Key takeaways
- Your plan should shift from growth to protection as you move through retirement.
- If you’re more proactive than your advisor, you may be paying too much for too little.
- Pre-2019 strategies can be a poor fit in today’s higher-rate, higher-volatility market.
- Infrequent contact and one-size-fits-all advice are common warning signs.
- A no-cost second opinion from a fiduciary can surface gaps before they cost you.
The Quiet Risk in Staying Loyal to a Financial Plan That No Longer Fits You
You’ve done everything right.
You worked hard, saved aggressively, and followed the advice you were given. But something’s changed, and it’s not just the markets.
It’s you.
Your financial priorities have shifted from growth to protection… from building wealth to preserving it. Yet your plan, your strategy, your asset mix, even your advisor, may still be operating like you’re in your 40s.
Worse, you may not realize how much that mismatch may be costing you, until it’s too late.
Across the country, affluent retirees are waking up to this quiet risk. They’re asking tougher questions. They’re taking second opinions. And more and more are deciding to part ways with their long-time financial advisors.
Here are five clear signs it might be time to do the same.
The quiet cost of staying put
The right fit isn’t about loyalty — it’s about whether your plan still works for the decade you’re actually in.
Vanguard estimates a strong advisor relationship can add roughly three percentage points in net annual returns through tax efficiency, rebalancing, and behavioral coaching. Illustrative only — results vary.
| What you should expect | With a fiduciary review | On your own |
|---|---|---|
| A plan that shifts from growth to protection as you age | — | |
| Proactive tax planning (Roth conversions, RMDs, capital gains) | — | |
| A portfolio rebalanced for today’s rates and volatility | — | |
| Ongoing reviews and timely answers to your questions | — | |
| A legal fiduciary duty to put your interests first | — |
Source: Vanguard, “Putting a Value on Your Value: Quantifying Vanguard Advisor’s Alpha.” For illustration only; not a guarantee of future results. See full disclosures below.
You’re Not 40 Anymore. Your Plan Should Reflect That
What made sense at 40 doesn’t cut it at 65. Your advisor should recognize the shift from accumulation to preservation and transition accordingly. If your plan still prioritizes growth without addressing risk management, income stability, and tax efficiency, it may no longer fit your current priorities
You’re Doing Their Job.
You're reading whitepapers, googling Roth conversions, asking ChatGPT about capital gains. That instinct is right. But the questions you're chasing on your own? A plan built for this stage should already be answering them. Most plans were built years ago and never caught up to where you are now.
Get matched with a fiduciary advisor who can offer a second opinion — free, no pressure, no obligation.
Take Matching QuizYou’re Still Using Pre-2019 Strategies in a Post-Rate-Hike World
Pre-2019, the economy lived in a world of near-zero interest rates, easy money, and a very different tax and market environment. That world is gone. Rates have surged. Volatility is higher. The playbook changed, but your advisor might still be calling plays from the old one. That’s not “conservative” investing.
It always feels like you’re guessing
An annual check-in fits a stage where nothing much moves. This isn't that stage.
Markets shift. Tax rules have changed twice since 2019. The RMD window is opening. The years on either side of retirement are the ones that need the most hands on the wheel — and a once-a-year cadence was built for a quieter season than the one you're in.
Nobody did anything wrong. The plan just hasn't caught up to the stage.
Get matched with a fiduciary advisor who can offer a second opinion — free, no pressure, no obligation.
Take Matching QuizYou’ve Never Had a Second Opinion.
You’ve spent decades building your wealth, but you’ve never pressure-tested the plan meant to protect it.
Doctors get second opinions. Lawyers bring in co-counsel. Pilots run checklists with copilots.
But your financial advisor? They’ve had unchecked control over your life’s work for years, maybe decades.
Not because they’re the best.
But because they were just… first.
Loyalty is admirable. But blind loyalty? That can be dangerous.
Don’t you deserve to feel informed and secure about your plan?
If you’ve ever second-guessed a recommendation, wondered if you’re paying too much in taxes, or just felt unsure about your plan, you’re not alone.
Take 60 seconds to check in on where you stand. Our no-cost advisor matching service is a private tool designed to help you assess whether your current advisor is still meeting your needs.
Based on your answers, we’ll introduce you to a fiduciary advisor who can offer a second opinion, without pressure, and without obligation.
Don’t wait until a market swing or tax change exposes a costly oversight.
👉 Take the matching quiz now. You’ve earned the peace of mind.
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Answer a few quick questions
About 60 seconds — your goals, assets, and what matters most to you right now.
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