---
title: "What are Broker Fees (and how to pay less)?"
description: ""
canonical_url: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/broker-fees
markdown_url: https://trendshare.org/ai/broker-fees.md
published: 2011-09-14
last_updated: 2025-11-28
content_license: https://trendshare.org/about/disclaimer
---
# What are Broker Fees (and how to pay less)?

Source: https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/broker-fees
Updated: 2025-11-28
Picture a broker in your mind. What do you see?

Perhaps someone sitting behind a desk piled high of reports, talking on the
phone, and watching huge columns of numbers scroll across a big computer
screen. Maybe she's young and energetic. Maybe he's older and has seen it all.
The whole scene tries to say "Trust me with your money. I know what I'm
doing."

That's a good image, but it's incomplete. Most brokers are trustworthy and
professional. Most are good at their jobs. Some are excellent. (As with any
profession, a few—a handful really—are suspicious, but by far they
mean well.)

Should you let someone else handle your money? Should you pay for the
privilege of doing so?

That depends on what they charge for what you get in return.

Remember that the goal of investing is to make money. It sounds so simple.
How could anyone forget? Yet it's easy to dig yourself into a hole before
you've even had a chance to make money—and one way to start by losing
money is to pay too much to invest.

    
### Key takeaways

    

        - **If you mainly hold low-cost index funds and trade rarely,** a discount or no-fee broker usually leaves more of your money invested.

        - **Full-service advisors charge for personalized planning** (tax, estate, retirement). That can be worth it for complex needs, but it often costs ~0.75%–1.5% AUM.

        - **Use the calculator below** to compare net outcomes at different fee levels. Try the example scenarios to see the real effect on long-term returns.

    

    **Try these scenarios:**
    
        <button type="button" class="bfh-scenario" aria-label="Scenario: No-fee platform, $100,000 principal, 8% return, 0% fee, 20 years" data-principal="100000" data-return="8" data-fee="0" data-years="20" style="padding:.4rem .6rem;border-radius:6px;background:#eef6ff;border:1px solid #cfe0ff;cursor:pointer;">No-fee platform: $0</button>
        <button type="button" class="bfh-scenario" aria-label="Scenario: Robo-advisor, $100,000 principal, 8% return, 0.25% fee, 20 years" data-principal="100000" data-return="8" data-fee="0.25" data-years="20" style="padding:.4rem .6rem;border-radius:6px;background:#f7f9f4;border:1px solid #e1e9df;cursor:pointer;">Robo-advisor: 0.25%</button>
        <button type="button" class="bfh-scenario" aria-label="Scenario: Full-service advisor, $100,000 principal, 8% return, 1.00% fee, 20 years" data-principal="100000" data-return="8" data-fee="1.00" data-years="20" style="padding:.4rem .6rem;border-radius:6px;background:#fff6f6;border:1px solid #ffdede;cursor:pointer;">Full-service advisor: 1.00%</button>
    

## What Are Broker Fees?

Note: The fees given here are examples and not absolutes.

    
### Typical fees by broker type

    <table style="width:100%;border-collapse:collapse;font-size:.95rem;">
        <thead>
            <tr>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Broker type</th>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Typical fee / notes</th>
            </tr>
        </thead>
         <tbody>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">No-fee challengers</td>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">$0 trade commissions; may earn from order flow; minimal or no annual fees</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Discount brokers</td>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Low commissions or per-trade ($0-$10 historically); small account fees possible</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Full-service brokers</td>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Higher management fees (1%-2% AUM) + trade commissions; often bundled services</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Robo-advisors</td>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Annual fee typically 0.25%-0.50% plus fund expense ratios</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Mutual funds / ETFs (expense ratio)</td>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Expense ratios vary: 0.03% (low-cost index ETF) to >1% (actively managed funds)</td>
            </tr>
        </tbody>
    </table>

    
### Real examples (broker fees) — last-checked 2025-11-10

    
A quick, sourced snapshot of common broker fee lines to help you compare costs. Always check the provider's pricing pages or Form CRS for the latest details.

    <table style="width:100%;border-collapse:collapse;font-size:.95rem;margin-top:.5rem;">
        <thead>
            <tr>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Broker</th>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Trade commission</th>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Account / maintenance fees</th>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Advisory / subscription</th>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Notes</th>
                <th style="text-align:left;padding:.4rem;border-bottom:1px solid #eee">Source</th>
            </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Merrill (Bank of America Wealth Management)</td>

    
**Data notes:** This is an illustrative snapshot to compare fee categories across full-service brokerage/advisory programs. Always consult the provider's official fee schedules and disclosures for current, authoritative pricing. Snapshot date: 2025-11-10.

