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Estate Professional — Financial Advisor

name: estate-pro-financial-advisor

description: “Guidance on engaging financial advisors for trust/estate investment management, portfolio diversification, and asset allocation. Use when managing trust investment assets. Typical costs: 0.5-2% AUM or $200-400/hr.”

Estate Professional — Financial Advisor

Instructions

Advise trustees and executors on when to engage a financial advisor for trust and estate assets, how to evaluate advisors, and how to ensure fiduciary-quality management.

When You Need a Financial Advisor

  • Managing investment assets within a trust or estate during administration
  • Rebalancing a decedent’s portfolio to align with trust purposes and beneficiary needs
  • Creating an investment policy statement (IPS) for ongoing trust management
  • Evaluating whether to retain or liquidate concentrated stock positions
  • Coordinating asset allocation with distribution schedules and beneficiary timelines

Typical Costs

Fee Model Range
Assets Under Management (AUM) 0.5–2% annually (decreasing at higher tiers)
Hourly/project-based $200–400/hr
Flat retainer $2,000–10,000/yr
Underlying fund expenses 0.03–0.75% (in addition to advisor fees)

How to Find and Select

  • Prefer fee-only fiduciaries — they are legally required to act in the client’s best interest
  • CFP (Certified Financial Planner) or CFA (Chartered Financial Analyst) designations
  • NAPFA (National Association of Personal Financial Advisors) for fee-only advisors
  • SEC or state investment advisor registration — verify via the SEC IAPD database
  • Look for advisors with specific trust and estate management experience
  • Referrals from the estate attorney or CPA carry weight

Questions to Ask

  • “Are you a fiduciary at all times, and will you put that in writing?”
  • “What is your experience managing trust assets specifically?”
  • “How do you determine an appropriate investment strategy for a trust with multiple beneficiaries?”
  • “What are your all-in costs including fund expenses?”
  • “How do you coordinate with the trustee, CPA, and estate attorney?”
  • “What is your approach to concentrated positions inherited from the decedent?”

Red Flags

  • Commission-based compensation with no fiduciary obligation
  • No specific trust or estate investment experience
  • Recommends complex products (variable annuities, private placements) without clear justification
  • Cannot explain the prudent investor rule as it applies to trustees
  • Unwilling to provide a fee schedule in writing
  • Does not ask about the trust document’s investment provisions

Working Effectively

  • Share the trust document — it may contain investment restrictions or directives
  • Establish an investment policy statement before making changes
  • Coordinate tax-loss harvesting and capital gains with the CPA
  • Review fees annually — negotiate as AUM grows
  • Ensure the advisor understands trustee fiduciary duties, not just personal financial planning
  • Request quarterly performance reports benchmarked against appropriate indices

Examples

Scenario: Trust holds $1.2M in brokerage assets with income and remainder beneficiaries. Action: Engage a fee-only fiduciary advisor with trust experience. Create an IPS balancing current income needs with remainder growth. Budget 0.5–1% AUM annually.

Scenario: Estate holds a concentrated stock position (40% of portfolio in one company). Action: Engage an advisor to develop a diversification strategy considering tax implications of liquidation. Coordinate with the CPA on capital gains timing.

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