In Retirement Planning
Choosing an adviser

How to choose a financial adviser in Brisbane

By George Iacovou, Principal Financial Adviser Updated June 2026
The short version

Four checks that take about ten minutes. Confirm the adviser is on the ASIC Financial Advisers Register, confirm their qualifications, confirm which AFSL they operate under, and get their fee in dollars in writing before you commit to anything.

Is choosing an adviser in Brisbane actually different in 2026?

Question 1 of 6 · The Brisbane market
The short answer

The market is smaller and more tightly regulated than a decade ago. Adviser numbers in Australia dropped from around 28,000 to about 15,500 between 2019 and 2024. The ones left are, on average, better qualified, but the pricing went up to match.

Domain, Brisbane median house price, 2026.

The detail

South East Queensland is in the middle of a long retirement shift. Around one in five Brisbane residents is now aged 60 or over, and the cohort is growing faster than the national average. That's visible in the suburbs most affected: Redland Bay, Victoria Point, Samford Valley, the Logan corridor, and the Sunshine Coast ribbon all carry strong retiree demographics. Advice demand is concentrated around these areas.

The other factor is the property-linked wealth. The Brisbane median home now sits around $920,000 (Domain, 2026), and many long-term owners have equity well above $1.5 million tied up in a house they bought 25 years ago. That changes retirement maths. A lot of advice conversations in Brisbane in 2026 are really about how to convert home equity into retirement cashflow without blowing the Age Pension.

Underneath all of this is the post-Royal Commission advice market. The 2019 reforms culled the industry hard. Adviser numbers in Australia dropped from around 28,000 to about 15,500 between 2019 and 2024. The ones left are, on average, better qualified and more tightly regulated. But the pricing went up to match, and the market is now stratified in ways it wasn't a decade ago.

around one in five Brisbane residents aged 60 or overBrisbane median home around $920,000 (Domain, 2026)equity well above $1.5 million for many long-term owners
George Iacovou
Where advice earns its keep

The 2032 Olympics is shifting infrastructure planning. For people holding investment property in the Olympic corridor, the advice question is whether to sell into the build-up or hold through. That's a specialised conversation, and not every adviser handles it well.

How do I vet an adviser before booking anything?

Question 2 of 6 · The four checks
The short answer

4 checks

about ten minutes combined, before you book anything. Any adviser who fails one of them isn't worth a coffee chat.

ASIC Financial Advisers Register (moneysmart.gov.au/financial-advisers-register).

The detail

Before any first meeting, do these four things. They take about ten minutes combined. Any adviser who fails one of them isn't worth a coffee chat.

Tick off all four before you book0 of 4 done
  1. ASIC Register

    moneysmart.gov.au/financial-advisers-register. Active registration, no bans or cancellations, current licensee listed.

  2. Qualifications

    The ASIC Register lists degree and CPD. Relevant degree or approved qualification pathway (standards lifted from 2019), plus AFP or CFP if they claim it.

  3. AFSL / Licensee

    Their Financial Services Guide (FSG). Which Australian Financial Services Licence they operate under, whether as authorised rep or direct employee.

  4. Fees in writing

    FSG plus a one-page fee quote. Dollar figure for your situation, broken down by initial advice and ongoing, with no "we'll tell you later" gaps.

4 checks, about ten minutes combinedmoneysmart.gov.au/financial-advisers-register
George Iacovou
Where advice earns its keep

The ASIC Register is the most important of the four. Every licensed financial adviser in Australia appears there. It lists their qualifications, their current licensee, prior licensees, and any disciplinary history. If someone says they're a financial adviser and they're not on the register, walk away. That's a legal problem, not an oversight.

What should I ask in the first meeting?

Question 3 of 6 · Eight questions
The short answer

Once you've narrowed to two or three advisers, the first meeting tells you the rest. It's usually free and typically runs 45 to 60 minutes. Start with a sample Statement of Advice and a one-page dollar fee quote, and end with who takes over your file.

The detail

Once you've narrowed to two or three advisers, the first meeting (usually free, typically 45 to 60 minutes) tells you the rest. These are the questions worth asking.

Eight questions for the first meeting0 of 8 done
  1. Can I see a sample Statement of Advice before committing?

