Wealth Management Fees – How Much Do Advisors Cost in 2025? (And Why I Think It’s Too Much for Too Little)
It’s a fair question. In fact, it’s often the first thing people want to understand before they commit to any kind of professional guidance, whether that’s asset management fees, portfolio management fees, or broader investment management fees.
Many start by searching things like “financial advisor fees”, “how much do financial advisors charge”, or “financial advisor cost Canada,” which don’t get me wrong, is an important consideration. However, what most people really want to understand when it comes to cost is: are the fees that I am paying going to eat into my retirement and jeopardize my future, while the returns end up being subpar at the same time?
There is an important distinction that needs to be made when understanding the responsibilities of the person that you’re working with. Under current regulations, a financial advisor is typically required to facilitate the sale of investment products that meet the risk-tolerance requirements of the client. This is an important role; however, there are many components to someone’s financial life that are being ignored if this is looked at in isolation.
This is what has led the industry to shift more toward “wealth management,” a term flaunted around so casually that it often lacks the appreciation of how important and how complex the matter truly is. Selling products that fit the client’s risk of tolerance simply isn’t enough. What’s truly needed is a broader plan that supports long-term wealth and deeper tax-efficient planning within the context of life goals.
The challenge is that most firms don’t clearly explain what you actually receive for these costs. Even options marketed as fee-only wealth management can vary dramatically in terms of value and transparency.
Here’s my opinion: most clients are paying too much and getting too little.
The Problem with Industry Fees
If you walk into a Canadian bank today, chances are you’ll be steered into one of their proprietary mutual funds.
The average cost? Around 2–2.5% of your assets every single year. According to research published by NerdWallet, most traditional financial advisors charge between 0.5% and 2% depending on account size and service model, meaning many Canadians unknowingly sit at the top end of the cost spectrum.
What do you get for that fee? For many clients:
An index fund that could be purchased for free (or nearly free) elsewhere
Little to no proactive planning around tax, estate, insurance, or corporate structure
An advisor you rarely, if ever, hear from
In other words: you’re paying premium fees for bargain-bin service.
Worse, many of these funds are “locked in.” That means that if you want to move your money, you often have to sell first — triggering taxes and delays.
On top of that, the fees themselves aren’t always transparent. Morningstar’s global fee study has consistently shown that Canada has some of the highest mutual fund MERs in the world, often exceeding 2%, and these costs are rarely explained clearly to clients.
It’s an expensive, inefficient system.
Why This Matters for Professionals
For incorporated professionals, such as lawyers, doctors, consultants, business owners, the stakes are even higher.
You’re not just investing personally. Your corporation, tax planning, and estate goals are all intertwined.
Yet too often, investment advice is delivered in a silo. You get recommendations on a portfolio, but no guidance on how it fits with your corporate accounts, your tax strategy, or your broader life goals.
That fragmented approach leads to:
Overpaid taxes
Missed planning opportunities
Underwhelming returns on both money and peace of mind
I believe fees should be justified by real value.
Approach360™ — A Different Standard
That’s why I built Approach360™, a comprehensive financial strategy designed for incorporated professionals earning $200K–$1M+.
Instead of just charging you to sit in a mutual fund, we:
Align your financial strategy with your personal values and vision for life
Optimize your corporate and personal structures for tax efficiency
Oversee your investments in the context of your full financial plan
Coordinate with legal, insurance, and accounting partners to protect your wealth
Handle the financial admin so you don’t have to
One relationship. Every financial decision covered. That’s what your fees should pay for.
Fee Breakdown & Data of Common Fee Types
To make meaningful fee comparisons, here’s a breakdown of the most common pricing models across the industry:
| Fee Type | Description | Typical Range (2025) |
| AUM (Assets Under Management) | Percentage charged on total assets managed | 0.5% – 2% annually |
| Flat Planning Fee | One-time or annual fee for a full financial plan | $1,500 – $7,500+ |
| Hourly Fee | Pay only for advice hours used | $150 – $500/hour |
| Retainer / Subscription | Ongoing access to planning + support | $2,000 – $12,000/year |
| Commission-Based | Advisor is compensated through commissions on products sold | Varies; often hidden via MERs |
All-In Cost Explanation
Many Canadians pay both the advisor fee AND the mutual fund MER (often 1.5%–2%), meaning the true cost is much higher than advertised.
Hidden Fees to Watch For
Trading commissions
Deferred sales charges
Fund management expenses (MERs)
Trailer commissions paid to advisors
Examples & Scenarios
Here’s what fees look like at different portfolio sizes under AUM pricing:
$100K portfolio → 1% fee = $1,000/year
$500K portfolio → 1% fee = $5,000/year
$1M portfolio → 1% fee = $10,000/year
$2M portfolio → 1% fee = $20,000/year
$5M portfolio → 1% fee = $50,000/year
Long-Term Impact of Fees
A 1% fee compounded over 25 years can reduce your final wealth by hundreds of thousands, sometimes more than $500,000 depending on returns.
