If you’ve ever watched a couple argue about money, you know how quickly things can go off the rails.
One wants to buy tech stocks; the other still remembers the sting of 2008. One reads headlines and feels panic; the other shrugs and says, “It’ll come back.” These fights aren’t just about numbers—they’re about values, fears, and the stories we tell ourselves about risk and reward.
Enter the Investment Policy Statement (IPS).
If you’ve never heard of it, that’s not surprising. Most households don’t have one. But they should.
An IPS isn’t just a document—it’s a ceremony, a constitution, a peace treaty, and, perhaps most importantly, a source of calm when markets go haywire.
What Is an IPS?
An Investment Policy Statement is a written plan that spells out how you’ll invest your money.
It declares your financial goals, your time horizons, your risk tolerance, your asset allocation, your rules for rebalancing, and your behavioral guardrails.
It’s not just a spreadsheet or a pie chart—it’s a declaration of who you are, financially, before the markets test you.
Writing an IPS is a small act with big consequences. It’s like deciding how you’ll respond to a fire before you smell smoke.
When volatility screams and greed whispers, the IPS is the paper that’s calmer than you will be. Let it lead.
The Anatomy of an IPS
So what goes in an IPS? Specifics. Here’s what you should include:
Goals and Time Horizons
Begin with your goals. Retirement at 65? College for the kids in 15 years? A down payment in five? Write them down. Assign each goal a time horizon—short-term, medium-term, long-term.
Risk Tolerance
Be honest. Can you stomach a 20% drop in your portfolio without panicking? Or do you lose sleep at the thought of losing a dime? Couples should discuss this openly—mismatched tolerances are the source of many money fights.
Asset Allocation
Get specific. For example:
Stocks: Target 60%, allowed range 55–65%
Bonds: Target 30%, allowed range 25–35%
Cash: Target 10%, allowed range 5–15%
List what funds or accounts represent each bucket. Maybe it’s the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index for stocks, the iShares Core US Aggregate Bond ETF for bonds, and a high-yield savings account for cash.
Contribution Schedule
How often will you add money? Monthly, quarterly, annually? Specify the amounts or percentages.
Rebalancing Rules
Markets move. Your allocation will drift. Decide in advance what you’ll do:
Rebalance when any asset class moves outside its allowed range.
Rebalance annually, on your birthday or at tax time.
Never rebalance based on headlines.
Tax Considerations
Are you investing in taxable accounts, IRAs, 401(k)s? Note which buckets are tax-efficient. Specify rules for tax-loss harvesting, Roth conversions, or capital gains.
Review Schedule
Commit to reviewing your IPS at least annually. Also revisit after major life events—job changes, births, inheritances.
Behavioral Guardrails
Write down your rules for behavior. For example:
No trades based on headlines or emotions.
Maintain a 5–10% “sandbox” for speculation—crypto, meme stocks, whatever scratches the itch.
Consult your partner before making any major changes.
Why Couples Need an IPS
Money is the number one cause of stress in relationships. It’s not just about how much you have—it’s about how you handle it together.
An IPS is a peace treaty. It aligns expectations and creates a shared language.
Instead of arguing about whether to buy Tesla after reading a scary news story, you can point to the IPS: “Our sandbox is maxed out.
Let’s review this at our annual meeting.” Instead of panicking when the market drops, you can read your IPS and remember why you invested the way you did.
The IPS Is Living, Not Rigid
Don’t treat your IPS like a stone tablet. It’s a living document. Revisit it after major life events. Update it as your goals change. If you have kids, inherit money, or change careers, your IPS should reflect those changes.
But don’t change it based on market noise. The whole point is to make decisions calmly, before the world gets loud.
Where to Keep Your IPS
Store your IPS with your important documents—wills, insurance policies, passports. Make sure both partners know where it is. When markets are volatile, read it. When you feel greedy, read it. The paper is calmer than you will be.
Sample IPS Statement
Here’s what a simple IPS might look like:
Smith Family Investment Policy Statement
Goals:
Retire at age 65 with $1.5 million
Fund college for two children in 15 years
Maintain emergency fund of $30,000
Time Horizons:
Retirement: 25 years
College: 15 years
Emergency fund: ongoing
Risk Tolerance:
Moderate. Comfortable with up to 20% portfolio decline.
Asset Allocation:
Stocks: 60% (Vanguard Total Stock Market Index)
Bonds: 30% (iShares Core US Aggregate Bond ETF)
Cash: 10% (Ally High-Yield Savings)
Allowed Ranges:
Stocks: 55–65%
Bonds: 25–35%
Cash: 5–15%
Contribution Schedule:
$2,000/month to 401(k)
$500/month to 529 college fund
$200/month to emergency fund
Rebalancing:
Annually in January
If any bucket drifts outside allowed range
Tax Considerations:
Maximize contributions to tax-advantaged accounts
Review for tax-loss harvesting each December
Review Schedule:
Annually in January
After major life events
Behavioral Guardrails:
No trades based on headlines
5% sandbox for speculation
Consult partner before any changes over $10,000
The Takeaway
If you want to build wealth and keep the peace, don’t just trust your gut.
Write an IPS. Make it specific, make it honest, make it shared. Store it somewhere safe. And when the world gets noisy, let the paper lead.
You are not your portfolio’s daily swings. You are the person who wrote the IPS—the person who decided, calmly, what you stand for.
That’s worth more than any hot stock tip.