Unbiased wealth management is easy to claim and harder to prove. In plain terms, it means your adviser has no in-house product to sell and no sales target shaping the advice, so the recommendations follow your interests rather than a firm’s shelf. Yet most people never ask the question that actually reveals it: whose side is the person across the table on?
It’s a matter of structure, not marketing
A good adviser can be honest, skilled and genuinely well-meaning, and still work inside a system that nudges them towards certain products. That isn’t dishonesty; it’s design. Whenever someone sells from a shelf, the shelf shapes the advice. Unbiased advice therefore starts by removing the shelf altogether. Because an adviser with nothing of their own to sell can choose from the whole market, each decision rests on merit rather than margin.
Where your money actually sits
Safety is the worry that stops most people, and the honest answer is simpler than they expect. In a properly structured arrangement, your money never sits with the manager at all. It stays at your regulated custodian bank, in your own name. The manager holds a limited mandate — enough to invest, never enough to withdraw. In practice, then, the size of the firm matters far less than the structure around your assets. What protects you is where the money is held and who can touch it.
The whole market, not one shelf
Every large institution eventually has one view to promote: its own. An independent approach can lay several research opinions side by side, weigh them and filter out the noise, guided by someone who gains nothing from any single call being right. The same logic applies to products. Instead of a closed range, the whole market is open, and each part of the plan goes where it is best served.
Costs you can actually see
For years, much of the cost in this industry stayed out of sight — built into products, tucked into exchange rates, quietly retained as commission. None of it was necessarily sinister; it was simply the norm. The real progress has not been lower prices, but visible ones. When every layer is on show — management, custody and execution — you can check the maths yourself and compare it with what you pay today. That transparency matters more than any promise to be cheap.
Why unbiased wealth management shouldn’t lock you in
A strong mandate needs no chains. If the relationship stops working, you should be able to end it — no move, no penalty, no upheaval. Your assets stay at your own bank, and a mandate can be revoked at any time. So, for me, this is a genuine test: any firm that keeps clients through exit barriers rather than by the quality of its work is telling you something. Unbiased wealth management earns loyalty; it doesn’t trap it.
When a bank is still the right answer
Honesty also means knowing the model’s limits. Sometimes a bank is the right or necessary answer — a straightforward mortgage, pure transaction banking, or a corporate loan. That doesn’t undercut independent wealth management. On the contrary, an unbiased adviser can bring in the right bank for the job rather than pretend that one model fits everything. The point isn’t to replace the bank; it’s to put it in the right role.
The one question that matters
Strip away the brochures and it comes down to something very human. Is this person sitting with me, or across from me? Answer that honestly and you have made the most important part of the decision already.
Frequently asked questions
What is unbiased wealth management?
Unbiased wealth management is advice from a manager with no in-house products to sell and no sales targets, so recommendations follow the client’s interests. Your assets stay in your own name at a custodian bank of your choice.
Is an independent manager as safe as a bank?
Your money is held at a regulated custodian bank in your own name, not on the manager’s books. The manager can invest under a limited mandate but cannot withdraw funds, so the firm’s own size has little bearing on the safety of your assets.
How do I check that advice is genuinely unbiased?
Ask three things: is there an in-house product to sell, are all costs disclosed line by line, and can you end the mandate at any time without a penalty? Clear answers to all three are a good sign.