Tennessee Financial Advisors
Browse top-rated tennessee financial advisors. Compare pricing, specialties, and client reviews.
Popular cities in Tennessee
9 professionals found
9 professionals found
Comprehensive wealth management in Atlanta
Fee-Only Planning for Physicians in the Southeast
Atlanta's leading independent wealth advisor
Atlanta Fee-Only Wealth Management & Tax Planning
Knoxville Fee-Only Planning for Physicians & Execs
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Nashville Fee-Only Wealth for Healthcare & Music
Fee-only wealth management in the Blue Ridge
Financial Planning Exclusively for Doctors
Editorial review by the Coyote Wealth team · Updated June 3, 2026
Benefits of Hiring a Financial Advisor
A fiduciary financial advisor works in your best interest — not on commission — to build a retirement strategy tailored to your income, assets, and goals for clients in Tennessee. Whether you're a business owner planning an exit, a high-income professional managing equity compensation, or a family thinking about multi-generational wealth, the right advisor brings a coherent investment strategy, estate planning guidance, and tax-efficient portfolio management.
Working with an advisor who specializes in your life stage and situation matters: an advisor focused on business owners understands liquidity events, corporate retirement plans, and key-person insurance in ways a generalist may not. Fee transparency — knowing exactly what you pay and how your advisor is compensated — is the foundation of a trustworthy advisory relationship.
How to Choose a Financial Advisor: A Step-by-Step Guide
Follow these four steps before signing any engagement letter.
Step 1: Understand fiduciary duty
Not all financial advisors are fiduciaries. A fiduciary is legally required to act in your best interest; a broker under a suitability standard only needs to recommend products that are "suitable." Ask directly: "Are you a fiduciary 100% of the time?" and get it in writing. Fee-only RIAs registered with the SEC or state are fiduciaries by law, while commission-based brokers typically are not.
Step 2: Clarify the fee structure
Financial advisors charge in several ways: 1% of AUM annually (common), a flat annual fee ($2,000–$10,000+), an hourly rate ($200–$500/hr), or commissions on products sold. AUM-based fees scale with your portfolio size — at $1M, 1% is $10,000/year. Always ask for the full fee disclosure document (ADV Part 2) before signing.
Step 3: Interview the right way
Ask any prospective financial advisor: What is your client minimum? Who is your typical client? How do you get paid — and do you receive any third-party compensation? How often will we meet? What's your investment philosophy? Who will actually manage my account day-to-day? A good advisor welcomes these questions; evasive or vague answers are red flags worth taking seriously.
Step 4: Use FINRA and SEC databases
The SEC's IAPD database lets you look up any registered investment adviser's Form ADV — which includes credentials, fee disclosures, disciplinary history, and services offered. FINRA's BrokerCheck covers registered brokers and broker-dealers. Check both before hiring anyone who manages money. Any disciplinary history or customer complaints should be explored before proceeding.
Frequently Asked Questions
How We Vet Every Firm
Verified Credentials
We check active license status with state boards, the SEC's IAPD, and FINRA BrokerCheck before any firm is listed.
Real Client Reviews
Every review is collected directly from verified clients. We apply spam detection and moderation to ensure authenticity.
Transparent Fees
Listed firms disclose their fee structure. We flag any firm that refuses to share how they charge clients.
Clean Regulatory Record
We screen every firm against SEC, FINRA, and state licensing databases for disciplinary history and sanctions.
