Do I Need a Financial Adviser as an Expat?

If you’re living and working abroad, chances are you’ve already made a number of financial decisions that most people back home never have to think about—things like multi-currency income, international tax rules, private healthcare, and schooling costs. You might be earning well, enjoying life, and managing just fine on your own.

But at some point, the question arises: “Do I really need a financial adviser?”

Here’s a detailed, honest guide to help you decide—especially as an expat in Singapore.

Why Expats Face Unique Financial Challenges

Expats often juggle more complexity than they realise:

  • Earnings in one currency, savings in another
  • Multiple tax jurisdictions
  • Pensions and savings scattered globally
  • International school fees
  • Changing immigration or residency statuses
  • No access to home-country financial products
  • No CPF if you’re not a Singapore citizen or PR

All of this means your financial decisions aren’t just about “what fund to invest in”—they’re about strategy, timing, structure, and risk management across borders.

When You Might Not Need an Adviser

Let’s start with the honest bit.

You might not need a financial adviser if:

  • You have a strong financial background (e.g. you’re a CFA or accountant)
  • You’re comfortable researching investments and tax implications yourself
  • Your finances are still fairly simple (e.g. you’re single, renting, no dependents)
  • You’ve already created a well-diversified, low-cost investment strategy
  • You have time and interest in actively managing your own finances

That said—even financially savvy people often underestimate the value of a second pair of eyes when cross-border issues are involved.

When an Adviser Becomes Valuable

Here’s where an adviser can make a real difference:

1. You’ve hit a life transition

Marriage, divorce, children, relocation, career break, inheritance—these moments carry major financial implications. An adviser can help you map a plan that reflects your new reality.

2. You have no access to employer pension schemes

Without an automatic pension structure, expats must build retirement savings intentionally. Advisers can help design investment portfolios and income plans for later life.

3. You earn well but aren’t sure where the money goes

This is incredibly common. A good adviser can show you how to redirect surplus income into wealth-building strategies, without compromising your lifestyle.

4. You want to send children to international school or university

The costs are high, the timelines are long, and the inflation is real. You’ll need a structured investment plan—not just cash in the bank.

5. You plan to repatriate

Whether you’ll return to the UK, Australia, or elsewhere, an adviser can help bridge your Singapore-based life with your long-term home-country goals—without triggering tax or currency surprises.

6. You don’t want to DIY everything anymore

Some expats hit a point where managing every spreadsheet and market update becomes exhausting. Delegating can be both smart and liberating.

What Should an Expat Adviser Help With?

A quality financial adviser should do more than talk about products.

Here’s what they should offer:

  • Cash flow planning across currencies
  • Investment advice tailored to your time horizon, risk tolerance, and location
  • Education planning for international school and university
  • Retirement projections that account for different jurisdictions
  • Tax awareness (not advice—but they should work with your accountant or tax advisor)
  • Insurance reviews (life, health, critical illness, income protection)
  • Estate planning for global assets
  • Regular progress reviews and portfolio rebalancing

They should also help you avoid financial pitfalls unique to expat life—like becoming unintentionally tax resident in multiple countries, or holding accounts that could be frozen after a move.

What a Financial Adviser Should Not Do

Red flags to watch out for:

  • Selling high-commission products with hidden lock-ins
  • Offering “one-size-fits-all” portfolios
  • Recommending structures you don’t understand
  • Dodging questions about fees and total cost
  • Pushing “savings” or “bonuses” that sound too good to be true
  • Talking in jargon instead of plain English

A good adviser should be transparent, licensed, and focused on your goals—not theirs.

What About Fees?

Financial advisers are paid in one of three ways:

  1. Fee-only: You pay an agreed fee for advice or a plan—no product sales involved.
  2. Commission-based: The adviser earns money through product recommendations (e.g. insurance, investment platforms).
  3. Hybrid: A mix of planning fees and product-based revenue.

In Singapore’s expat market, most advisers are hybrid. That’s not necessarily bad—as long as:

  • The fees are clearly disclosed
  • The advice is tailored to your needs
  • You understand exactly what you’re signing up for

If you’re unsure, ask for a full breakdown and always get it in writing.

Should You See an Adviser Even If You’re Not Ready to Invest?

Yes—especially if you:

  • Have a long-term goal (e.g. career break, home purchase, retirement abroad)
  • Are unsure how to structure your savings
  • Want clarity on what’s possible with your income
  • Feel overwhelmed by the number of decisions to make

The best advisers work with clients in planning mode, not just those ready to hand over money to invest.

