Why Use a Financial Planner?

When it comes to money, most people do not struggle with what to do, they struggle with actually doing it. Life is busy, financial choices are complex, and the cost of mistakes can be high. A financial planner helps cut through the noise, creates clarity, and provides a roadmap that keeps you on track.

But not all financial planning is created equal. At Mountainview Planning, the approach is advice-only, fee-for-service: you pay for unbiased advice, not for products. That means no hidden commissions, no sales quotas, and no conflicts of interest. The only focus is on what is best for you.

The Value of Working with a Planner

1. Better Financial Outcomes

Research shows that households working with a financial planner accumulate more wealth over time. A 2012 study by the Financial Planning Standards Council (now FP Canada) and Strategic Insight found that advised households had 2.7 times more assets than non-advised households, even after controlling for income and age.

2. Improved Investment Behavior

One of the biggest risks to your wealth is not the market, it is human behavior. Studies from Morningstar and Dalbar consistently show that individual investors often underperform the very funds they invest in, largely because they buy high and sell low. A financial planner provides perspective and accountability, helping you stay disciplined, especially in turbulent markets.

3. Peace of Mind and Reduced Stress

Money is the number one source of stress for Canadians (FP Canada, 2023) A clear financial plan creates confidence: you know where you stand, what your options are, and how to get where you want to go.

4. Continuity for Your Family

Financial planning is not just for you, it is for your family as well. In the event of death or incapacity, a well-prepared plan ensures your loved ones know what to do, who to contact, and how to access critical resources. Estate planning, beneficiary designations, and documented strategies reduce confusion and conflict at an already difficult time. A planner helps make sure your financial life is organized so your family can carry on with clarity and security.

5. Access to Best-in-Class Tools

Professional financial planners use sophisticated planning software that goes far beyond what is available to the average DIY investor. These tools allow for detailed scenario analysis, tax optimization strategies, retirement income projections, and coordinated planning across multiple goals. This level of precision helps identify opportunities and risks that may otherwise go unnoticed.

6. Comprehensive Guidance Beyond Investments

True financial planning goes beyond choosing investments. It includes:

With advice-only planning, every recommendation is tailored to your goals and life circumstances.

7. Accountability that Drives Progress

Knowing what to do is one thing, but following through is another. A financial planner provides structure, follow-up, and accountability so goals do not get pushed aside. Regular check-ins help keep you on track, adjust for life changes, and ensure progress continues year after year.

Why Advice-Only?

Traditional financial advice often comes bundled with product sales or investment management fees. That means your advisor may get paid more if you invest more, regardless of whether that is the best choice for you.

Advice-only financial planning removes these conflicts. You pay directly for professional guidance, just as you would for a lawyer or accountant. The result: transparent, unbiased, client-first advice.

The Bottom Line

Working with a financial planner is not about chasing hot stocks or timing the market. It is about creating clarity, confidence, and long-term results. Independent research shows the value is real, and when the advice is fee-for-service, you can trust it is truly in your best interest.


References

Financial Planning Standards Council & Strategic Insight (2012). Value of Financial Planning Study. 

Dalbar, Inc. (2023). Quantitative Analysis of Investor Behavior (QAIB). 

Morningstar (2019). Mind the Gap 2019: A Report on Investor Returns in the U.S. 

FP Canada (2023). Financial Stress Index.