Who Can I Trust With My Retirement Assets? A Fiduciary Financial Advisor Guide

Who can you trust with your retirement assets? Start with how the advisor is required to act, how they are paid, and whether their process fits the decisions in front of you. A fiduciary financial advisor should be judged by more than a friendly meeting, a polished website, or a market forecast.

That matters most when your savings are about to become income. A retirement account is no longer an abstract balance on a statement. It may need to support taxes, healthcare, family decisions, Social Security timing, pension choices, old 401(k)s, investment risk, and estate documents. Before you move assets or hand over planning responsibility, slow down and ask better questions.

This guide gives you a practical way to vet an advisor before you decide who should help with your retirement assets.

Why Trust Gets Harder Near Retirement

During your working years, retirement planning can feel like a savings problem: contribute, invest, review, repeat. Near retirement, the question changes. Now the money has a job to do.

Your assets may need to replace a paycheck, handle tax bills, cover healthcare, support a surviving spouse, and last through markets you cannot control. A narrow investment-only relationship may not be enough. A product-first relationship can be worse.

That is why the question is not “who sounds trustworthy?” It is “who is required, qualified, and organized to give advice that fits my situation?” A retirement-focused financial advisor should be able to explain the planning process before asking you to move money.

What Makes an Advisor a Fiduciary

A fiduciary financial advisor is required to put a client’s interests ahead of their own when giving advice within that advisory relationship. In plain English, the advisor’s recommendations should be based on what serves the client, not what creates the easiest sale or highest payout.

The word “advisor” by itself does not answer the question. Some financial professionals may act as fiduciaries in one context and under a different standard in another. Some may sell products. Some may receive commissions. Some may manage assets under an advisory agreement. The label matters less than the written obligation, the services provided, and how the advisor is paid.

The U.S. Department of Labor has published guidance on how to tell whether an adviser is acting as a fiduciary. You can also verify firms and representatives through the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure database. Both are worth checking before you sign paperwork or roll assets into a new account.

Fiduciary duty vs. sales suitability

Fiduciary duty

  • Client-first obligation: advice should put the client’s interests ahead of the advisor’s.
  • Process matters: recommendations should connect to goals, risks, costs, and alternatives.
  • Disclosure matters: conflicts and compensation should be explained before decisions are made.
  • Best test: ask for the fiduciary role and scope in writing.

Sales suitability

  • Product-fit standard: the recommendation may be suitable without being the only or lowest-cost option.
  • Compensation can vary: commissions, product payments, or incentives may shape the menu.
  • Scope can change: one professional may wear different hats in different parts of the relationship.
  • Best test: ask what standard applies to each recommendation.

How Advisors Get Paid

Compensation does not make an advisor good or bad by itself. It does create incentives. Your job is to understand those incentives before they affect a recommendation.

Common models include asset-based advisory fees, hourly planning fees, flat project fees, commissions, or a mix of fees and commissions. Ask the advisor to explain the total cost in dollars and percentages. Then ask what you pay inside the account as well: fund expense ratios, platform costs, transaction costs, surrender charges, or product costs.

A fee-only advisor is paid only by client fees, not by commissions or product compensation. A fee-based advisor may charge client fees and also receive commissions, product compensation, or other payments connected to a recommendation. The distinction matters because it changes the conflicts you need to ask about before trusting someone with retirement assets.

Compensation modelWhat to clarify before moving assets
Asset-based advisory feeAsk the annual percentage, what services it covers, and whether the fee changes when assets are consolidated.
Flat or project planning feeAsk what deliverables are included, when the work ends, and whether implementation is separate.
Hourly planning feeAsk for the estimated hours, billing rate, and what follow-up support costs after the first plan.
Commission or product compensationAsk what product pays the compensation, what alternatives were considered, and what surrender or ongoing costs apply.
Mixed compensation modelAsk which parts of the relationship are advisory, which are product-based, and which standard applies to each recommendation.

If the answer is vague, keep asking. The checklist below turns those issues into questions you can bring to the meeting.

Compare the process before you move assets

Before you roll over a 401(k) or consolidate retirement accounts, ask how the advisor will document duty, compensation, planning scope, and the team responsible for your recommendations.

Questions Before You Move Assets

A good vetting meeting should feel less like a sales pitch and more like a planning interview. Bring these questions with you.

8-question advisor vetting checklist

  1. Are you legally acting as a fiduciary for this relationship? Ask for the answer in writing. If the duty applies only to certain services, ask where it starts and stops.
  2. How are you compensated? Ask about advisory fees, commissions, referral arrangements, product costs, and any other payments connected to your recommendation.
  3. What credentials and licenses do you hold? Credentials are not everything, but they show training, testing, and continuing education. Verify them on the advisor’s public profile.
  4. Who builds and reviews my plan? Find out whether one person handles everything or whether a broader team reviews investments, planning, operations, and compliance.
  5. How do you connect investments to income planning? Retirement advice should account for withdrawals, taxes, Social Security, pensions, beneficiary choices, healthcare, and risk.
  6. What type of client do you serve most often? A retiree with multiple accounts may need different advice than a young accumulator or a business owner with a liquidity event.
  7. How often will we review the plan? The answer should include scheduled meetings and a process for major changes in markets, tax law, health, or family needs.
  8. What would make you tell me not to move assets? This is a useful test. A fiduciary process should be able to say “stay put” when that is the better answer.

