How Much Does a Financial Advisor Cost?
How Much Does a Financial Advisor Cost?
How Much Does a Financial Advisor Cost?
The cost of hiring and working with a financial advisor depends on their fee structure. Financial advisor costs are determined by a management fee, often referred to as an Assets Under Management (AUM) relationship or a flat fee relationship.
The cost of hiring and working with a financial advisor depends on their fee structure. Financial advisor costs are determined by a management fee, often referred to as an Assets Under Management (AUM) relationship or a flat fee relationship.
Below we will break down each of these advisor fee types in detail.
Below we will break down each of these advisor fee types in detail.

When it comes to advisor fees, the words “transparency” and “clear” rarely come up, even though they should. Any advisor that is offering “free” financial advice is most likely a commissioned broker. Unfortunately, free advice almost always leads to a propriety product or insurance product that earns them a commission. When an advisor is incentivized to sell you products, they are not legally obligated to work in your best interest.
When it comes to advisor fees, the words “transparency” and “clear” rarely come up, even though they should. Any advisor that is offering “free” financial advice is most likely a commissioned broker. Unfortunately, free advice almost always leads to a propriety product or insurance product that earns them a commission. When an advisor is incentivized to sell you products, they are not legally obligated to work in your best interest.
What to Know About Financial Advisor Costs
What to Know About Financial Advisor Costs
At Zoe we invest time interviewing advisors for your peace of mind. All of Zoe’s advisors have been heavily vetted about their costs, fee structures, and their legal obligations to work as fiduciaries for their clients.
At Zoe we invest time interviewing advisors for your peace of mind. All of Zoe’s advisors have been heavily vetted about their costs, fee structures, and their legal obligations to work as fiduciaries for their clients.
Assets Under Management (AUM)
Assets Under Management (AUM)
This is a full-service financial advisor relationship where an advisor conducts ongoing financial planning and investment management for you. Potential financial advisors costs will be a percentage-based fee of the assets the advisor manages for you.
This is a full-service financial advisor relationship where an advisor conducts ongoing financial planning and investment management for you. Potential financial advisors costs will be a percentage-based fee of the assets the advisor manages for you.
Is this the plan for you?
This is ideal if you are transitioning into retirement, or if you do not feel comfortable managing your investments on a daily basis. This is the most all-encompassing and full service you can get from a financial advisor. Most busy families opt into this relationship because of that.
AUM Fees: We see fees ranging from .80% to 1.5% of the assets an advisor manages. For example, if you were to hire an advisor under the AUM fee structure, and they managed $1 million dollars for you, their annual fee would be 1% of those investments, which would equate to a $10,000 annual advisor fee. This is not an out-of-pocket expense, the fees come directly from your investment account.
Is this the plan for you?
Thinking about something different?
If you do not want an advisor managing your assets or would like to begin in a less all-encompassing relationship. We see families start with a One Time Plan or Retainer option to later migrate to an AUM relationship when it makes sense.
Thinking about something different?
Flat Fee Retainer
Flat Fee Retainer
This is an agreed-upon ongoing flat-fee financial planning retainer to begin a relationship with a dedicated financial planner. Potential financial advisors’ costs will take the form of a monthly fee.
This is an agreed-upon ongoing flat-fee financial planning retainer to begin a relationship with a dedicated financial planner. Potential financial advisors’ costs will take the form of a monthly fee.
Is this the plan for you?
This is ideal if most of your assets are tied up in workplace retirement plans or stock options. You are younger in your financial journey and in the accumulator phase and would like ongoing guidance on how to save more, invest smartly, and plan for your short-term and long-term goals.
Fees: We see fees ranging from $100 to $500/month for a financial planning retainer.
Is this the plan for you?
Is this the plan for you?
Looking for something more?
The downside of this service is that an advisor is typically not actively managing your assets. You might want to upgrade to an AUM relationship if you feel you need more involvement from your advisor.
Looking for something more?
Looking for something more?
One Time Plan
One Time Plan
This is an agreed-upon flat fee to conduct financial planning with a Zoe Advisor to build a financial plan. Potential financial advisor costs will be charged to you only once.
This is an agreed-upon flat fee to conduct financial planning with a Zoe Advisor to build a financial plan. Potential financial advisor costs will be charged to you only once.
Is this the plan for you?
This is ideal if you have a narrow question or decision that needs to be made, or you are very comfortable self-managing your investments, but just want an advisor to help construct a plan.
Fees: We see fees for a one-time financial plan ranging from $1,500-$5,000 depending on your financial situation.
Is this the plan for you?
Is this the plan for you?
Looking for something more?
The downside of a one-time financial plan is that it is a static document in time. Should your family’s situation change, most likely your plan will need updating. More often than not, families are opting into an ongoing relationship with an advisor so they can build a relationship and allow that advisor to be proactive in protecting their wealth.
Looking for something more?
Looking for something more?
Ask The Right Questions To Avoid Common Red Flags
Ask The Right Questions To Avoid Common Red Flags
Having the wrong financial advisors means working with someone who doesn’t have your best interest in mind. You may lose sight of what’s important to you and find it more challenging to fulfill your financial goals. If you’re in the process of finding your ideal advisor, make sure you’re on the lookout for the most important advisor red flags to spot before you make any decisions. Here are some the questions you should ask to understand financial advisor costs.
Having the wrong financial advisors means working with someone who doesn’t have your best interest in mind. You may lose sight of what’s important to you and find it more challenging to fulfill your financial goals. If you’re in the process of finding your ideal advisor, make sure you’re on the lookout for the most important advisor red flags to spot before you make any decisions. Here are some the questions you should ask to understand financial advisor costs.
Do you receive any compensation from any investment company for recommending any of their products?
This should be a “No”. Some advisors will say that they do not receive commissions specifically, but they actually still receive backdoor kickbacks that you are paying via 12b-1 fees from mutual fund companies. Those additional fees can range from 0.25% to 1%, which can really add up!
Do you receive any compensation from any investment company for recommending any of their products?
Do you earn a commission from private funds or other investments?
The answer should be “No.” If they receive any type of commission, they will be biased and unable to work in your best interest.
Do you earn a commission from private funds or other investments?
Are all of your fees itemized in writing?
The answer here should be “Yes.” Just like when you receive your receipt at a restaurant, you want to know exactly what you’re paying for.
Are all of your fees itemized in writing?
How many clients per ‘client-facing’ advisor does your practice have?
If the practice has more than 200 clients per advisor, then its important to find out how much support staff does the advisor have to service the client. If an advisor has primary coverage of 600 clients, it is fair to assume that they do not offer a high-touch service. Thus, fees should be well below what full-service advisors charge.
How many clients per ‘client-facing’ advisor does your practice have?
Do you receive any compensation from any investment company for recommending any of their products?
Do you earn a commission from private funds or other investments?
Are all of your fees itemized in writing?
How many clients per ‘client-facing’ advisor does your practice have?
Ready to Grow Your Wealth?
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Disclosure: This page is not investment advice and should not be relied on for such advice or as a substitute for consultation with professional accounting, tax, legal or financial advisors. The observations of industry trends should not be read as recommendations for stocks or sectors.
Investment advisory services are provided by Zoe Financial, Inc. (Zoe Financial), an investment adviser registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. Learn more about Zoe Financial on the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website. Brokerage services are provided by Zoe Securities LLC and Apex Clearing Corporation, members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. (FINRA) and Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC). Learn more about Zoe Securities and Apex on FINRA’s BrokerCheck website.
The information in the visuals above is for illustrative purposes only and does not represent an actual user's account, balance, or return. Zoe Financial does not provide tax or legal advice.
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Some of this content may have been generated with the assistance of AI. Please review and sense-check all outputs, as AI tools can occasionally produce incomplete or inaccurate information.
In certain situations, you may be required to disclose that the content was “generated by AI.” Please confirm any specific disclosure or labelling requirements with Compliance.
Copyright © 2026 Zoe Financial, Inc. | All rights reserved
Find an Advisor
Retirement Planning
Disclosure: This page is not investment advice and should not be relied on for such advice or as a substitute for consultation with professional accounting, tax, legal or financial advisors. The observations of industry trends should not be read as recommendations for stocks or sectors.
Investment advisory services are provided by Zoe Financial, Inc. (Zoe Financial), an investment adviser registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. Learn more about Zoe Financial on the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website. Brokerage services are provided by Zoe Securities LLC and Apex Clearing Corporation, members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. (FINRA) and Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC). Learn more about Zoe Securities and Apex on FINRA’s BrokerCheck website.
The information in the visuals above is for illustrative purposes only and does not represent an actual user's account, balance, or return. Zoe Financial does not provide tax or legal advice.
Explore the Zoe Wealth Platform with AI

