The $124 trillion Boomer wealth transfer could change crypto forever

More than $124 trillion in US household wealth is set to change hands by 2048, and the generations receiving it hold crypto at rates several times higher than the generations giving it.

Estate planning documents with Bitcoin symbol illustrating the $124 trillion wealth transfer and its impact on crypto
Image by CryptoSlate
5 min read

Quick Take

  1. Cerulli projects $124 trillion in US household wealth will change hands by 2048, mostly from Baby Boomers and older generations.
  2. Younger heirs own crypto at far higher rates than older investors, giving the transfer potential to reshape long-term digital asset demand.
  3. The shift is gradual and uneven, with wealth eroding, passing first to spouses, and heirs often diversifying instead of moving quickly into crypto.

The next leg of crypto adoption may already be taking shape in estate planning offices instead of on trading floors or in congressional hearing rooms. Analysts have spent a decade modeling adoption through ETF approvals, halving cycles, interest rates, and regulatory milestones. But one of the most powerful forces reshaping demand for digital assets is demographic, slow, and already underway.

Over the next two decades, Cerulli Associates projects that $124 trillion in US household wealth will change hands, the largest transfer of assets in recorded history. Roughly $105 trillion will flow directly to heirs, with another $18 trillion earmarked for charity.

The generations receiving that money invest in fundamentally different ways than the generations giving it, and that gap carries structural implications for Bitcoin and the broader digital asset market that dwarf anything a single ETF approval or rate cut could produce.

A $124 trillion wealth transfer to heirs who own crypto

Cerulli's projections describe a transfer dominated by the oldest cohorts. Baby Boomers and older generations will account for nearly $100 trillion of the total, or 81% of all transfers through 2048. Millennials stand to inherit about $46 trillion, the largest haul of any cohort, while Generation X is projected to receive approximately $39 trillion and Gen Z around $15 trillion.

More than half of the total volume, roughly $62 trillion, will come from high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth households, a group that represents just 2% of all US households. The math reflects a broader accumulation trend: older households controlled 61% of national wealth as of 2023, up from 54% three years earlier, and asset price appreciation since the pandemic has significantly inflated the pool.

Cerulli's own estimate stood at $84 trillion as recently as 2020 before equity and real estate gains pushed it to the current figure.

Approximately $54 trillion will first move horizontally, passing between spouses before it ever reaches children or grandchildren, and nearly $40 trillion of those spousal transfers will go to widowed women in the Boomer generation and older. The intergenerational shift, in other words, unfolds in stages across decades rather than arriving as a single wave. The fact that all of this will happen gradually makes it easy for markets to ignore it and almost impossible for them to price it.

The investment behavior of the receiving generations diverges sharply from that of the giving ones. Gemini's State of Crypto survey found that 49% of millennials and 51% of Gen Z respondents in the US currently own or have previously owned cryptocurrency, against 29% of Gen X.

Motley Fool Money's 2026 investor survey measured current ownership at 30% among millennials, 16% among Gen X, and just 7% among Baby Boomers. The exact numbers vary from survey to survey, yet the shape of the curve never does: adoption falls steeply with age.

A Coinbase survey of 4,350 U.S. adults with investment accounts found that Gen Z and millennial investors hold 25% of their portfolios in non-traditional assets, including crypto, roughly triple the 8% reported by Gen X and Boomer respondents.

Bank of America Private Bank's research on wealthy Americans shows young investors allocating 14% of their portfolios to crypto compared with 1% for older investors, while 72% of investors aged 21 to 43 believe stocks and bonds alone can no longer deliver above-average returns, a view shared by only 28% of those over 44.

Researchers have now started sizing what this means for flows. Grayscale head of research Zach Pandl calculated that Americans aged 60 and older hold nearly $110 trillion in net worth, and that shifting just 2% of transferred assets toward digital assets would generate $2.2 trillion in additional crypto demand. Pandl wrote that as assets change hands, portfolios “could shift to incorporate a higher share of crypto assets.”

Galaxy Research reached a similar conclusion from a smaller base in a December 2023 report, estimating that an immediate transfer would push an incremental $160 billion to $225 billion into crypto markets based on generational acceptance gaps, at a time when the entire asset class was worth about $1.5 trillion. The market later expanded well beyond that 2023 base, and the ETF era has considerably widened the on-ramps.

Wall Street has noticed

Incumbent institutions seem to be repositioning in response to the demographic shift with unusual speed. Morgan Stanley began piloting spot crypto trading on E*Trade in May 2026, charging 50 basis points per transaction to undercut Coinbase, Robinhood, and Charles Schwab, with all 8.6 million E*Trade clients scheduled to gain access later this year.

Schwab launched its own spot trading at 75 basis points. Vanguard, long among crypto's most vocal institutional skeptics, began allowing clients to trade third-party crypto ETFs and mutual funds on its brokerage platform in December 2025.

JPMorgan Private Bank cited the wealth transfer as a driver of future Bitcoin adoption in February 2026 client materials, alongside the $62 billion in net inflows that U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs had attracted at the time.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.

5-minute digest 100k+ readers

Free. No spam. Unsubscribe any time.

You’re subscribed. Welcome aboard.

Morgan Stanley wealth management head Jed Finn described the E*Trade rollout as “disintermediating the disintermediators,” saying that direct crypto access was a defensive necessity for a company whose future clients grew up on app-based platforms.

This kind of defensiveness also seems to run deep across the industry. A Natixis survey found that 41% of US financial advisors see wealth transfer as an existential threat to their business, and a ZeroHash survey, cited by Forbes, found that more than half of wealthy investors under 40 had fired advisors who did not offer crypto access.

Cerulli senior analyst Chayce Horton has argued that firms able to build relationships with younger investors “will be well positioned for success,” with $85 trillion collectively destined for Gen X and millennial hands. His research finds that 89% of leading high-net-worth firms now prioritize family meetings and next-generation engagement as core retention strategies.

The wealth management industry, in short, is behaving as though the demographic thesis is already true, and its product roadmap is doing the advocacy that crypto lobbyists spent a decade attempting.

Where the thesis meets friction

However, several structural issues temper the bull case for this wealth transfer. Concentration cuts both ways: because $62 trillion of the transfer originates in the wealthiest 2% of households, the average heir will see far less than headline totals suggest, weakening any simple read-through from generational crypto ownership rates to broad market inflows.

Galaxy's own report acknowledged that longer life expectancies, rising medical costs, and retiree spending will erode the amounts that actually reach younger hands. The Fidelity estimate cited in the report put 2021 health care costs for a retiring couple at $300,000, up 88% since 2002, underscoring the risk of erosion rather than providing a current-cost estimate.

There's also the matter of sequencing. With $54 trillion moving first to surviving spouses, much of the wealth will remain under the stewardship of the same generation for years before it descends to heirs, delaying any shift in allocation.

Inheritance behavior adds another layer of caution, since heirs frequently diversify incrementally rather than overhauling portfolios. RBC survey data point to stewardship rather than sudden portfolio churn, finding that 99% of receivers intend to respect their parents' wishes regarding the wealth, and that their top concern is being financially responsible with what they receive.

Older investors are simultaneously narrowing the gap from the other direction, with Gen X and Boomers now accounting for 37% of US crypto owners by some measures as retirement accounts open to digital assets.

Every year that passes moves decision-making authority over the world's largest pool of private wealth toward cohorts whose baseline crypto allocation runs anywhere from three to fourteen times higher than their parents'. Regulation, ETFs, and even halvings might set the market's rhythm for the time being, but the deeper current beneath them is actuarial. Crypto's most durable bull case may depend on outliving skeptics rather than converting them.