Financial Advisors for Athletes and Entertainers
Kimberly Green | 2026-03-02
Financial Advisors for Athletes and High-Earning Entertainers Professional athletes and entertainers face a financial situation unlike almost any other: very high income concentrated into a compressed window, followed by a career transition that most people aren't prepared for. The average professional sports career is 3–5 years. The window to generate lifetime wealth is short. The financial advice industry has a terrible track record with athletes and entertainers — partly because of predatory advisors, partly because of family and entourage pressures, and partly because the planning challenges are genuinely unusual. Getting this right requires an advisor who understands the compressed earning window, the tax implications of multi-state and multi-year income, and the behavioral challenges of transitioning out of a high-income career. How We Selected Financial Advisors for Athletes Understanding of compressed earning window planning: how to build lifetime wealth in 5–15 high-income years Multi-state tax expertise (athletes and touring entertainers earn income in multiple states) Familiarity with the "jock tax" (allocating income to states where games are played or performances occur). Under IRC Section 162, performance income is typically sourced to the state where the performance occurs. Estate planning and family financial management — wealthy athletes and entertainers are magnets for financial requests from family and friends Fiduciary standard (Form ADV disclosure) — this demographic is historically heavily targeted by conflicted advisors Compressed Earning Window Planning: The Math That Matters The core financial planning challenge for athletes and entertainers is that most of their lifetime income arrives in a short window. The financial decisions made during that window determine the quality of the next 50 years. A professional athlete who earns $3M per year for 6 years has $18M in gross earnings — before taxes, agent fees, and living expenses. After approximately 40% in federal and state taxes, 4% in agent fees, and reasonable living expenses, the net investable amount might be $7M–$9M. Managed well, that funds a comfortable retirement forever. Managed poorly, it disappears in a decade. The lifestyle creep problem is real. Income that feels permanent — because it's higher than you've ever seen — isn't. An advisor who sets expectations clearly and creates structure around spending is as valuable as one who picks good investments. Income replacement planning matters. What does life look like after the career? Some athletes transition to coaching,...