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A wrap fee is a consolidated fee that some financial advisors charge as an alternative to a la carte pricing for investment management, custodial fees or other administrative fees that clients might otherwise pay separately. Wrap fees typically range from 1% to 3%.
If you’re an active investor – that is, you and your financial advisor buy and sell investments frequently – wrap accounts could save you money because they effectively cap the costs associated with the trading (instead of paying per transaction).
If you’re a buy-and-hold investor, meaning you don’t buy and sell investments that often, you tend to own your investments for a long time or you are mostly invested in index funds, target-date funds or similar instruments with long-term objectives, wrap fees may actually increase your costs and do more harm than good.
How wrap fees work
Think of wrap fees as an all-day wristband for unlimited rides at an amusement park. For people who want to enjoy a lot of rides, an all-day pass may save a lot of money compared to paying for each ride individually. But those who just want to go on one or two rides and go home will probably be better off paying per ride.
Wrap fees are typically a percentage of your assets. For example, if the advisor’s wrap fee is 2% and you have $1 million in assets under management, your total annual fee would be $20,000. Many advisors assess the wrap fee in quarterly installments.
Wrap fee programs might also be called “asset allocation programs,” “asset management programs,” “investment management programs,” “mini-accounts,” “uniform managed accounts,” or “separately managed accounts.”
They often have sponsors, which are entities that receive a portion of the wrap fee in return for organizing or administering all or part of the wrap program[0]. For example, a wrap fee program might also involve your advisor hiring other advisors to manage a portion of your assets (just the fixed income investments, for instance).
What a wrap fee typically covers
Wrap fees typically include the following, but beware – this can vary by advisor. Be sure you ask questions when you meet with your advisor.
Transaction costs. These are usually the expenses that come with buying and selling securities. They might also include research costs.
Administrative expenses. This may include custodial fees, which are fees associated with housing your securities with a third party.
What a wrap fee may not cover:
Expense ratios. Mutual funds and exchange-traded funds often charge investors a percentage fee to cover the cost of running the fund. Wrap fees typically don’t cover expense ratios; they will be taken directly out of your investment in the fund.
Trading away. Your adviser might decide to use a broker-dealer outside of the wrap fee program in order to make certain trades in your account in a better or faster way compared to what the existing custodian can provide (this is called “trading away”). These are often separate (and sometimes higher) brokerage fees that aren’t covered by the wrap fee.
Pros and cons of wrap fees
May encourage the advisor to avoid trading.
May encourage the advisor to put you in higher-cost funds.
Advantages of wrap fees
May save money on fees. If you’re an active investor who makes a lot of trades, a wrap fee might cost less than paying separately for custodial, transaction and other administrative fees.
Simplicity. By consolidating fees, a wrap program could reduce the number of fees and invoices you have to deal with.
Disadvantages of wrap fees
Cost. Wrap fees are typically higher than conventional assets under management (AUM) fees, which can eat away at your investment gains, especially for buy-and-hold investors.
May encourage the advisor to avoid trading. The less the advisor trades, the more of the wrap fee the advisory firm gets to keep. Wrap fees may create a conflict of interest for the advisor, because they may encourage the advisor to make fewer trades in order to avoid losing money on the fees.
May encourage the advisor to put you in higher-cost funds. Wrap fee programs may encourage the advisor to minimize the trading costs they have to absorb, which could cause them to focus more on what a fund costs them to buy or sell rather than what a fund costs you to own (the expense ratio).
Wrap fee red flags to look for
Wrap fees can save you money under the right circumstances, but they can also create conflicts of interest for your advisor. Here are a few things to watch for.
Unsubstantiated recommendations. In one SEC study of over 100 examinations of financial advisors, the SEC staff observed instances where advisers routinely recommended wrap fee programs to clients without assessing whether the programs were in the clients’ best interests[0]. Be wary if the advisor is recommending a wrap fee program to you but can’t show you how it would save you (and specifically you) money.
No follow-up. The same SEC study found instances where advisors did initially consider whether their clients were better off with a wrap fee, but they didn’t go back later to reassess whether their clients should still be in the wrap program. Good advisors should ask you often whether anything in your personal life has occurred that might change your financial situation, financial needs, risk tolerance or similar – and they should apply that information accordingly.
Unusual changes in investment recommendations. The SEC study found instances where advisors recommended investments that carried higher costs for their wrap-free clients (such as mutual funds that had higher expense ratios) but lower transaction costs for the advisor (which allow the advisor to keep more of the wrap fee).
Reluctance to let you leave the wrap fee program. Advisors may not want to pay certain expenses and transaction fees to transfer your accounts out of the wrap fee program, which could cost them money.
Continued charges for certain fees. Much like an all-day wristband covers rides but not necessarily food and drinks, wrap fees don’t necessarily include everything. Be sure you understand whether you’ll still have to pay fees for the mutual funds or ETFs in your account, fees for options trades, wires and electronic funds transfers, custodial expenses or other services.
👉 Ask your advisor these four questions:
What exact fees are included in your wrap fee program?
What other fees will I pay?
How often are you going to assess whether I should still be in the wrap fee program?
What’s the process for getting out of the wrap fee program?
Alternatives to wrap fees
If a wrap fee doesn’t sound like it’s for you, that’s ok. Most financial advisors provide services in an unbundled form so that you can pick and choose what you want to pay for and what you don’t. The table below explains other common financial advisor fees.
Assets under management (AUM)
Managing your portfolio of stocks, bonds and other investments.
0.25% to 0.50% annually for a robo-advisor; about 1% for a financial advisor.
Flat annual fee (retainer)
Special projects, such as analyzing whether to buy or sell your business. May also provide more access to the advisor. In some cases, advisors may substitute flat fees for AUM fees.
Typically $2,500 to $9,200.
Special projects, such as helping create a financial plan for a specific situation, such as a divorce.
Creating a detailed, written comprehensive financial plan for a client.
Typically $3,000, but varies by service.
Transaction costs and expense ratios
Fees that trading platforms charge the advisor to use, or fees that mutual funds, ETFs and similar instruments charge.
Varies; expense ratios may range 0.05% to 0.75%.
Fees that the custodian charges you to hold your assets.
May be around 0.10% to 0.15%, but varies by account size, asset type, transaction activity and custodian.
Bundles the firm’s investment management services and related custodial transaction costs together for one price.
Varies by account size and type.
Money earned from financial institutions for buying or selling certain products to clients.
3% to 6% of investment transaction amount.
To compile this information, we reviewed industry studies on average rates among financial advisors in 2024. Those studies included:
State of Financial Planning and Fees study from Envestnet, a company that develops software for the wealth management industry.
How Financial Planners Actually Do Financial Planning from Kitces.com.
We also reviewed fees charged by providers reviewed by the NerdWallet investing team.
🤓Nerdy Tip
Ask the advisor for a copy of their SEC Form ADV Part 2. Often called “the brochure,” this document details the fees for the firm’s services in plain language.
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