🧭 Overview
This guide explains how financial professionals structure advice, deliverables, and pricing in retirement planning, so you can choose an engagement that matches your needs and budget. You’ll learn the common ways a financial advisor business is paid (AUM, retainer, hourly, commission), what each model typically includes, and how to compare proposals without getting buried in jargon. If you’re still clarifying the meaning of retirement planning, this walkthrough connects “plan” to practical outputs: an income target, clear assumptions, scenario comparisons, and a review cadence you can maintain. For the broader foundation (prepare → calculate → get advice), start with the pillar guide.
✅ Before You Begin
Before you compare advisor models, get clear on what you’re building and what you’re buying. Start by writing down the decision you’re trying to make (retire earlier, downsize, adjust contributions, or stress-test spending). Then gather the baseline inputs any credible retirement planning engagement will request: current assets and account balances, debts, income sources, expected retirement age, household spending, and any pension or employer benefits. If you’re working with a partner, align on shared goals and “non-negotiables” (risk tolerance, liquidity needs, dependents, and large upcoming purchases). If you’re evaluating multiple firms, standardise this input pack so comparisons are apples-to-apples.
Next, confirm who you actually need. A retirement advisor may focus on household planning and implementation, while a retirement plan advisor may be oriented to plan governance and oversight in a workplace setting. If you want a cleaner comparison of roles before you book meetings, use the definitions guide.
Finally, set your readiness check. You should be able to state: (1) your current savings rate, (2) your target retirement income, (3) your fee preference (one-off vs ongoing), and (4) what “success” looks like. If you want a structured starting point, adapt a retirement planning checklist from the step-by-step guide.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Define the engagement, scope, and fee model.
Start by mapping the service to your decision. Ask the advisor to describe their planning workflow in plain language: what they collect, what they build, and how often it is reviewed. Then classify the compensation model, because it shapes incentives and the follow-through you should expect. Common financial advisor business models include assets-under-management fees (ongoing), flat retainers (ongoing), hourly or project fees (one-off), and commission or hybrid structures (implementation-led).
Your checkpoint is a written scope of work. It should state what is included (plan build, assumptions log, implementation support) and what is not (tax filing, legal work, insurance underwriting). Ask for a sample plan outline so you can see the level of detail. If you’re unsure when to get a financial advisor, use the decision triggers and timing examples in the dedicated guide.
Expected result: you can name the model, list the outputs, and understand how you will be charged.
Step 2: Verify credentials, incentives, and review standards.
Once the scope is clear, validate the person and the firm. Start with financial advisor certifications and licensing, then translate credentials into practical capability: what advice they can provide, what products they can recommend, and who is accountable for the plan. A “certified retirement planner” label can mean different things across firms, so treat it as a prompt to ask for specifics (training, ethics standards, and ongoing education), not as a shortcut to trust.
Then address incentives directly. Request a simple fee schedule in writing, a summary of any product compensation, and how conflicts are disclosed and documented. If they recommend products, ask how alternatives are compared and recorded. Finally, confirm review standards: which assumptions are used (inflation, taxes, longevity), how often assumptions are refreshed, and what triggers a re-plan.
For a deeper breakdown of credential types and what to look for, refer to the retirement planning credentials guide.
Step 3: Build the baseline income plan and assumptions layer.
Now move from “advisor model” to “plan mechanics.” In retirement income planning, the baseline is the reference case you’ll compare everything against. Document the core assumptions in one place: retirement date, spending in today’s dollars, inflation approach, savings rate, expected contributions, and known income streams. Then estimate the gap between projected income and desired spending. Keep each assumption dated and traceable.
A retirement money calculator is a useful first pass for “how much you need,” but it’s only reliable if inputs are explicit and reviewable. Treat the calculator output as a draft, then translate it into a year-by-year cash flow view. Add short notes for items that are uncertain (health costs, one-off expenses, or time-limited income).
If your team is maintaining multiple spreadsheets, Model Reef can help you centralise assumptions so scenario changes don’t become a rebuild exercise. For a more detailed walkthrough of calculator inputs, use the guide.
Step 4: Stress-test scenarios and standardise how you compare outcomes.
This is where retirement planning becomes decision-ready. Define 3–5 scenarios that map to choices you control: retire one year earlier/later, change annual spending by a fixed amount, adjust contribution rates, or change the drawdown approach. Add at least one risk scenario (lower returns early, higher inflation, unexpected expense). If your situation is complex, include a “policy” scenario that reflects constraints (minimum cash buffer, no debt in retirement, or required support for dependents).
The key is consistency. Keep scenario rules stable and change only one or two variables per scenario so results stay interpretable. Validate units (monthly vs annual), date conventions, and whether figures are nominal or real. Document why each scenario exists and what “success” means (spending floor, minimum ending balance, or required liquidity).
If you want a clean workflow for comparing scenarios and keeping assumptions governed, use Model Reef’s modelling features for scenarios, reporting, and version control.
Step 5: Finalise the service cadence, monitoring, and implementation plan.
With scenarios agreed, lock in “how this stays current.” Confirm meeting cadence, what data is updated each cycle, and who owns each action (rebalance, contribution changes, insurance review, tax coordination). Define triggers that force a review: income changes, major purchases, health events, market drawdowns, or policy changes that affect retirement accounts. If you’re paying an ongoing fee, get clarity on turnaround times, what support looks like between meetings, and how requests are handled.
To validate outcomes, use a coverage metric you can track. Many plans start with a target wage replacement rate (a percentage of pre-retirement income), then refine it based on spending categories and taxes. The exact target is less important than having a method and updating it consistently with the same assumptions layer. For rules-of-thumb and common ranges, see the explainer.
Expected result: you leave with a written plan, a monitoring schedule, and a repeatable update process.
🧪 Example
A small advisory firm offers three tiers for retirement planning. Tier A is a one-off plan (fixed fee) with a baseline cash flow and two scenarios. Tier B is an ongoing retainer with quarterly check-ins and scenario updates when assumptions change. Tier C is an AUM model that includes the plan plus ongoing portfolio management.
Input → Action → Output:
- Input: age 52, retire at 65, annual spending target, current savings, expected pension.
- Action: run a retirement money calculator for a draft target, then build a year-by-year cash flow and stress-test a “retire at 63” scenario with a higher inflation assumption.
- Output: a written engagement scope, the baseline projection, scenario comparisons, a short action list, and a monitoring cadence (quarterly updates, annual re-plan).
If the firm tracks scenarios in Model Reef, it can update assumptions once and regenerate comparison outputs without rewriting formulas across multiple tabs, which is useful when clients change goals mid-year.
🚀 Next Steps
You now have the key building blocks: a defined engagement, validated incentives, a baseline projection, and a scenario set you can review. The next step is turning those pieces into a cadence, so your retirement planning stays current when life changes. If you’re working in spreadsheets, standardise a single assumptions layer and a repeatable scenario comparison so updates take minutes, not weekends.
If you want fewer broken links and cleaner version control, use Model Reef to maintain assumptions and regenerate scenario outputs as inputs change across clients or households. Start free on the platform’s free trial page.