General4 min read

How Much Does a Financial Planner Cost in Ontario?

Wondering what a financial planner costs in Ontario? This guide explains the three main fee models — fee-only, fee-based, and commission — what you can expect to pay, and how to evaluate whether the cost is worth it for your situation.

MP

Marc Pineault

Cost is one of the first questions people ask when considering a financial planner — and one of the most genuinely complicated to answer, because the cost of financial planning in Ontario depends heavily on how that planner is compensated. Two planners can give you wildly different answers to "how much do you charge?" even though they offer similar services. Understanding why requires a quick look at how financial planners are paid.

The Three Main Fee Models in Ontario

Fee-Only Financial Planning

A fee-only planner charges you directly for their work — no product commissions, no trailer fees. Fees are typically structured as:

  • Hourly rates — Generally between $200 and $400 per hour for financial planner planners in Ontario. A standalone financial plan might take 6–15 hours to complete, depending on complexity.
  • Flat project fees — A comprehensive financial plan from a fee-only planner often runs between $2,500 and $5,000, sometimes more for complex situations involving business interests, estate planning, or tax strategies.
  • Annual retainer — Some fee-only planners charge an ongoing retainer, typically $2,000–$6,000 per year, for a planning relationship that includes annual reviews and ongoing access.

The appeal of this model is transparency: you know exactly what you're paying, and the planner has no financial incentive to recommend one product over another.

Fee-Based (Fee-Offset) Planning

Fee-based planners charge a planning fee, but that fee may be reduced by commissions earned on products you implement through them. This is common in practices that integrate insurance and investments with financial planning. It's a hybrid model — not inherently problematic, but one where you should understand clearly which part of your cost is offset and by what.

Commission-Based Planning

Some financial planners in Ontario earn their compensation entirely through commissions on the financial products they recommend — life insurance, mutual funds, or investment products. In this model, you may pay nothing directly for the financial plan. However, the planner's compensation depends on which products you purchase, which is an incentive structure worth being conscious of.

This doesn't mean commission-based planners give bad advice — many do excellent work. But the compensation model is relevant context when evaluating recommendations.

What Affects the Cost of a Financial Plan

Whether you're paying directly or indirectly, the complexity of your financial situation drives the time and expertise required. Financial plans are generally more involved when you have:

  • Multiple income sources (salary, self-employment, rental income, pension)
  • Business ownership or a pending sale
  • Cross-border financial exposure
  • Significant estate complexity (multiple properties, blended family, special needs beneficiary)
  • Tax planning that spans multiple years

A single person approaching retirement with a straightforward RRSP and one pension is a simpler planning engagement than a business owner with a holding company, real estate, multiple registered accounts, and an estate involving children from two marriages.

Is the Cost Worth It?

This is the right question — and the honest answer is: it depends on your situation. For someone with a straightforward financial picture and decades of runway, the value of a comprehensive plan may be lower. For someone within 10 years of retirement, managing a pension decision, handling an inheritance, or executing a business exit, the cost of not having a plan is measurably higher than the cost of getting one.

Research and experience consistently show that the decisions a good financial plan informs — when to take CPP, how to draw down registered accounts in the right sequence, how to structure income to minimize tax — can be worth tens of thousands of dollars over a retirement. That's not a sales pitch; it's the arithmetic of optimized versus unoptimized financial decisions over 20-30 years.

Working With Marc Pineault at Pineault Wealth Management

Marc Pineault is a financial planner at Pineault Wealth Management, based in London, Ontario. He works with individuals and families across Southwestern Ontario who are looking for a comprehensive financial plan — not just investment management.

Understanding how a planner is compensated is a reasonable thing to ask at any initial conversation. Marc is transparent about his compensation structure and the planning services included. The first step is a complimentary discovery call where you can ask questions, discuss your situation, and determine whether there's a fit.

Visit pineaultwealthmanagement.com to learn more and book an introductory conversation.


This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalized financial advice. Please consult a qualified financial planner before making any financial decisions.

MP

Marc Pineault

Financial Planner in London, Ontario

I help families and business owners in London, Ontario build clear financial plans for retirement, taxes, and investments — then I manage it all so they can stop worrying and start living.

Learn more about me →
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