Sunday, May 31, 2026

The Overpriced Fiduciary. Revisiting How We Pay for Financial Advice (first published 3/20/2026 on Substack)

 

The Overpriced Fiduciary. Revisiting How We Pay for Financial Advice

The practice of paying a financial advisor a percentage of assets under management (AUM) on top of other fund investment expenses—is an outdated model that should be retired. There are reasonable alternatives to obtain professional advice for financial planning and investment management at a lower cost, regardless of one’s personal asset level.

Investors typically pay a flat advisory fee that ranges from 1.0% to 1.5% of AUM. That price is becoming progressively harder to justify. Some financial advisory firms have differing rate structures based upon portfolio size, but they still peg their fees to AUM.

Kitces research noted last year that a full 86% of financial advisory firms continue to use the AUM model to bill for advisory services.

Advisors that charge for their work by using a percentage of client AUM can and do provide valuable services. However, many of these same clients could save by doing research and thoughtful vetting in order to hire professionals on a fixed project fee or hourly fee basis. Typical advisory services include, but are not limited to:

  • Asset allocation and fund selection
  • Periodic portfolio review, rebalancing  
  • Household budgeting and cashflow projections
  • Tax planning strategies
  • Retirement income planning
  • Estate and legacy planning

Parsing the Advisors Label

I cringe after hearing commercial pitches like: "We do better when our clients do better". Anyone can be a fiduciary and still overcharge for a professional service because the industry permits fee calculation even if it is uncorrelated to actual hours worked.

An advisor operating under the AUM model gets paid even when portfolios underperform or service delivery is substandard. In up markets advisors get paid more, even if they have done less work than they did during a year with a significant drawdown. There’s too much opacity regarding what services a client receives and what effort was expended to deliver services on their behalf.

The Jane and Claude Comparison

Some believe that the AUM model is fair because the percentage charged by the advisory firm is the same for similar clients. Consider two investors using "Joe Advisor" and each investor is subject to paying a 1.00% AUM fee for services:

Client

Portfolio Value

Annual Advisory Fee

Claude

$1,000,000

$10,000

Jane

$2,000,000

$20,000

 

All other factors equal, has Joe Advisor done twice the amount of work for Jane to justify a $10,000 difference in fees?

Of course, significantly larger portfolios and the clients associated with them have complex needs that require more advisory time and customization. Advisory firms that migrate to a clean and transparent hourly or fixed dollar fee structure can justifiably bill these clients for comparatively more hours and do so at higher hourly rates for specialists.

When the Playing Field Began to Level

After the advent of Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), the advisor’s "insider" advantage of providing access to exclusive investments or obtaining lower effective share prices went away. Institutional share classes that come with lower expense ratios are not commonly available to everyday investors because they require high investment minimums – often millions of dollars. Thus, ETFs recommended by hourly advisors come with the same expense ratio as the one recommended by a pricier AUM advisor. Only the way that they charge for their services differs.

Robotic Players

Robo-advisors provided by firms like Betterment, Fidelity, Schwab, and Vanguard also charge significantly less for investment management —typically 0.20% to 0.30% of AUM— than their human counterparts. They are not going away.

These algorithmic platforms require investor responses to a slate of questions that automatically inform an asset mix consistent with investor goals, time horizon, knowledge level, and tolerance for risk and volatility.

According to Grand View Research, adoption of Robo-advisor platforms equated to advisory revenue of $6.61 billion in 2023 and it is expected to reach $41.83 billion by 2030.

When Paying a % of AUM Matters Less

There are exceptions. The question of whether an investor is overpaying for a service by paying a percentage of AUM for services becomes more negligible when:

  • Clients who want absolutely nothing to do with personal financial matters and are happy to outsource everything, even paying a premium to do so.
  • Clients who require significantly more "handholding" and advisory time and want a professional to control their assets.

‘Summing’ Up

For a significant portion of the investing public, the AUM model is an overpriced service. Whether one chooses a Robo-advisor for automated, diversified index fund management, or leverages an hourly or fixed fee professional but makes their own trades – or a combination thereof, less expensive options exist. Doing personal research and thoughtful vetting can help investors who take the time to understand what they need and source expertise from advisors that charge clients equitably.

Resources for Investors:

  • The Advice-Only Network: This platform is strictly "Advice-Only" and unlike some fee-only advisors who still charge using the AUM model, the professionals here don’t control your assets. They provide the plan, and you manage your accounts.
  • NAPFA (National Association of Personal Financial Advisors): Fee-only advisors committed to transparent retainer or hourly models.
  • Garrett Planning Network the GPN Alliance Inc., Pioneers of hourly, advice-only planning to help investors avoid ongoing AUM fee commitments and product commissions.

Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. While the author has extensive experience in the professional services industry, he is not a registered investment advisor (RIA) or a certified financial planner (CFP). Investing involves risk, including the loss of principal. Mention of specific firms and websites do not constitute endorsement.


From the Author: Thank you for taking the time to read my article. I watch trends and developments that shape how we live, work, and play—and I try to share insights that are genuinely useful, or at a bare minimum, interesting. If you find value here, I invite you to follow along for more analysis and practical perspectives in future posts.

 

The Overpriced Fiduciary. Revisiting How We Pay for Financial Advice (first published 3/20/2026 on Substack)

  The Overpriced Fiduciary. Revisiting How We Pay for Financial Advice The practice of paying a financial advisor a percentage of assets...