competitive yields. Watch for transfer limits, teaser rates, bank policies.

Money market fund

Best for emergency buffer and decision cash. Why — often competitive yields, easy inside brokerage accounts. Watch — not FDIC insured, yields move, understand what you own.

Vanguard notes money market funds are designed for “low risk assets like cash and Treasury bonds,” and they “seek to maintain a stable share price of $1.”

Treasury bills and short-term Treasuries

Best for decision cash with a known timeline. Why — clear maturity dates, often attractive yields, backed by the US Treasury. Watch — learn the basics of ladders and maturities, do not buy long duration when you need near-term liquidity.

CDs

Best for decision cash when you want fixed terms. Why — defined maturity, predictable interest. Watch — early withdrawal penalties, reinvestment risk.

Brokerage account “settlement fund”

Can work fine, especially if it behaves like a money market. Watch — make sure you know what it is and what it pays.

The correct answer is not a single product. The right answer is matching the bucket to the container.

How much cash should you keep in retirement

This is one of the most searched questions, and it deserves a clean answer.

Retirement cash is not only about emergencies. It is also about sequence risk — the danger of pulling from a portfolio during a market decline early in retirement.

A simple retirement-oriented approach.

The retirement cash bucket rule

Keep enough stable money to cover:

Some retirees prefer two years. Some prefer less. The right number depends on:

This is also why retirees often benefit from a clear withdrawal sequencing plan, because your “cash need” is partly a tax plan. See withdrawal sequencing for the full framework.

A practical example (with real numbers)

Let us say you spend $8,000 per month after tax on essentials and normal living.

Bucket 1 — Operating cash

One month essentials: $8,000. Plus a small buffer: $4,000. Operating cash total: $12,000.

Bucket 2 — Stability cash

Six months essentials: $48,000. Stability cash total: $48,000.

Bucket 3 — Decision cash

You plan a $30,000 home project within 12 months. You also want to replace a car in 18 months, estimated at $25,000.

Decision cash total: $55,000.

Total cash across all buckets: $12,000 + $48,000 + $55,000 = $115,000.

Now the “So what” part.

If you previously kept $250,000 in cash “just in case,” you might discover that:

That does not mean you must invest it immediately. It means you should give it a purpose.

Maybe it becomes:

The key is that you decide on purpose.

The Prove It Sweep — signs you are holding too much cash

Here are simple tells.

1. Your cash number has no math behind it. If your answer is “I just feel better,” you are using feelings as a financial plan. Feelings are real. They just should not be the only input.

2. Your checking account keeps growing. That usually means you do not have clear buckets and automatic transfers.

3. You are delaying decisions because cash feels safe. Safety is good. Avoiding decisions is expensive.

4. You are holding “retirement cash” inside a long-term portfolio without a plan. This leads to either forced selling or constant second-guessing.

5. Your cash is sitting in a low-yield account out of habit. Cash still has opportunity cost. Even when yields move, the habit matters.

The Specificity Sweep — questions that set your exact cash number

If you answer these, your cash plan becomes clear.

  1. What are your essential monthly expenses
  2. How stable is your income over the next 12 months
  3. What large expenses are likely in the next 24 months
  4. What is your borrowing flexibility (line of credit, home equity, business credit)
  5. If markets drop 20 percent, what spending can you pause
  6. Are there tax events that create near-term cash needs (estimated taxes, vesting, RMDs, Roth conversions)
  7. For retirees — what percentage of spending is covered by guaranteed income

You do not need perfect answers. You need reasonable ones.

The Heightened Emotion Sweep — what a good cash plan feels like

A good cash plan creates three emotions that matter.

Relief. You know you can handle surprises.

Control. You are not reacting. You are executing.

Confidence. You can invest with a steadier hand because you are not using the portfolio as a checking account.

That is what people actually want from “more cash.” They want these feelings. The cash is just the tool.

The Zero Risk Sweep — what this framework does and does not do

This framework aims to reduce avoidable stress, reduce forced selling risk, and improve your ability to make clear decisions.

It does not guarantee returns, eliminate market risk, predict future interest rates, or eliminate all uncertainty.

It is a decision framework. Not a promise.

A simple “do this next” checklist

If you want to implement this in one sitting, follow this.

  1. Calculate one month of essential expenses
  2. Set your operating cash target (one to two months)
  3. Set your stability cash target (three to twelve months based on your situation)
  4. List the next three known large expenses and their timing
  5. Create a decision cash target tied to those expenses
  6. Pick containers — checking, savings or money market, short-term Treasuries if needed
  7. Automate transfers so your checking does not balloon
  8. Review quarterly, and after major life events

If you want a process to coordinate this with taxes, investments, and long-horizon planning, start with How We Work, Strategic Tax Optimization, or schedule a private intro.

Closing thought

Cash is not a moral virtue. It is not “good” or “bad.” It is a tool.

The right amount of cash is the amount that lets you sleep at night and still move forward with your plan.

If you want help building a clean liquidity plan that connects to the rest of your financial decisions, schedule a private intro.