    
Cite as: Trendshare, "Broker fee snapshot", article page CSV download. Link to the article for scoring method and context.

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Full-service brokerage/advisory
                pricing varies; managed-advisory fees typically charged as a
                percentage of assets (see disclosures)</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Account minimums and maintenance
                depend on program (advisor-managed accounts often have
                minimums)</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Advisory fees commonly in the
~0.75%-1.5% AUM (Assets Under Management) range for full-service programs
(tiered pricing applies)</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Merrill offers advisor-led
                wealth management and several managed-account programs; fee
                schedules are program-specific.</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">[Merrill: wealth management and disclosures](https://www.merrill.com/)</td>

            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Morgan Stanley Wealth Management</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Pricing varies by account type;
                brokerage services and advisory services are offered under
                separate arrangements</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Some advisory programs have
                minimum asset requirements; program disclosures show
                details</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Advisory fees vary widely by
                program and scale; full-service advisory programs commonly
                charge around ~0.75%-1.5% AUM (see Client Relationship
                Summary)</td>

                <td style="padding:.4prem .5rem">Morgan Stanley provides both
                advisor-led and digital advisory options; exact fees depend on
                chosen program.</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">[Morgan Stanley Wealth Management (disclosures and CRS)](https://www.morganstanley.com/what-we-do/wealth-management)</td>

            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">UBS Wealth Management</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Brokerage and advisory fee
                structures differ by service; contact an advisor or review
                relationship summary</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Minimums and fee schedules
                depend on the program (private/advisory clients typically face
                minimums)</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Advisory fees for bespoke wealth
                services are typically quoted as a percentage of assets and vary
                by client segment and services required</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">UBS targets higher-net-worth
                clients with customized fee schedules; consult disclosures for
                specifics.</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">[UBS Wealth Management: client disclosures](https://www.ubs.com/us/en/wealth-management.html)</td>

            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Edward Jones</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Traditional full-service model:
                fees and commission structures vary by product and advisor; see
                disclosure documents</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Account minimums and fees depend
                on account type and advisor program</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Advisory/managed account fees
                tend to be in the full-service advisor range (often around 1%
                AUM or more depending on services)</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">Edward Jones is primarily an
                advisor-led network, with fees individualized and disclosed in
                client agreements.</td>

                <td style="padding:.4rem .5rem">[Edward Jones: disclosures and client resources](https://www.edwardjones.com/us-en)</td>

            </tr>
        </tbody>
    </table>

    
Note: pricing
    and fee structures change frequently. Always check the broker's published
    pricing and regulatory disclosures (Form CRS or fee schedule) for the exact,
    up-to-date details and effective dates.

 
### Common pitfalls when assessing broker fees
  - Confusing expense ratios (fund-level) with broker commissions both add to costs.
 - Ignoring trading commissions when you trade frequently; they compound over time.
 - Yield traps: a high yield may signal company distress, not a bargain.
 - Account fees (inactivity, transfer, custodial) can erode returns on small accounts.

- Special dividends and one-time payouts distort trailing yields.
 

    **Related:**

    [What is a discount stock broker](/how-to-invest/what-is-a-discount-stock-broker)

    [Buy the S&P index fund](/how-to-invest/buy-the-s&p-index-fund)

Suppose your broker charges you a fee of 1% of your portfolio's value every
year. (That's common.) If you have $10,000 invested, that's $100 a year. Your
investments must make $100—1%—for you to break even on fees alone
(let alone [getting a good rate of return after taxes and inflation](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-a-good-annual-rate-of-return)).

If you only earn $95, that means you've *lost* money. You might as
well have put that money in a bank account where you could have earned $20 on
it instead. Hopefully your broker's better than that and will help you break
even. That doesn't always happen, and you'll have to pay brokerage fees either
way.

The fees don't stop there. If you have to pay your broker $20 every time you
buy or sell something. If you have $10,000 invested and you sell one stock and
buy another, that's $40 on top of the $100 already charged. Now you need to
make $140 just to break even.

Is that reasonable? Maybe; you're not going to make those trades on your
own. Then again, if you had a [discount stock broker](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-a-discount-stock-broker), you could pay
$10 or less per trade.

Remember, you pay that commission for every transaction you make. Suppose
your broker calls you with a great tip. A local company has gone through a
restructuring and its stock looks like a bargain, as the business is solid,
debt is gone, and revenue projections look great! You should transfer more
money into your brokerage account and buy more stock!