You don’t need to be rich to benefit from financial advice—you just need to have goals, complexity, and curiosity.

As an expat, your financial life spans borders, currencies, and systems. A good adviser won’t just help you grow wealth—they’ll help you stay on track, reduce risk, and make smarter decisions at every stage of your journey.

Wondering whether advice is right for you? Let’s have a low-pressure chat and see what you might be missing. Sometimes the smallest tweaks make the biggest difference.

Why Financial Advice is Better than DIY

I often get asked the question, “Why should I involve a professional with my investing, when I can do it myself?”. To me, the answer is very simple, but there are lots of reasons why. The analogy I like to use is this; if you are unwell, you go and see a doctor. Especially if it’s serious, like an operation, you will go and see a surgeon. Same with a suit, if you want a suit made, very few people will sew it themselves; they will get a tailor to do it. This same logic should apply to finances and investments. Unless you are an expert, like a fund manager, financial analyst, etc, having the input of a professional is always going to be beneficial. Here are five key ways financial advice is better than DIY.

  1. Avoiding Scams

Back in 2021, I wrote an article on ‘How to Spot An Investment Scam’ (you can check it out here:

https://danielleteboul.com/2021/12/03/how-to-spot-an-investment-scam/: Why Financial Advice is Better than DIY

Investment scams are still on the rise, with many ‘investments’ offering huge returns over a short period of time. These may either be Ponzi schemes, or just a way to con you out of a lump sum of money. A professional will be able to spot an investment scam, understand the rules and regulations of the country they provide advice in, and could potentially help you save losing a lot of money.

2. Confidence in Investing

If you’re unsure how to even start planning your finances, a professional will guide you with your financial goals and objectives, and put forward an investment plan that will achieve these goals, whilst still being within your means and circumstances. They can provide you with confidence during your investment journey, supplementing their advice with knowledge and data. For example, I know many people that think they are a risk-taker and an adventurous investor. But, as soon as there is an economic downturn, such as Covid or the Russian invasion of Ukraine, they panic, and are concerned that their investment value has dropped. An advisor would be able to provide that person with the perspective they need to ignore short-term fluctuations and to take the emotion out of investing. For my article on this topic, click below:

https://danielleteboul.com/2021/05/27/how-to-take-emotion-out-of-investing/: Why Financial Advice is Better than DIY

3. Reminding You to Invest Long-Term

This links back to my first two points; normally if an investment offers amazing returns over the short-term, it’s too good to be true. Not only that, if you check on your investment every day for fluctuations, you may lose faith in your planning. Investment should be for the long-term. A lot of my clients plan for retirement; a long-term goal that is inevitable (we all have to stop working one day!). But even if you have mid- to long-term goals, your money is bound to go further than if you expect returns in one or two years. This is because investing long-term can withstand short-term fluctuations or drops in the market. Overall, the stock market has risen over the years; even with crashes like the Lehman Brothers, Covid, The Dot Com Bubble, and even The Great Depression. Your advisor will know this and encourage you to diversify and hold long-term, so that you benefit and achieve your financial goals.

4. Providing Something Tax Beneficial

Wealth and tax go hand-in-hand, and a lot of expats will require tax advice or need a tax-efficient investment. If you think about it, it’s pointless in doing an investment that eventually you will have to pay a hefty sum of tax on, and navigating tax is often confusing, time-consuming and possibly costly. Instead of trying to do it yourself, wasting time and possibly money, a professional can offer tax-efficient solutions, advise you on tax reliefs you are eligible for, and connect you with experts for more tricky tax situations. All of this means that you are saving time and also your investment is growing in the most tax-efficient way possible.

For my article on what tax relief you may be eligible for in Singapore, check out this link:

https://danielleteboul.com/2022/04/04/tax-relief-for-foreigners/: Why Financial Advice is Better than DIY

5. Tailoring and Reviewing

Going back to my initial analogy, when you get a suit made, a tailor will do it for you. If you need alterations, a tailor will also help you with this. This is the same with a financial professional; they will tailor a bespoke financial plan for you. Investing is not one-size-fits-all. Just because your friend is doing a certain investment, doesn’t mean it is the right thing for you. A professional will match your goals, lifestyle and personality with a suitable investment plan, and will tweak and make adjustments along the way. Financial planning is a process, one that may change throughout your life, so a financial professional will review regularly to make sure that you are on track.