
Compensation - Commission vs Fee Based
Commission vs. Fee-for-Service
Understanding How Your Advisor Is Paid and Why It Matters
One of the most common questions investors ask is this:
Is it better to work with a commission-based advisor or a fee-for-service advisor?
The honest answer is not black and white. Both compensation models can work very well when handled properly. Both can also create problems if incentives are misaligned.
What matters most is not the label. It is how the advisor operates within that structure.
Let’s break it down clearly.
What Is a Commission-Based Advisor?
A commission-based advisor is compensated through the financial products they implement. In Canada, this often applies to:
Segregated funds
Mutual funds
Life insurance
Annuities
For example, when working with providers such as iA Financial Group, compensation is built into the product structure and disclosed within the management expense ratio or policy illustration.
The client does not receive a separate invoice. The compensation is embedded.
Benefits of Commission-Based Compensation
1. Accessibility for More Families
Many households in Atlantic Canada do not have large portfolios. A fee-for-service model that charges hourly rates or flat planning fees can be expensive upfront.
Commission-based structures allow:
Smaller investors to receive advice
Young families to begin investing
Clients to access insurance planning without a large initial cash outlay
This creates broader access to professional guidance.
2. Alignment With Implementation
In a commission model, the advisor is compensated when a plan is put into action.
That can encourage:
Moving from analysis to execution
Getting life insurance in place rather than delaying
Starting investments instead of overthinking
Advice without implementation does not build wealth. Execution matters.
3. No Ongoing Planning Invoice
Clients often appreciate knowing:
There is no hourly billing
No unexpected invoice for a phone call
No separate annual planning fee
The cost structure is known upfront and embedded.
Potential Downsides of Commission-Based Models
To be balanced, there are potential concerns.
1. Incentive to Sell
Because compensation is tied to product placement, a poor advisor may:
Recommend products too quickly
Suggest unnecessary policies
Focus on higher-paying solutions
This is not a flaw of the model itself. It is a flaw in the advisor’s ethics.
2. Embedded Costs Can Feel Opaque
Even when disclosed properly, embedded fees inside investment products can:
Feel less transparent
Be harder for clients to compare
Create confusion about total cost
That is why clear communication is critical.
What Is a Fee-for-Service Advisor?
A fee-for-service advisor charges directly for:
Financial planning
Portfolio management
Ongoing advisory services
This may be:
A percentage of assets under management
A flat annual retainer
An hourly planning rate
The client sees the fee clearly on statements or invoices.
Benefits of Fee-for-Service Compensation
1. Perceived Objectivity
Because compensation is not tied to a specific product, clients often feel:
Advice is more independent
Recommendations are product-neutral
There is less incentive to “sell.”
This can build trust quickly.
2. Transparent Cost Structure
Clients can easily see:
Exactly what they are paying
What percentage of assets are being charged
How fees change as assets grow
Transparency can be reassuring.
3. Alignment With Portfolio Growth
When fees are based on assets under management, the advisor’s compensation grows only if:
The portfolio grows
Additional assets are consolidated
This can align incentives around long-term growth and retention.
Potential Downsides of Fee-for-Service Models
Again, balance matters.
1. Minimum Asset Requirements
Many fee-based firms require:
$250,000
$500,000
Or even $1 million minimum portfolios
This excludes many families from receiving advice.
2. Ongoing Fees Regardless of Activity
Clients may pay:
Annual management fees
Retainer fees
Even in years where little planning work is done.
Some clients are comfortable with this. Others are not.
3. Incentive to Gather Assets
In asset-based fee structures, the incentive shifts toward:
Consolidating assets
Increasing assets under management
Which can sometimes discourage strategies like paying down mortgages or investing outside managed accounts.
So, Which Is Better?
The real question is not commission vs fee.
The real question is:
Does your advisor act in your best interest?
Are costs explained clearly?
Is there a documented financial plan?
Is communication strong?
Are recommendations aligned with your goals?
A fiduciary mindset can exist in both models.
A sales-driven mindset can also exist in both models.
The compensation structure does not determine integrity. The advisor does.
How I Approach It
As a Canadian advisor serving families in Fredericton and across New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and PEI, I primarily use commission-based structures for:
Segregated funds
Insurance solutions
Long-term retirement planning
Why?
Because it allows:
Broad accessibility
No upfront planning invoice
Integrated estate and creditor protection solutions
But the compensation conversation is always open. Fees are explained clearly. Illustrations are reviewed in detail. And planning drives every recommendation.
If a solution does not serve the client’s goals, it does not get implemented. Period.
Final Thoughts
Both compensation models can work beautifully.
Both can also fail if handled improperly.
The key elements you should demand are:
Transparency
Alignment
Clear planning
Ongoing communication
Ethical advice
Compensation matters. Character matters more.
If you are unsure about your current structure, I am always happy to review it with you and explain how it works in plain language.
