Many people aren’t sure what “independent” really means when it comes to financial advice. So, before making any decisions, it’s important to understand the difference. In this clear, plain-English guide, we explain the key distinctions between Independent Financial Advisers (IFAs) and tied or restricted advisers. As a result, you’ll be better equipped to choose the type of support that truly suits your needs—especially if you have pensions, investments, or cross-border questions.
Independent Financial Adviser [IFA]
An IFA works for you, not for a single bank or insurer. They can research the whole market and recommend the most suitable products and providers for your goals and budget. Their advice is unbiased and typically paid for by a clear fee that you agree in advance.
Key traits of an IFA:
- Access to the whole market (unrestricted choice)
- Transparent fees aligned with your interests
- Typically higher qualifications and experience in complex planning
- Clear focus on long-term service: regular reviews, rebalancing, and updates
What is a Tied or Restricted Adviser?
- A tied or restricted adviser works for a specific bank, insurer, or a small panel of providers. They can only recommend what their firm offers.

An IFA is likely to provide potentially better long-term outcomes for clients as the needs of the client and the IFA are aligned. Unlike ‘tied agents’ who normally earn up front commissions on the sale of a product; IFA’s will normally be remunerated by agreeing a transparent fee structure with their client. This means the IFA is motivated to service the client and provide regular reviews to make sure the solutions they recommend remain on track to achieve the clients’ goals.
Limitations to consider:
- Limited product range (not whole-of-market)
- Possible sales targets or incentives that can bias recommendations
- Often less flexibility to adapt when your needs change
The Big Difference: Choice, Cost, and Ongoing Care
| Area | Independent Financial Adviser (IFA) | Tied/Restricted Adviser |
| Market access | Whole-of-market search | Limited to one firm or small panel |
| Conflicts | Lower – paid by client fees | Higher – often product/firm driven |
| Pricing | Transparent fees | May rely on commissions or bundled costs |
| Suitability | Tailored to your goals and risk | Constrained by product shelf |
| Ongoing reviews | Proactive monitoring and re-planning | Varies; often minimal |
| Best for | Complex needs, cross-border, tax, pensions | Simple, single-product needs |
Why independent advice often leads to better outcomes
- Broader choice = better fit. With the full market in play, IFAs can combine the right platform, funds, wrappers, and insurance to meet your exact needs.
- Aligned incentives. When a clear fee is paid, ongoing service and plan improvements are prioritised by your adviser—not just the sale of a product.
- Regular reviews. Markets, tax rules, and your life change. IFAs schedule ongoing reviews to keep your plan on track.
- Cost control. IFAs compare fees, performance, and flexibility across providers and can help you switch to more cost-effective options when appropriate.
- Clarity and simplicity. A good IFA explains your options plainly and builds a plan you can actually follow.
Continuity of service matters
Banks and product providers often fall short on ongoing service. Clients can be left to manage fund switches, risk changes, and tax implications on their own. IFAs, by contrast, are built around long-term relationships, clear review schedules, and continuous improvements to your plan.
At Astra Worldwide, we frequently see clients who were given one-off product sales without follow-up. Independent, unbiased advice can correct course and restore confidence.
When tied advice can still be fine
If you only need one basic product (e.g., a simple life policy alongside a mortgage) and you’re confident it suits you, tied advice may be adequate. But once you have multiple goals, pensions, investments, or cross-border issues, the limits of a tied approach become clear.

Key Differences between IFA and Tied:
An IFA will provide the latest offerings in the market as these businesses are more Entrepreneurial and adaptable to the market. Tied agents who work for banks and insurance companies take longer to adapt and often sell outdated products.
What to expect in a first meeting with an IFA
A qualified IFA will:
- Review your full picture: pensions, investments, savings, insurance, cash flow, taxes, and goals
- Map out short-, medium-, and long-term objectives
- Compare providers across the whole market
- Explain fees, performance, risks, and flexibility in simple terms
- Recommend a plan with clear next steps and a review timetable
Extras for complex cases: estate planning coordination, cross-border structures, and tax-efficient wrappers where suitable and allowed.
Why independence is crucial for expats and international clients
If you live, work, or retire across countries, you’ll face multiple tax systems, currencies, and pension rules. You need solutions that travel with you. An international IFA can provide:
- Cross-border planning that remains suitable when you move
- Consolidation of old pensions and accounts where appropriate
- Currency and platform choices that reduce friction and costs
- A single, trusted contact who understands your context across jurisdictions
FAQs
Is an IFA more expensive?
Not necessarily. IFAs aim to deliver net value by improving structure, costs, and outcomes. Their fees are transparent, so you know what you’re paying for—and why.
How do IFAs get paid?
Usually by an agreed fee (initial and/or ongoing). This aligns advice with your interests and encourages long-term service.
Can a tied adviser be unbiased?
Although they can act with care, their product shelf is limited. As a result, that built-in restriction can reduce true impartiality.
What if I already have products from a bank or insurer?
An IFA can review and compare your current setup with the wider market, then help you keep, tweak, or switch—based on evidence, not sales targets.
Summary
- IFAs offer whole-of-market choice, transparent fees, and proactive reviews—key ingredients for better long-term outcomes.
- In such cases, particularly where pensions, investments, or cross-border matters are involved, a plan that genuinely fits your circumstances is typically best achieved through independent advice.
- Tied advisers can be fine for simple, single-product needs, but they lack flexibility and breadth.
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Ready to get unbiased, whole-of-market advice?
Contact James Hartland for a friendly, no-jargon conversation about your goals and options.
Email: [email protected]
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