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When your investable assets cross the $1 million threshold — and certainly as they approach $5 million or more — the financial advice you receive must operate on a fundamentally different standard. A fee-based fiduciary operating under the fiduciary standard is legally required to put your interests first and to disclose all forms of compensation, without exception. For high-net-worth families navigating complex tax situations, concentrated stock positions, multi-generational estate plans, and executive compensation packages, that distinction is not a minor footnote. It is the difference between advice designed to serve you and advice designed to generate revenue for someone else.

This guide explains exactly how a fee-based fiduciary protects affluent families from the conflicts of interest that are baked into most advisory relationships — and why those conflicts become exponentially more costly as your wealth grows.

What Is a Fee-Based Fiduciary, and Why Does the Distinction Matter?

The Legal Definition of a Fiduciary

A fiduciary is a Registered Investment Adviser (RIA) bound by a legal duty to put your interests first. Fiduciary advisors are typically compensated through transparent, client-paid fees — a flat fee, hourly rate, or percentage of assets under management — and any other compensation, including commissions on products such as annuities or insurance, must be fully and clearly disclosed. The fiduciary standard, governed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, requires the advisor to act in the client’s best interest at all times, disclose all material conflicts, and prioritize the client’s financial outcomes above the firm’s revenue goals.

This is a higher legal standard than the “suitability” standard that governs broker-dealers. Under suitability, a broker may recommend a product that is merely appropriate for your situation — even if a better, lower-cost alternative exists — as long as it generates a commission for the firm.

Fee-Only vs. Fee-Based: A Critical Distinction

The terminology here is intentionally confusing, and high-net-worth families are often misled by it. Fee-only means the advisor is compensated exclusively by the client. Fee-based means the advisor charges fees AND may also earn commissions on products they sell. A fee-based advisor at a national wirehouse, for example, may manage your brokerage account for a fee while also earning a commission when they move a portion of your assets into an annuity or proprietary mutual fund.

For a family with $3 million in investable assets, that distinction can translate into tens of thousands of dollars in hidden costs annually — costs that compound quietly over a decade into six-figure losses in wealth accumulation.

a side-by-side comparison graphic showing a fiduciary advisor structure with a clean direct line between client and advisor versus a commission-based structure with arrows pointing to product companies and referral fees — fee-based fiduciary
a side-by-side comparison graphic showing a fiduciary advisor structure with a clean direct line between client and advisor versus a commission-based structure with arrows pointing to product companies and referral fees

Why Conflicts of Interest Are More Dangerous for HNW Families

Higher Stakes Mean Higher Conflict Risk

Mass-market investors with $100,000 in a target-date fund face relatively limited exposure to advisor conflicts. The stakes are modest, the products are simple, and the decisions are few. But high-net-worth families operate in an entirely different financial environment where the decisions are larger, more complex, and far more consequential.

Consider the scenarios that are routine for affluent clients but virtually nonexistent for average investors:

  • A $2 million concentrated stock position that needs to be unwound tax-efficiently over multiple years
  • A $500,000 annual income that requires careful IRMAA planning to avoid surcharges on Medicare premiums
  • An estate valued at $8 million that sits near the federal estate tax exemption cliff
  • An executive compensation package with non-qualified deferred compensation, restricted stock units, and ISO options that all require coordinated tax planning
  • A $5 million rollover from a corporate pension plan that attracts aggressive product pitches from commission-based advisors

In every one of these scenarios, a conflicted advisor has a financial incentive to recommend a product or strategy that serves their revenue model — not your balance sheet. A fee-based fiduciary is legally bound to act in your best interest and to disclose every form of compensation, so any potential conflict is transparent rather than hidden.

The Dollar Cost of Conflicted Advice at the HNW Level

The Vanguard research framework known as “Advisor’s Alpha” estimates that a disciplined advisor relationship can add approximately 3% in net returns annually through behavioral coaching, tax-efficient investing, and asset location strategies. But conflicted advice works in the opposite direction. Research on commission-based advice consistently shows that advised investors in conflicted relationships hold higher-cost products, experience more unnecessary portfolio turnover, and pay embedded fees that are difficult to see but easy to calculate in hindsight.

For a $5 million portfolio, a 1% annual drag from conflicted advice — through higher expense ratios, unnecessary trading, or suboptimal tax positioning — compounds to over $600,000 in lost wealth over 10 years, assuming a 7% gross return environment. That is the real cost of not working with a fiduciary advisor who is transparent about every cost and conflict.