    Any adviser worth the fee has de-identified SOAs ready. If they won't show you one, you're buying blind.

  2. What's your fee for my situation, in dollars, on a one-page quote?

    A good adviser can scope this in the first meeting or within a week.

  3. How many clients in roughly my position do you currently advise?

    Not a trap question, just confirming you're not their first pre-retiree.

  4. Explain the tax treatment of super death benefits for an adult child.

    Tests technical depth. 15% on the taxable component is the answer.

  5. What happens if I want advice on something not on your Approved Product List?

    Tests whether the AFSL's APL restrictions will frustrate your needs.

  6. Do you receive any commissions or kickbacks from any product provider?

    Commissions on super and investment advice have been banned since 2013. Risk-insurance commissions remain legal and should be disclosed.

  7. If you were hit by a bus tomorrow, who takes over my file?

    Succession depth. Good advisers have a documented answer.

  8. When was the last time you told a prospective client they weren't the right fit?

    A good adviser turns away work when the relationship isn't going to be useful. An adviser who takes everything in front of them isn't being selective about the match.

usually free, typically 45 to 60 minutes8 questions15% on the taxable component (super death benefit to an adult child)
George Iacovou
Where advice earns its keep

A good adviser turns away work when the relationship isn't going to be useful. An adviser who takes everything in front of them isn't being selective about the quality of the match.

What will an adviser cost in Brisbane in 2026?

Question 4 of 6 · Fee structures
The short answer

Four common fee models are operating in Brisbane right now, each with trade-offs. A one-off fixed-fee Statement of Advice typically runs $3,500 to $7,000. Ongoing advice runs $3,500 to $8,000 a year, asset-based fees 0.5% to 1.2% per annum, and hourly work $350 to $650.

Future of Financial Advice (FOFA) reforms, 1 July 2013; Life Insurance Framework (LIF) commission caps.

The detail

Four common fee models are operating in Brisbane right now. Each has trade-offs.

StructureTypical Brisbane Range (2026)When It Makes Sense
Fixed-fee SOA (one-off)$3,500–$7,000Most pre-retirement engagements; scope is knowable upfront
Ongoing advice fee (annual)$3,500–$8,000/yrComplex situations; annual review needed as rules change
Asset-based (% of managed assets)0.5% to 1.2% p.a.Investment-heavy relationships; be careful above $1M where dollar fee ramps
Hourly$350–$650 per hourSmall, bounded pieces of work; rare for full advice engagements

Commission-based advice on super or investments has been illegal since 1 July 2013 under the Future of Financial Advice (FOFA) reforms. Any adviser still earning trail commission on those products is operating in breach. Life-insurance commissions remain legal and capped under the LIF reforms at 60% upfront and 20% ongoing.

$3,500 to $7,000 fixed-fee SOA, one-off$3,500 to $8,000 a year ongoing0.5% to 1.2% p.a. asset-based
George Iacovou
Where advice earns its keep

Advice fees are tax deductible in many cases where the advice relates to ongoing income generation or existing investments. That's a question for your accountant, but it materially changes the net cost.

What should make me end the conversation?

Question 5 of 6 · Red flags
The short answer

Six flags, and any one of them in a first meeting means cut it short and leave: product pitches before the scoping conversation, vague or evasive fee disclosure, property spruikers dressed as advisers, no Statement of Advice before implementation, pressure to sign in the first meeting, and reluctance to explain Approved Product List restrictions.

Corporations Act 2001, Statement of Advice requirement.

The detail

If any of these show up in a first meeting, cut it short and leave.

  • Product pitches before the scoping conversation. Advice starts with strategy. Product recommendations are the last step, not the first.
  • Vague or evasive fee disclosure. "We'll work it out later" or "it depends on the products we recommend" is a problem.
  • Property spruikers dressed as advisers. SEQ has an ongoing issue with operators who bundle "advice" with off-the-plan apartment sales. If property acquisition is the suggested core solution in a retirement planning conversation, something's off.
  • No Statement of Advice before implementation. By law, a personal advice recommendation must be accompanied by an SOA. An adviser who wants to rearrange your super without issuing one is operating outside the regulatory framework.
  • Pressure to sign in the first meeting. Genuine advice takes days to document. Anyone pushing for an immediate signature is selling a product, not giving advice.
  • Reluctance to explain fund restrictions. Every authorised representative is bound by their licensee's Approved Product List. A good adviser is transparent about what that list contains and whether it limits advice on your specific position.
6 red flags
George Iacovou
Where advice earns its keep

SEQ has an ongoing issue with operators who bundle "advice" with off-the-plan apartment sales. If property acquisition is the suggested core solution in a retirement planning conversation, something's off.

