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5 February 2026 | Comment | Financial advice insights | Article by David Hulse

Cash: How much is sensible and how much is too much?


Cash is comforting as it  gives you options, reduces stress, and can make you feel prepared for whatever life throws at you.

Yet many people  hold far more cash than they actually need. Not because they are careless, but often because of apathy and a sense of caution, trying to avoid making a mistake after working hard to build reserves.

The uncomfortable truth is cash feels safe, but over time it can be one of the riskiest assets to hold.

This article is about finding the right balance between having enough cash to keep life running smoothly, but not so much that it quietly undermines your long-term plans.

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If you would like help sense-checking your cash holdings, or mapping your short-, medium- and long-term needs into a clear plan, our Independent Financial Advisers can provide personalised guidance.

Emergency fund vs “just in case” cash

An emergency fund has a clear job. It is there for genuine surprises such as a period off work, an unexpected tax bill, urgent home repairs or short-term cashflow disruption (especially for business owners).

Most people don’t need years of living costs in instant-access cash. As a starting point, many households aim for three to six months of essential outgoings, with a little more for those with variable income, dependants, or more complex commitments.

“Just in case” cash is different. It tends to build up without a plan. It sits in current accounts, savings accounts, and premium bonds because it feels sensible to keep it there. Often it is linked to a vague worry such as “What if the market falls?” or “What if we need it for something?”

The hidden cost of holding too much cash

Inflation quietly erodes spending power

Inflation does not need to be dramatic to do damage. If inflation averages 4% a year, something that costs £100 today may cost about £148 in ten years. If your cash is not growing at a similar pace after tax, your spending power falls. That is why cash can be “safe” in the short term, but unsafe over the long term.

Opportunity cost is the real risk

Every pound sat in cash is a pound not working elsewhere. That does not mean you should rush into investments but your cash should have a purpose. If you are keeping large balances for the long term, you may be taking a  risk of not meeting your future goals.

It is not unusual to see people over-allocated to cash due to being wary of volatility. The cost isn’t visible day to day, but it is real: falling purchasing power, forfeited growth, and the gap versus a disciplined strategy widens quietly every year. By the time the cash is redeployed in to a financial plan, the long-term damage can already be locked in, not by markets, but by inaction.

Why big cash balances feel prudent, but can backfire

There is a behavioural side to this as we tend to overvalue what we can see and touch and a large cash balance feels like control.

Investments, by contrast, come with uncertainty as values move and news headlines highlight potential risks and turbulences. Even when your plan is sensible, it may not feel that way on a bad week in the markets.

So, people do what humans do, and choose comfort. Cash can bring comfort, but can be expensive as over time, a cash-heavy approach can lead to:

  • a retirement plan that needs more contributions than expected
  • less flexibility later in life
  • reluctance to make family gifts or support children because “we might need it”
  • an estate that grows slowly, even when goals are clear

The aim is not to remove caution. It is to direct it.

A practical way to structure cash across time horizons

A simple approach is to divide cash into three “buckets”. This keeps you prepared without leaving everything idle.

Short term cash: instant access (0 to 12 months)

This covers day-to-day running costs and true emergencies. Think current account, easy-access savings, and a defined emergency fund.

Key question: If something unexpected happened next week, what would you actually need?

Medium term cash: planned expenditure (1 to 5 years)

This is money earmarked for known events:

  • home improvements
  • school or university costs
  • a property purchase
  • a planned career change
  • a tax bill you can see coming

This cash can often sit in accounts designed for planned saving, where you can accept a little less flexibility in exchange for a better return (while still keeping risk low).

Key question: What spending is likely, not just possible?

Strategic reserves: long-term cash decisions (5 years plus)

This is the bucket where “too much cash” usually hides. If money has no clear use for five years or more, the conversation becomes a planning one:

  • What is this money for?
  • When might you need it?
  • What level of volatility could you tolerate if it improved your chances of meeting your goals?

Sometimes the right answer is still “keep more cash than average”. For example, if you are about to sell a business, if you have a major life transition coming, or if sleep-at-night matters more than optimisation. The key is that it is a deliberate choice.

Bringing it back to one reassuring truth

If you have built up substantial cash reserves, you have done something right. The next step is making sure your cash is doing the right job.

Keep enough for resilience. Keep enough for planned spending. Beyond that, make sure you are not paying an invisible price for comfort.

Because while cash feels safe, over time it can be one of the riskiest places to leave money.

Speak to us

If you would like help sense-checking your cash holdings, or mapping your short-, medium- and long-term needs into a clear plan, our Independent Financial Advisers can provide personalised guidance.

Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and does not constitute financial advice. Tax rules can change and will depend on your individual circumstances.

Author bio

David Hulse

Head of Hugh James Independent Financial Advisers

David Hulse heads up the Hugh James Independent Financial adviser team. An experienced adviser looking after personal and professional clients based all over the UK from London to Edinburgh and closer to home here in South Wales.

Disclaimer: The information on the Hugh James website is for general information only and reflects the position at the date of publication. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be treated as such. If you would like to ensure the commentary reflects current legislation, case law or best practice, please contact the blog author.

 

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