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Fees for advice

merl1955
Posts: 28 Forumite
I have seen an IFA for a first interview taken my details and will get back to us. What I am worried about is no mention of fees were discussed.
Call me stupid but I am worried they will charge for this initial assessment.
I want to know to if I put my lump sum in a bond do I have to pay anyone for this? and is a high interest account in a building society/ bank a better deal and safer would we have to pay for this service and does the £50000 per banking corportation for a single person what about joint accounts.
I was shocked when I found out I had to pay a lot of money for this advice how much would one expect to pay for a £70000 investment.
Call me stupid but I am worried they will charge for this initial assessment.
I want to know to if I put my lump sum in a bond do I have to pay anyone for this? and is a high interest account in a building society/ bank a better deal and safer would we have to pay for this service and does the £50000 per banking corportation for a single person what about joint accounts.
I was shocked when I found out I had to pay a lot of money for this advice how much would one expect to pay for a £70000 investment.
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Comments
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I have seen an IFA for a first interview taken my details and will get back to us. What I am worried about is no mention of fees were discussed.I want to know to if I put my lump sum in a bond do I have to pay anyone for this?and is a high interest account in a building society/ bank a better deal and saferwould we have to pay for this serviceand does the £50000 per banking corportation for a single person what about joint accounts.I was shocked when I found out I had to pay a lot of money for this advice how much would one expect to pay for a £70000 investment.
If they can generate an additional 0.5% a year in returns on the full £70k that's worth an additional £1,800 over a 5 year period.
If paying £750 in fees can ensure a rebate of £1,050 to your investments that would otherwise be commission paid to the IFA then it looks like a good deal to me.
Given the sum involved, and perhaps some of the naivity in your questions (which is where most people are when it comes to personal finance and investments), I'd suggest that paying a fee for professional advice from an IFA is exactly what somebody in your position should be doing.
When they confirm what the fee actually is, I'd suggest posting the details here for reasonability purposes.0 -
thanks but don't understand about tax relief? only 57 get an annual pension salary of about £14000 so paying standard rate tax. Because we had bad mortgage advise we are really worried about taking risks and advice.
sorry for being so naive0 -
I was shocked when I found out I had to pay a lot of money for this advice how much would one expect to pay for a £70000 investment.
Any decent financial adviser operating within the scope of the FSA will discuss fee/commissions at the first meeting and certainly before your sign up for anything. If your not sure /happy just walk away and find a fee based adviser as if your looking at investing £70K it would most likely be the more cost effective option.0
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