Do I need a specialist, or will a good generalist do?

Question 6 of 6 · Specialists
The short answer

Most Brisbane advisers are generalists, and for most situations that's fine. Specialist advice genuinely matters for SMSFs, complex estate planning across generations, and aged-care transitions. Ask how much of the adviser's practice is in that niche; if it's less than 25%, you're probably better with a pure specialist.

George Iacovou, Principal Adviser, Great Advice.

The detail

Most Brisbane advisers are generalists. For most situations, that's fine. A competent generalist who handles retirement planning, super, insurance, and Age Pension strategy can easily outperform a narrow specialist on standard cases.

Specialist advice genuinely matters in a few situations. Self-managed super funds (SMSFs) need an adviser who handles them weekly, not occasionally. Complex estate planning across generations, particularly with overseas assets, benefits from a specialist. Aged-care transitions where home equity, pension, and care fees interact are another specialist category. If one of those describes your situation, ask directly how much of the adviser's practice is in that niche. If it's less than 25%, you're probably better with a pure specialist.

less than 25% of the practice in your niche
What’s the takeaway?

Brisbane's advice market is large and mostly competent. The mediocre portion is filterable in about ten minutes with four checks.

If the checks confirm a registered, licensed adviser with clear fee disclosure, and the first meeting shows technical depth on the questions above, you've probably found your adviser. The next question is just whether their specialisation matches your situation.

Before you book 4 checks

ASIC Register, qualifications, licensee, and a written dollar fee quote. About ten minutes combined.

In the first meeting 8 questions

Usually free, typically 45 to 60 minutes. Starts with a sample Statement of Advice and ends with who takes over your file.

Your questions, answered

Common questions

How do I check if a Brisbane financial adviser is properly licensed?

Go to moneysmart.gov.au/financial-advisers-register and search by name or Adviser Number. The register shows current registration status, licensee, qualifications, CPD, and any disciplinary history. It's the definitive source. If an adviser isn't on the register, they're not legally able to provide personal financial advice in Australia.

How much does a financial adviser in Brisbane cost in 2026?

A one-off Statement of Advice for a pre-retirement situation is typically $3,500 to $7,000 depending on complexity. Ongoing advice runs $3,500 to $8,000 a year in the Brisbane market. Asset-based fees are 0.5% to 1.2% per annum on invested amounts. Most advice fees are partly tax deductible where they relate to ongoing income generation or existing investments.

Can I check if a Brisbane adviser has had complaints or bans?

Partly. The ASIC Financial Advisers Register shows disciplinary history including bans, suspensions, and licensee cancellations. It doesn't show individual client complaints or civil disputes. For a more complete picture you can check AFCA for published determinations involving the adviser's licensee.

Are commission-based advisers still operating in Brisbane?

On super and investments, no. Commissions on those products have been illegal since 1 July 2013 under the FOFA reforms. Any adviser still earning commissions on super or investment advice is operating in breach. Life-insurance commissions are still legal (capped at 60% upfront, 20% ongoing) and should be disclosed.

How long should the first meeting with a financial adviser be?

Forty-five to sixty minutes for a general introduction and scoping conversation. Long enough to cover your situation at a high level and for the adviser to propose a scope of work. Not long enough to produce advice, which by law requires a written Statement of Advice.

General Advice Warning: This article contains general information only and does not take into account your individual objectives, financial situation, or needs. Before making any financial decisions, you should consider whether the information is appropriate for your circumstances and seek personal financial advice from a licensed adviser. Great Advice Financial Advisers is a Corporate Authorised Representative of Akumin Financial Planning Pty Ltd (AFSL 232706).

Bare tree silhouetted on a hillside at sunset, a legacy left behind after a parent passesA warm-lit suburban family home at golden hour on a tree-lined street, retirement living in the Logan corridor