Plain English

When Friends & Family Want Your Money

Plain English · ~6 min read · Updated June 2026

The short version When friends and family want a piece of your NIL money, follow one rule: only risk money you'd be completely fine never seeing again — and never your tax, emergency, or retirement money. Treat any loan or "investment" into someone you love as a gift you may not get back. And remember: "no" is a complete sentence. Protecting your future isn't selfish — it's the whole point.

Some of the hardest money situations you'll face aren't strangers or scammers. They're the people you love. A cousin with a business that needs cash. A best friend with a "can't-miss" startup. A family member who just needs a loan to get through. These asks are wrapped in love and loyalty, which is exactly what makes them so hard. Here's how to handle them without losing your money or the relationship.

Why this is so hard (and so common)

Money attracts people. The more visible you get, the more come — and the ones who care about you most are often the first to ask. It's natural to want to help the people who helped you. The trouble is that one emotional "yes" can quietly drain the foundation you're trying to build. You can be a generous person and protect your future. Those aren't in conflict.

The one rule that protects everything

Here it is, and it's simple: only give or "invest" money you'd be totally fine never seeing again — and never touch your foundation.

Your foundation is the money that keeps your life standing:

That money is off-limits, full stop. Whatever's left after the foundation is the only money even on the table — and only if losing it wouldn't hurt.

Treat it as a gift, not a loanMost loans to friends and family don't get paid back on time, if at all — and the awkwardness can wreck the relationship. So if you decide to help, assume you'll never see it again. If that thought is fine, go ahead. If it makes your stomach drop, that's your answer.

"Invest in my business" is still a risk

A friend's startup or a cousin's business feels different from a stranger's pitch — but the math is the same. Most small businesses and startups fail. Mixing money and relationships raises the stakes on both. So run it through the exact same filter you'd use for any investment: only money you can truly afford to lose, never your foundation, and eyes wide open about the odds.

Picture itYou earned $10,000 in NIL deals. After setting aside $3,000 for taxes and protecting your emergency fund and Roth IRA, maybe $500 is genuinely "money I'd be fine losing." That $500 is the most you'd put toward a cousin's business — not the $5,000 they asked for. The number is almost always smaller than the ask.

"No" is a complete sentence

You do not owe anyone a long justification for protecting your own future. A clear, kind "no" is enough. But if a hard "no" feels impossible, you can lean on your plan as the reason — it's not you turning them down, it's the system you've committed to.

Saying no to protect your future isn't selfish. It's the reason you'll still have something to be generous with later.

Scripts you can actually use

Make a decision before you're askedThe pressure of the moment is what makes people cave. So decide your "money I'd never miss" limit now, in a calm moment — a specific dollar number — and never cross it. When an ask comes, the decision is already made and you don't have to negotiate with your own emotions on the spot.

Protect yourself everywhere money shows up

Friends and family are one piece of staying safe. Also learn to spot outright NIL money scams, and how to read an NIL contract before you sign. For the full system — taxes, fees, saving, and investing — start with the complete guide to NIL money.

Want the whole playbook?The full NIL Game Plan covers the tough conversations, scams, contracts, taxes, and a year-one money plan — for $29. Or grab the free checklist first.

Frequently asked questions

What do I do when friends and family want my NIL money?

Help only with money you'd be fine never seeing again, and never with your tax, emergency, or retirement money. Treat any money you give to a friend or family member's business or loan as a gift you may never get back. And remember that "no" is a complete sentence — you don't owe anyone a long justification.

Should I invest in a friend or family member's business with NIL money?

Only with money you can genuinely afford to lose, never your foundation money. Most small businesses and startups fail, so assume you might never see it again. If losing that amount would hurt your finances or the relationship, the answer is no.

How do I say no to family asking for money without ruining the relationship?

Be warm but firm and keep it short. You can lean on your plan as the reason: "My money's locked into a long-term setup, I can't touch it." Offer non-money help if you want. "No" is a complete sentence, and protecting your future isn't selfish.

This article is educational and is not personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Tax figures and limits change and vary by person and state — confirm current details with a licensed professional. Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal.

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