Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does that include your home? If so, you need to aggressively save. No need for a financial advisor right now.
+1. If home asset is included you are really behind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, most of the people replying to you don't have the type of money they claim to have.
We use Charles Schwab and have access to a financial advisor that we check in with quarterly. She's a CFP and gives us great advice.
can you elaborate on this option?
If you go to their website, you'll see all the options they have. We have Intelligent Portfolio Premium - about half of our accounts are invested in their roboadvisor and the other half we do on our own (and our 529s are through the state, so not under Schwab at all), but you can enter all your info into their retirement planning software and the advisor will work with you to refine it and make adjustments at every meeting. Ours also provided advice on the 529s and the implications of things like buying a $900K house vs a $1.1 Million house, etc.
Real question is how much are you paying for this service?
Anonymous wrote:A money manager is going to leach about 1% in fees off the top of that money and not add enough value to pay for that.
Better plan: put it (the investments anyway) in a roboinvesting platform like betterment or wealthfront - they have a simple questionnaire to determine your goals and timeframe and then will do the actually valuable things FAs do like keep the money appropriately invested in low cost investments, balanced, and handle tax loss harvesting - for a much much lower fee than 1%
We have multiple millions in liquid investments and we still just do this - studies have shown over and over again that human FAs just aren’t worth the money
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does that include your home? If so, you need to aggressively save. No need for a financial advisor right now.
+1. If home asset is included you are really behind.
Anonymous wrote:What type of financial advisor should you get? Is this enough for a wealth manager? Goals include paying for college and being comfy in retirement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does that include your home? If so, you need to aggressively save. No need for a financial advisor right now.
+1. If home asset is included you are really behind.
Anonymous wrote:Does that include your home? If so, you need to aggressively save. No need for a financial advisor right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, most of the people replying to you don't have the type of money they claim to have.
We use Charles Schwab and have access to a financial advisor that we check in with quarterly. She's a CFP and gives us great advice.
can you elaborate on this option?
If you go to their website, you'll see all the options they have. We have Intelligent Portfolio Premium - about half of our accounts are invested in their roboadvisor and the other half we do on our own (and our 529s are through the state, so not under Schwab at all), but you can enter all your info into their retirement planning software and the advisor will work with you to refine it and make adjustments at every meeting. Ours also provided advice on the 529s and the implications of things like buying a $900K house vs a $1.1 Million house, etc.
Anonymous wrote:OP, most of the people replying to you don't have the type of money they claim to have.
We use Charles Schwab and have access to a financial advisor that we check in with quarterly. She's a CFP and gives us great advice.