Deposit another $1000 for that trade. You'll pay $20 for that transaction
and another $10 in annual fees. For the additional $1000, you need to make a 3%
return just to break even. If you sold something else to get that $1000, you
paid $20 for that transaction too, so add up the costs again and again.

Add another small percentage of fees for any mutual funds you buy or sell.
Add more fees for handling a Roth IRA or any other type of investment you have.
Add more fees for advanced services such as personalized retirement planning.
Yikes. If you've ever asked "[How do brokers make money](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/how-do-stock-brokers-make-money)?", now you know—by charging you every chance they
get.

## Types of Brokers and Brokerage Fees

Stockbrokers fall into three rough categories:

- *Full-service brokers* actively manage your portfolio for you. They may also provide tax advice, estate planning, and other financial services. In return, you generally pay a commission percentage of the trade value for every trade, generally 1 or 2%. In other words, buying or selling $4000 of stock could cost you $40 to $80. In addition, you may pay a 1-2% of your total assets in management fees every year.

- *Discount brokers* help you perform trades, but do not provide the range of services or personal advice you can expect from a full-service broker. Trade commissions are generally flat fees from $5 to $40 per trade. Any account maintenance fee is often less than 1% annually.

- *Online brokers* allow you to buy and sell securities online. You'll pay a flat fee per trade; the best online brokers charge under $10 per trade. There may be an annual fee, but it's generally less than $100 and frequently waived if you have enough assets invested.

The lines between these three categories can be fuzzy; an [online discount broker](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/what-is-a-discount-stock-broker) may offer
premium individual services, while still allowing you to manage your portfolio.
In every one of these cases, you need to remember two things. First, you will
pay to buy and sell stocks. Second, the amount you pay affects what you get in
return.

Pun intended.

A reputable online broker can handle most of what you're likely to throw at
it; you can transfer your ETFs, mutual funds, and other securities from your
existing broker. You can roll over your 401(k) from a previous company. You can
move or set up a new Roth IRA. You can do a lot!

## How Do Fees Affect Your Return?

1% and 3% and 5% may not sound like a lot, but every dollar you give someone
else to manage your money for you is a dollar that could be working for you.
[The S&P 500](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/dow-sandp-nasdaq) has an 8% or 9% return rate on
average over the past several decades. You'll have to beat that substantially
to make up for these fees. Most brokers and most funds don't do better than
that. *Brokerage fees exist to make brokerages money*, not to save you
money.

There's nothing wrong with paying a professional to do a job you can't do
yourself. If your broker is amazing and gets you 25% returns reliably, paying
3% in fees is well worth it. If your broker is good and makes a reliable 10%
return *before fees*, you're just as well off not using a broker at all
and instead [dumping your money into an S&P 500 index fund, where you can make 8-10% a year](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/buy-the-s&p-index-fund).

Oh, and if your broker actively moves your money around—charging you
$20 for each transaction, of course—paying a 3% brokerage fee might start
to look like a bargain. Six transactions a year is $120. Ten transactions a
year is $200.

Add to that that the broker doesn't necessarily know what *you* know
about the businesses you want to invest in. Your broker's goals may not to be
to find a couple of great companies and buy their stocks and hold them for
several years. After all, if your broker makes money on every transaction, the
fewer transactions you make, the less money for your broker.

## Should You Pay a Stockbroker?

It's not fair to paint brokers as greedy—they're not—or anything
other than professionals. Some of them are excellent and worth every penny they
charge. Can brokers have it all? No; nor should you expect them too.

In theory, a full service broker is earning you enough every year that you
will gladly pay an individual transaction fee of $40 and up per trade and 1-2%
of your assets every year. If you're getting a 20% return reliably, you write
that check every year. That's great! That's rare.

In practice, most full-service brokers aren't providing that much extra
value over [simple index fund investing](https://trendshare.org/how-to-invest/buy-the-s&p-index-fund),
unless you have a few million dollars in play. Even then, you can find tax
assistance that charges you by the job, not a percentage of your portfolio.

Apart from retirement planning, estate advice, or tax planning, you can do
most of what a broker does for yourself. You can find great companies and good
values and manage your investments on your own. You might get better returns
than your investment broker could (in fact, if you're careful you're can pick a
few winners!). Better yet, you'll *understand* your investments and be
able to explain why you own the companies you own.

If you get a fair value from your broker, by all means continue to do so. If
you're not sure, count the costs and see how much more work your money could do
for you. You have options, from full-service to discount to online brokers, and
you can save fees and put more of your money to work for you.