7 Proven Ways a Fee-Based Fiduciary Protects High-Net-Worth Families

1. A Fee-Based Fiduciary Manages and Discloses Product Commission Conflicts

The most fundamental protection a fee-based fiduciary provides is full transparency around how the advisor is paid. As a fiduciary, the advisor is legally bound to act in your best interest and to disclose all compensation — including any commissions on products such as annuities (which can run 5–8% of premium on variable products), as well as any load mutual fund payouts or referral arrangements. That disclosure obligation means every recommendation must be evaluated and justified on its merit for your specific situation, with any potential conflict put in front of you in writing rather than buried.

This matters particularly for high-net-worth families who are routinely marketed complex, high-commission products: indexed universal life policies, structured notes, non-traded REITs, and variable annuities. These products are not inherently evil, but when an advisor earns a large commission for placing you in them, you have no assurance the recommendation was driven by your interests rather than their compensation schedule.

2. Transparent, Predictable Fees Align Incentives Properly

A fee-based fiduciary typically charges advisory fees in one of three ways: a percentage of assets under management (commonly 0.50–1.00% for larger portfolios), a flat annual retainer, or an hourly consulting rate. All fees are disclosed in advance in the ADV Part 2 filing, which is a public document the SEC requires every RIA to provide and update annually.

When your advisor’s compensation grows only when your portfolio grows, your incentives are perfectly aligned. They have every reason to minimize unnecessary costs, optimize tax efficiency, and avoid the portfolio churn that commissions otherwise reward. You can review exact fee structures for comprehensive wealth management services at Davies Wealth Management to understand what transparent, fiduciary-grade pricing looks like in practice.

3. Objective Tax Planning Without Product Motivation

Tax planning for high-net-worth families is one of the most consequential areas where advisor conflicts cause real damage. A commission-based advisor selling annuities has a powerful financial incentive to frame tax-deferred growth inside an annuity as the optimal strategy — even when a Roth conversion ladder, direct indexing with tax-loss harvesting, or a charitable remainder trust might be significantly more effective for your situation.

A fee-based fiduciary evaluates your tax situation under a best-interest obligation, with any product-related compensation fully disclosed up front. In 2026, with the federal estate tax exemption under ongoing legislative scrutiny and individual income tax rates subject to potential changes, objective financial planning has never been more valuable for high-net-worth families. Consult a qualified tax professional for your specific situation.

4. Fiduciary-Grade Investment Selection Across the Entire Universe

A broker at a national wirehouse or bank is often limited to a proprietary product shelf — the firm’s own mutual funds, managed accounts, and structured products that generate revenue for the parent company. A fee-based fiduciary RIA has access to the entire investable universe and selects managers, funds, and strategies based on fit, cost, and performance history rather than a proprietary product shelf.

For high-net-worth investors, this open-architecture approach means access to:

  • Institutional share class mutual funds with dramatically lower expense ratios
  • Direct indexing platforms that allow tax-loss harvesting at the individual security level
  • Alternative investments — private equity, hedge funds, private credit — evaluated on merit rather than distribution agreements
  • Low-cost ETF strategies that mass-market advisors have little financial motivation to recommend
a financial advisor at a clean modern desk reviewing investment portfolio documents with a high-net-worth client couple in a professional office setting — fee-based fiduciary
a financial advisor at a clean modern desk reviewing investment portfolio documents with a high-net-worth client couple in a professional office setting

5. Estate and Legacy Planning Without Insurance Sales Pressure

Estate planning is another arena where conflicts can be extraordinarily expensive. An advisor who also sells life insurance products — even within a fee-based structure — has a financial incentive to recommend insurance-based estate planning tools like private placement life insurance (PPLI), survivorship life policies, or irrevocable life insurance trusts (ILITs) regardless of whether they represent the optimal solution.

For a family with an estate approaching the federal exemption threshold (currently $13.99 million per individual for 2026, with legislative uncertainty on the horizon), estate planning decisions can involve millions of dollars and multiple generations. A fee-based fiduciary coordinates with your estate attorney and CPA to implement the strategy that serves your legacy goals, with any insurance- or product-related compensation disclosed so it can never quietly drive the recommendation. Consult a qualified estate planning attorney for your specific situation.

6. Retirement Distribution Planning Designed Around Your Tax Bracket

High-net-worth retirees face retirement distribution challenges that simply do not exist for average investors: required minimum distributions from multi-million dollar IRAs that create substantial taxable income, IRMAA surcharges that can add thousands to annual Medicare premiums, and Social Security taxation at the maximum rate. In 2026, the IRMAA income thresholds for the highest surcharge bracket begin at $500,000 for single filers and $750,000 for married couples filing jointly.