Some of this content may have been generated with the assistance of AI. Please review and sense-check all outputs, as AI tools can occasionally produce incomplete or inaccurate information.
In certain situations, you may be required to disclose that the content was “generated by AI.” Please confirm any specific disclosure or labelling requirements with Compliance.
Copyright © 2025 Zoe Financial, Inc. | All rights reserved
Find an Advisor
Retirement Planning
Disclosure: This page is not investment advice and should not be relied on for such advice or as a substitute for consultation with professional accounting, tax, legal or financial advisors. The observations of industry trends should not be read as recommendations for stocks or sectors.
Investment advisory services are provided by Zoe Financial, Inc. (Zoe Financial), an investment adviser registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. Learn more about Zoe Financial on the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website. Brokerage services are provided by Zoe Securities LLC and Apex Clearing Corporation, members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. (FINRA) and Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC). Learn more about Zoe Securities and Apex on FINRA’s BrokerCheck website.
The information in the visuals above is for illustrative purposes only and does not represent an actual user's account, balance, or return. Zoe Financial does not provide tax or legal advice.
Explore the Zoe Wealth Platform with AI

Some of this content may have been generated with the assistance of AI. Please review and sense-check all outputs, as AI tools can occasionally produce incomplete or inaccurate information.
In certain situations, you may be required to disclose that the content was “generated by AI.” Please confirm any specific disclosure or labelling requirements with Compliance.
Copyright © 2026 Zoe Financial, Inc. | All rights reserved
