A 1% advisor fee sounds harmless until you translate it into dollars. For a business owner, the real question is not whether 1% is common. It is whether the planning you receive is worth the money leaving your account every year.
What 1% really means in dollars
At $1 million, a 1% advisory fee is about $10,000 per year. At $2 million, it is about $20,000. At $5 million, it is about $50,000. At $10 million, it is about $100,000 per year. Those numbers are before any fund expense ratios, platform costs, tax drag, or missed planning opportunities. The fee may still be justified, but it should never be invisible.
The compounding cost is bigger than the annual invoice
A fee paid from the portfolio is not just this year's expense. It is also money that no longer compounds for you. Over ten or twenty years, the hidden cost is not only the advisory fee. It is the growth that fee could have earned if it had stayed invested. This is why business owners need to understand both the annual dollar cost and the long-term drag.
When a 1% fee can be worth it
A higher fee can make sense when the advisor is doing high-value work: tax-aware planning, business cash-flow decisions, retirement contribution strategy, estate coordination, risk management, CPA collaboration, charitable planning, and real decision support during large transitions. If the advisor helped you avoid one major mistake, the value can be obvious.
When a 1% fee starts to look expensive
The fee starts to look expensive when the relationship is mostly investment management, quarterly performance reviews, generic retirement projections, and reactive service. If your advisor is not reviewing your tax return, coordinating with your CPA, understanding your business income, or helping you turn profit into personal wealth, the value equation gets thin quickly.
Why business owners feel this more sharply
For W-2 employees, most financial planning complexity may live in savings rate, benefits, retirement accounts, and investments. Business owners carry a different puzzle: uneven income, entity structure, owner pay, retained earnings, tax reserves, hiring, succession, business sale risk, family goals, and personal liquidity. An advisor paid like a comprehensive planner should be doing comprehensive work.
Flat fee versus AUM is not really about cheap versus expensive
Flat fee planning is not automatically better, and AUM is not automatically bad. The better question is alignment. If most of the value is planning work outside the portfolio, a flat fee may align better. If the advisor is truly managing complex assets and planning deeply around them, an AUM fee may still be reasonable. The model should match the work.
The five-question fee test
Ask your advisor: What did I pay you in dollars last year? What proactive recommendations did you make? How did you use my tax return? How did you coordinate with my CPA or other professionals? What planning decisions changed because of your advice? If the answers are vague, you may not have a fee problem. You may have a fit problem.
What to do before firing anyone
Do not switch advisors out of frustration alone. First, translate the fee into dollars, list the work you actually received, gather your tax return and statements, and ask for a plain-English summary of value. Then compare that to the complexity of your life. A calm audit beats an emotional jump.
How the scorecard helps
The Advisor Scorecard is designed to make the invisible parts of advisor value easier to see. It asks whether the relationship reaches your business, your taxes, your cash flow, and the life your money is supposed to support. The fee is only one part of the answer, but it is the part most people finally pay attention to first.
Questions to ask next
- Is a 1% financial advisor fee too high?
- How much does a 1% advisor fee cost?
- Is flat fee financial planning better than AUM?
- What should a business owner get for an advisor fee?
If those questions made you pause, take the 60-second Advisor Scorecard. No fluff. Just a clearer sense of where your advisor relationship stands.
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Related resources
1% AUM Cost Calculator
Put your own portfolio number into the fee math.
Flat Fee vs. AUM for Business Owners
Compare fee models once the annual dollar amount is clear.
Financial Advisor for Business Owners
See what owners should expect beyond investment management.
Take the Advisor Scorecard
Turn the fee question into a quick advisor-fit check.
Financial Advisor 92024
A local path into the same advisor-fit questions.
Financial Planning for Women Business Owners
A founder-focused planning page for women business owners.
Recommended next steps
If this topic raised bigger questions, these pages are the cleanest places to keep going.
- The Hidden Cost of a 1% Financial Advisor — The flagship fee guide: what 1% can cost at $1M, $2M, $5M, and $10M, and what business owners should expect in return.
- Do I Need a Financial Advisor Quiz? — The root scorecard page Google is already testing for quiz searches.
- Nicky Morong, CFP®, CLU® — The expert/entity page connecting Nicky, Peterkin Financial, the book, and the scorecard.
- Financial Advisor for Business Owners — The main page for business-owner advisor-fit search intent.
- 1% AUM Cost Calculator — The clearest calculator page for advisor-fee and 1% cost searches.
- Flat Fee vs. AUM for Business Owners — The comparison page for flat-fee, AUM, and percentage-fee intent.