A fee-based fiduciary approaches these challenges with a single objective: minimize your lifetime tax burden and maximize after-tax wealth. A commission-based advisor, by contrast, may direct excess cash into a high-commission annuity product when a Roth conversion strategy, qualified charitable distribution (QCD) stacking, or a donor-advised fund contribution would produce dramatically better outcomes. Consult a qualified financial professional to determine the right approach for your specific situation.

7. Ongoing Accountability Through Transparent Reporting and Disclosure

A fee-based fiduciary is required to provide clear, comprehensive reporting on portfolio performance, fees paid, and any material changes to their business or compensation structure. The SEC’s ADV Part 2 disclosure requirement ensures clients have access to full information about fees, commissions, and any potential conflicts — so nothing about how the advisor is compensated stays hidden.

Contrast this with a broker-dealer relationship where trailing commissions, 12b-1 fees, and revenue-sharing agreements may never appear in plain language on a client statement. For a high-net-worth family managing significant wealth across taxable accounts, retirement accounts, trust structures, and real estate, complete transparency is not a luxury — it is a prerequisite for sound decision-making.

The HNW Comparison: Fee-Based Fiduciary vs. Traditional Broker

Factor Fee-Based Fiduciary RIA Commission-Based Broker / Fee-Based Advisor
Legal Standard Fiduciary — must act in client’s best interest Suitability or Reg BI — product must be “appropriate”
Compensation Structure Advisory fees, with any commissions fully disclosed Fees plus commissions, 12b-1 fees, revenue sharing
Investment Access Open architecture — full market universe Often limited to proprietary or preferred product shelf
Fee Transparency Fully disclosed in SEC ADV Part 2 Embedded costs often invisible on statements
Tax Planning Objectivity No product incentive — strategy chosen on merit May favor tax-deferred products that generate commissions
Estate Planning Approach Coordinates with attorneys and CPAs, no insurance agenda May push insurance-based solutions for commission income
Conflict Disclosure Minimal conflicts; fully disclosed Multiple embedded conflicts; disclosure often buried

Recognizing When You’ve Outgrown Your Current Advisor

Signs Your Current Relationship May Have a Conflict Problem

In my experience working with clients who transition to a fiduciary relationship, certain patterns appear consistently. They often describe receiving product recommendations that felt more like sales pitches, difficulty getting clear answers about what they were actually paying, and a growing sense that their advisor was reactive rather than proactively planning around their tax situation.

Specific warning signs worth examining include:

  • Your portfolio holds annuities, proprietary mutual funds, or structured products you don’t fully understand
  • You cannot find a single document showing the total annual cost of your advisory relationship
  • Your advisor has never discussed Roth conversion strategy, IRMAA planning, or estate tax exposure with you
  • Tax planning conversations are referred to an outside CPA your advisor has a referral arrangement with
  • Your quarterly reviews focus on market performance rather than progress toward your personal financial goals

The Complexity Threshold Where a Fiduciary Becomes Essential

Not every financial situation requires the full depth of a fiduciary engagement. But above $1 million in investable assets, the complexity, tax exposure, and estate planning considerations grow rapidly enough that a fiduciary standard becomes a financial necessity rather than a preference.

For executives managing RSUs, ISOs, and deferred compensation, for business owners planning a liquidity event, and for retirees navigating multi-account drawdown strategies, the coordination required is simply beyond what a product-selling relationship is designed to provide. According to research published by Morningstar, comprehensive financial planning opportunities and behavioral guidance can add meaningful value precisely because it addresses the full complexity of a client’s financial life — not just the portion that generates transaction revenue.

a confident successful business owner or executive reviewing a comprehensive financial plan document with charts showing tax-efficient wealth projections and estate planning timelines — fee-based fiduciary
a confident successful business owner or executive reviewing a comprehensive financial plan document with charts showing tax-efficient wealth projections and estate planning timelines

How Davies Wealth Management Operates as a Fee-Based Fiduciary

Our Fee-Based Fiduciary Commitment to High-Net-Worth Clients

Davies Wealth Management is a fee-based fiduciary RIA based in Stuart, Florida, serving high-net-worth individuals, executives, professional athletes, and business owners. We operate under the SEC fiduciary standard, meaning every recommendation we make must be in your best interest — not ours. As a fee-based fiduciary, we are legally bound to act in your best interest and to disclose all compensation, including any commissions, so you always know exactly how we are paid.