Red Flags That Should Slow You Down

Trust is earned by clarity. Be careful if an advisor rushes past your questions or treats the transfer of assets as the first step instead of the last step.

Guaranteed returns

Retirement income planning should account for risk, not promise it away.

Pressure to move fast

Assets should move after the plan is clear, not before the questions are answered.

Vague fee answers

You should know advisory fees, product costs, and account expenses in plain language.

Product-first advice

Be careful when the solution appears before anyone studies your full retirement picture.

Unverified credentials

Names, licenses, and designations should be easy to confirm on public profiles.

No coordination limits

Good advisors know when to coordinate with a CPA, attorney, or insurance professional.

Any one red flag may have context. A pattern of rushed answers, unclear costs, and product-first advice is the reason to pause.

How Saxon Answers the Questions

When you compare advisors, look for facts you can verify. Saxon Financial Group is a registered investment advisor and has been fully independent since 2021. Its Houston-based team works with retirement-focused clients, including energy-sector professionals whose employer benefits can add complexity to planning decisions.

Saxon Financial Group advisory team
The Saxon Financial Group advisory team in Houston.

Saxon operates a team-based model rather than a single-advisor setup. Planning, investment management, operations, and compliance can be reviewed by different people instead of resting on one person’s opinion. For a retiree, that can matter because retirement advice often touches several parts of the financial picture at the same time.

Credentials You Can Verify

Saxon’s advisory team includes four CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER professionals, with Oscar Castro serving as Relationship Manager and Director of Financial Planning. The team also includes Certified Divorce Financial Analyst and Accredited Estate Planner designations, giving you specific planning, divorce finance, and estate planning credentials to verify before deciding whether the firm is the right fit.

You can meet the Saxon advisory team, review each advisor’s background, and use the SEC’s public adviser database as a second check.

None of this means you should skip the questions above. It means you have a better starting point. Ask how the fiduciary relationship works, how advice is documented, how compensation is explained, who reviews the plan, and what happens before assets move.

When to Start the Conversation

You do not need to wait until your retirement date is close enough to circle on a calendar. In many cases, the best planning work happens five to ten years before the first withdrawal.

It may be time to talk with a fiduciary financial advisor if you have old 401(k)s, multiple brokerage or retirement accounts, a pension decision, or company stock. It is also worth asking earlier if you have concentrated employer benefits common in Houston’s energy sector, Social Security timing questions, or a spouse who needs a clearer backup plan.

It may also be time if you have a simple question that keeps getting heavier: “How much can I spend without running out?” A useful answer requires more than a portfolio balance. It needs income needs, tax assumptions, risk tolerance, healthcare costs, inflation, estate documents, and a plan for bad markets.

The goal is not to give someone control because they sound confident. The goal is to decide whether their process, duty, team, and advice model deserve that trust.

Fiduciary Financial Advisor FAQs

What is a fiduciary financial advisor?

A fiduciary financial advisor is required to put a client’s interests ahead of their own when giving advice within that advisory relationship. Ask when the fiduciary duty applies, whether it applies to all recommendations, and how the advisor documents that duty.

Is a fiduciary better than a regular financial advisor?

The fiduciary standard is an important protection, but it is not the only factor. You should also review compensation, credentials, planning process, services, client fit, and who will actually manage the relationship.

What questions should I ask before moving retirement assets to an advisor?

Ask whether the advisor is acting as a fiduciary, how they are paid, what credentials they hold, who builds the plan, how retirement income is managed, how tax coordination works, and what costs you will pay inside and outside the account.

How much should a fiduciary financial advisor cost?

Costs vary by model. Some advisors charge based on assets under management, while others use flat, hourly, project, commission, or mixed models. Ask for the full cost in writing, including advisory fees, product costs, fund expenses, and platform fees.

What are red flags when choosing a retirement advisor?

Be careful with guaranteed return claims, pressure to move assets quickly, vague fee answers, product-first advice, credentials that cannot be verified, and meetings that skip your full retirement income, tax, risk, and family picture.

Can a financial advisor help me decide how much I need to retire?

Yes, if the advisor builds a retirement income plan using your income needs, Social Security, pension or 401(k) choices, healthcare costs, taxes, portfolio assumptions, and time horizon.

Your Next Step

If you are deciding who to trust with your retirement assets, start with the questions above. A fiduciary financial advisor should be able to explain duty, compensation, credentials, process, team structure, and fit before asking you to make a transfer.

Saxon Financial Group can help you review your retirement picture, compare your options, and decide whether its advisory model fits what you need. Learn more about Saxon’s retirement advisor services or schedule a conversation with the team.

This article is provided for educational purposes and does not constitute tax, legal, or investment advice. Advisory services are only offered to clients or prospective clients where Saxon Financial Group and its representatives are properly licensed or exempt from licensure. Consult your tax, legal, or financial professional for guidance specific to your circumstances.

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