Are Financial Advisors Overpriced?
Kimberly Green | 2025-06-02
TL;DR Financial advisors often get flak for their fees, especially when they charge based on assets under management (AUM). But when you look past investment management and consider services like tax planning, entity structuring, estate setup, and major life event support, the real value becomes clear. This post breaks down the numbers, tradeoffs, and how to decide if an advisor is worth it for you. Are Financial Advisors Overpriced? I’ve spoken with nearly 100 financial advisors over the years. Here’s the truth: They’re not trying to scam you. Whether it’s flat fee, hourly, or a percentage of assets under management (AUM), most fee structures shake out to similar pricing. They just wear different disguises to make the cost feel more palatable. What Is an AUM Fee, Really? AUM-based pricing means your advisor takes a percentage of the money they manage for you. While 1% is a commonly cited average, it actually ranges: 0.25% to 0.5% for roboadvisors like Betterment or Wealthfront 0.3% to 1.8% for human advisors, depending on portfolio size, services, and firm structure Let’s say you have a $400,000 portfolio and work with an advisor charging 0.85%: That’s $3,400/year in fees Over 12 years with 7.5% annual returns, you’ll pay ~$61,000 total (including missed compounding) Is that a lot? Maybe. But only if you think investment management is all you’re paying for. What Financial Advisors Actually Do (Beyond Investments) Here’s the stuff high-quality advisors handle on vetted of portfolio allocation: 1. Strategic Tax Planning Optimize tax brackets Minimize capital gains Maximize retirement deductions (401(k), SEP IRA, QBI, etc.) 2. Entity Setup & Optimization Help structure your business as an LLC, S-Corp, or C-Corp Coordinate with CPAs and legal teams Align your business structure with long-term goals 3. Trust & Estate Planning Establish revocable, irrevocable, or grantor trusts Plan for generational wealth transfer Reduce estate taxes and probate exposure 4. Risk & Insurance Management Evaluate gaps in your life, disability, umbrella, and business insurance Structure coverage to reduce liability and preserve wealth 5. Retirement & Cash Flow Modeling Build out goal-based plans (early retirement, college, house) Adjust strategies during life events or market volatility 6. Behavioral Coaching Talk you off the ledge during market crashes Prevent FOMO decisions when stocks surge 7. Support During Life Transitions Inheritance planning Divorce strategy Aging parents or special needs planning M&A/exits coordination...