Our planning approach integrates investment management, tax-efficient portfolio construction, retirement distribution planning, estate coordination, and executive compensation strategy under one roof. We work alongside your CPA and estate attorney to ensure every component of your financial life is aligned toward your goals. You can schedule a discovery conversation to explore whether our approach is the right fit for your situation.

The Fee-Based Fiduciary Advantage for Florida Residents

Florida presents unique financial planning opportunities for high-net-worth families — particularly around state income tax elimination, domicile strategy for multi-state situations, and homestead exemption planning. As a Florida-based fee-based fiduciary, Davies Wealth Management understands the specific planning levers available to Florida residents and how to integrate them into a comprehensive wealth strategy.

The Kiplinger retirement and tax research consistently highlights Florida as one of the most tax-advantaged states for high-income retirees and executives — but capturing that advantage requires deliberate planning, not passive residency. Consult a qualified financial and tax professional for your specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions About Fee-Based Fiduciary Advisors

What is the difference between a fee-only fiduciary and a fee-based financial advisor?

A fee-only fiduciary is compensated exclusively by client fees — no commissions, product payments, or referral income of any kind. A fee-based advisor charges fees but may also earn commissions on products they sell, creating potential conflicts of interest. For high-net-worth families, this distinction is critical because conflicted advice on large portfolios can compound into significant wealth losses over time.

Is a fiduciary required to act in my best interest by law?

Yes. Registered Investment Advisers operating under the fiduciary standard are legally required by the SEC’s Investment Advisers Act of 1940 to act in the client’s best interest, disclose all material conflicts, and prioritize the client’s financial outcomes. This is a stricter standard than the suitability or Regulation Best Interest standard that applies to broker-dealers. Consult a qualified financial professional to verify any advisor’s registration and fiduciary status.

How does a fee-based fiduciary get paid?

A fee-based fiduciary is paid primarily through client-paid advisory fees, typically structured as a percentage of assets under management (AUM), a flat annual or retainer fee, or an hourly consulting rate, and may also earn commissions on certain products such as annuities. All fees and any commissions are disclosed in the SEC-required ADV Part 2 document, which is publicly available. This transparency lets you see exactly how your advisor is compensated before you engage them.

At what asset level should I consider working with a fee-based fiduciary?

While fiduciary advice is valuable at any wealth level, the complexity and stakes that make it truly essential generally begin around $500,000 to $1 million in investable assets. Above this threshold, tax planning, estate planning, investment selection, and retirement distribution decisions become complex enough that conflicted advice can cost high-net-worth families significantly. Executives, business owners, and retirees with multi-million dollar portfolios have the most to gain from the objective, comprehensive approach a fee-based fiduciary provides.

How do I verify that an advisor is truly a fiduciary?

You can verify any advisor’s registration status, fee structure, and disclosed conflicts by reviewing their Form ADV Part 2 on the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure database at adviserinfo.sec.gov. Ask the advisor directly: “Are you a fiduciary? How are you compensated, and do you earn any commissions or other payments beyond client-paid fees?” A genuine fiduciary will answer clearly and in writing and disclose every form of compensation. If the answer is evasive, that itself is a signal worth heeding.

Taking the Next Step Toward Conflict-Free Wealth Management

The wealth you have built deserves protection from the structural conflicts that are embedded in most advisory relationships. A fee-based fiduciary is not simply a different type of advisor — it is a fundamentally different standard of service, accountability, and legal obligation, anchored in a best-interest duty and full disclosure of every form of compensation. For high-net-worth families managing complex tax situations, multi-generational estate goals, and significant investable assets, working with a fiduciary advisor is one of the most consequential financial decisions you can make.

At Davies Wealth Management, we have built our entire practice on this standard — because we believe the families we serve deserve advice that is designed exclusively around their financial success, not ours.


Want to understand how your current advisor fees — visible and hidden — are affecting your long-term wealth? Use our Fee Impact Calculator to see your real fee impact over time. It takes less than two minutes and the results are often eye-opening for high-net-worth families.

Ready for personalized guidance from a fee-based fiduciary? Book a complimentary phone call with our team and learn how Davies Wealth Management’s conflict-free approach can be applied to your specific financial situation.


This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Advisory services offered through Davies Wealth Management, a Registered Investment Adviser. Please consult a qualified financial, tax, or legal professional regarding your specific situation.

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Davies Wealth Management · Fee-Based Fiduciary · Stuart, FL