Comparison Example
| Investment Type | Typical All-In Cost | Pros | Cons |
| Bank Mutual Fund | ~2.0–2.5%+ annually | Easy to buy, advisor included | High fees, low transparency, poor tax efficiency |
| ETF Portfolio | ~0.25–0.40% annually | Low cost, diversified, transparent | No planning, no tax strategy, DIY risk |
| Discretionary Portfolio Manager | ~0.80–1.20% annually | Professional management, planning integration, tax coordination | Fees vary by firm; quality differs widely |
Service Breakdown
| Service Category | Typical Financial Advisor | Portfolio / Wealth Manager |
| Investment Authority | Suggests products; client must approve trades | Discretionary management (executes decisions on behalf of client) |
| Compensation Model | Often commission-based or fee-based | Typically transparent, fee-only or AUM-based |
| Investment Oversight | Periodic check-ins (often annually) | Ongoing monitoring & proactive adjustments |
| Tax Strategy Integration | Limited or none | Deep integration with tax planning & structure |
| Corporate Planning | Rarely included | Included for incorporated professionals |
| Estate & Insurance Coordination | Basic referrals | Full coordination with your advisors |
| Planning Depth | Product-focused | Holistic, integrated, long-term strategy |
| Who It Fits | General public, beginners | High-income professionals, complex needs |
Transparency & Conflicts of Interest
Fee-only = paid only by the client, avoiding product bias
Fee-based = combination of fees and commissions
Commission-based = compensated for selling products
Why Conflicts Matter
Bank advisors often recommend in-house funds because they are compensated for doing so, not because it’s best for the client.
Red Flags When Choosing an Advisor
Unclear or hidden fees
No written financial plan
Compensation tied to product sales
Infrequent communication
How to Reduce Your Fees Without Reducing Quality
Avoid high-MER mutual funds
Consider ETF-based portfolios
Work with fee-only or transparent portfolio managers
Consolidate accounts to lower tiered AUM brackets
Conclusion
The reality is simple: fees matter — but value matters more. Paying for true planning, oversight, and strategic integration is worthwhile. Paying for a product and a once-a-year phone call is not.
If you’re an incorporated professional in Canada, and you want a clearer understanding of what you’re paying — and what you should be getting — Approach360™ was built for you.
Book a clarity call and let’s make every dollar you earn work harder for your future.
Common Questions (FAQ)
1. What is a reasonable fee in 2025?
A reasonable fee depends on the level of service you’re receiving. In Canada:
0.8%–1.2% is typical for discretionary portfolio management
1.5%–2.5% is common for bank mutual funds (often without planning)
Flat fees for planning range $1,500–$7,500+
A reasonable fee is one that aligns with true value: integrated tax planning, investment oversight, and ongoing financial strategy — not simply product access.
2. What do advisors actually do for their fee?
It varies dramatically by advisor type.
Typical financial advisors:
Recommend investment products
Evaluate risk tolerance
Meet annually or occasionally
Portfolio/wealth managers:
Manage investments directly (discretionary authority)
Provide ongoing oversight
Integrate tax, estate, corporate, and retirement planning
Align planning with long-term goals
Coordinate with accountants and lawyers
If all you’re receiving is a product recommendation and a yearly check-in, you’re likely overpaying.
3. Are financial advisor fees tax deductible in Canada?
Not always. Here’s the breakdown:
Fees paid for investment management (AUM fees) may be tax deductible in some corporate or business contexts.
Fees embedded inside mutual funds (MERs) are not deductible.
Financial planning fees may be deductible for businesses or corporations, not typically for individuals.
Incorporated professionals often have more opportunities for fee deductibility — when the structure is set up properly.
4. How do I know if I’m overpaying?
You are likely overpaying if:
You hold bank mutual funds with MERs above 1.5%
You’re charged a fee but receive no tax planning
You rarely hear from your advisor
You don’t have a written financial plan
Your portfolio underperforms benchmarks after fees
High fees are only justified when they come with deep planning, proactive oversight, and strategic integration.
5. Should I choose percentage fees or flat fees?
Both can work — depending on your needs:
Percentage fees (AUM) make sense when you want ongoing management and planning.
Flat fees work well if you only need a standalone financial plan.
Hourly fees are best for one-time advice.
Professionals with complex corporate structures usually benefit most from integrated AUM-based wealth management.
6. What is a typical wealth management fee?
In Canada:
0.8%–1.2% for discretionary portfolio managers
1.5%–2.5% for bank-managed mutual funds
0.25%–0.40% for ETF-based solutions (no planning)
The key is understanding what you get for the fee — not just the number.
7. Is a 1% financial advisor fee worth it?
It depends.
A 1% fee is worth it when it includes:
Tax planning
Retirement structure optimization
Corporate integration
Estate considerations
Ongoing investment oversight
It is not worth it when it only includes a mutual fund and a yearly review.
8. Is $500,000 enough to work with a financial advisor?
Yes. Many portfolio managers accept clients starting around $250K–$500K.
For incorporated professionals, complexity often matters more than asset size — corporations, holding companies, and multi-account structures can justify advanced planning even with smaller portfolios.
9. Is a 1% management fee acceptable for financial advice?
Yes — if you receive full value.
A 1% fee is acceptable when it includes:
Active oversight
Coordinated tax strategy
Corporate + personal planning
Advisor accessibility
Performance reporting and transparency
A 1% fee is not acceptable when paired with high-MER mutual funds or minimal service.
Your first step is a free consultation call to see if we’re a good fit to work together. Click the button to set up a time I’m looking forward to meeting you!