Wealth management information for Edinburgh and the Lothians
Leading Wealth Advisory in Edinburgh
Independent financial planning for residents of Edinburgh and the Lothians, taking account of Scottish income tax rules and LBTT. Pensions, investments, retirement planning and inheritance guidance for households and small-business owners, with a clear route to regulated advice where you need it.
- Plain English, no jargon
- Scottish-tax-aware
- Discovery call within 48 hours
- Edinburgh-based, locally led
Edinburgh · City of Edinburgh
Organise pensions, ISAs and investments in one picture.
48h
Discovery call slot
7
Service areas
£0
Commission earned
City of Edinburgh
Local coverage
Market snapshot
Allowances and rates for Scottish taxpayers, 2026/27
The personal allowance held at £12,570 UK-wide. For Scottish taxpayers, Scottish Income Tax bands set by Holyrood apply on non-savings, non-dividend income: Starter 19%, Basic 20%, Intermediate 21%, Higher 42%, Advanced 45% and Top 48% above £125,140. Savings interest and dividend tax remain UK-wide and follow the rUK three-band structure. The ISA annual allowance stayed at £20,000, split between Cash, Stocks & Shares, Innovative Finance and Lifetime ISAs as you choose. The Junior ISA allowance is £9,000. The pension annual allowance is £60,000 for most savers, tapered for very high earners, with carry-forward available from the previous three tax years (and pension tax relief still given at marginal Scottish rates, which makes salary sacrifice more valuable at the 42%, 45% and 48% Scottish bands). The capital gains tax annual exempt amount sat at £3,000 per individual. The inheritance tax nil-rate band remained at £325,000, with the residence nil-rate band at £175,000 where a main home passes to direct descendants, giving a couple up to £1,000,000 of combined IHT-free allowance in the right circumstances. Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) replaces SDLT in Scotland, with Additional Dwelling Supplement on second homes. Dividend allowance is £500. State pension new flat-rate is £230.25 per week. None of this is advice on what to do with it.
Service areas we cover
Wealth management across the household balance sheet.
Seven service areas covering pensions, investments, retirement, tax, inheritance, ISAs and business protection. Information only; where regulated advice is needed we refer to FCA-authorised advisers.
Pensions
Workplace, personal and SIPPs. Annual allowance, carry-forward and consolidation of legacy workplace pots.
Read more →Investments
Platforms, fund choice and total annual cost. Active versus passive and the ISA-SIPP-GIA wrapper sequence.
Read more →Retirement Planning
Sustainable withdrawal rates, drawdown setup, the DB take-versus-defer question and annuity revival.
Read more →Tax Planning
Personal allowance, ISA and pension allowance use, capital gains tax management and dividend allowance.
Read more →Inheritance Tax Planning
Nil-rate bands, seven-year gifting rule, residence nil-rate band tapering and an introductory trust framework.
Read more →ISAs & Savings
Cash, Stocks & Shares, Lifetime and Junior ISAs plus the role of cash savings in the household balance sheet.
Read more →Business Protection
Relevant life cover, key person, shareholder protection and executive income protection for limited company directors.
Read more →Try the numbers
See how a contribution plan compounds.
Set the starting lump sum, the monthly contribution, the horizon and an assumed annual return. Illustrative only; not a forecast and not regulated advice. Past performance is not a guide to future returns.
Indicative projection
Investment growth calculator · Edinburgh
Set a starting lump sum, a monthly contribution, a horizon in years and an assumed annual return. Illustrative only. Past performance is not a guide to future returns.
Total contributed
£140,000
Investment growth
£119,770
Projected balance
£259,770
Assumes the assumed-return rate is achieved consistently each year, contributions are added at the end of each month, and no fees, taxes or inflation adjustments are applied. Real-world investment returns vary year to year and can be negative; fees on the platform and underlying funds will reduce the net return. Illustrative only; not regulated advice.
Recognisable names
UK wealth managers,
platforms and fund houses.
Most Edinburgh households are already invested with one of a familiar set of providers. We are not tied to any of them, we do not earn commission from product sales, and we do not earn referral fees on advised placements. Where the question is which platform to use or whether to consolidate, the answer turns on what you already own and the total fees you are paying.
Beyond the eight headline names we also recognise Martin Currie, Walter Scott & Partners, Artemis, Aegon UK and others as the recurring choices across City of Edinburgh. Always check any firm and adviser on the FCA Financial Services Register at register.fca.org.uk before instructing them.
Baillie Gifford
abrdn
Standard Life
Rathbones
Discretionary portfolios
Vanguard
Low-cost index funds
Hargreaves Lansdown
Largest UK platform
AJ Bell
SIPPs & investments
St. James's Place
Restricted advice
Edinburgh areas
Households we cover across Edinburgh.
County coverage
Wealth planning
across City of Edinburgh.
Beyond Edinburgh itself, we cover the same questions across the wider Lothians and into Fife. Midlothian and East Lothian carry a meaningful proportion of senior public-sector and professional households (Musselburgh, Dalkeith, Bonnyrigg, Haddington and North Berwick), often with NHS Scotland or Scottish Government scheme exposure on the pension side. West Lothian (Livingston, Linlithgow, Bathgate) holds a different mix, weighted toward corporate workplace pensions across the Heriot-Watt research park and the wider M8 corridor employers. Stirlingshire and the Fife edge (Dunfermline, Inverkeithing, Burntisland) come into the picture for households commuting across the Queensferry Crossing or down the A90. The household questions are recognisably the same: am I paying too much in fees, is my pension in the right place, can I retire when I want to, am I making the most of Scottish tax bands on pension salary sacrifice, and what happens to all of this when I die. The answers are different for every household; the framework for working through them is the same.
Recent work
Three recent Edinburgh wealth cases.
Client voices
Anonymised feedback from across Edinburgh.
"I had three old pensions sitting with three different providers and no idea what fees I was paying. A clear written summary inside a week told me exactly what I had, what each pot was costing, and what the consolidation route would look like. Took the regulated-advice step from there with confidence."
K.D. · EH4
Self-employed consultant, Stockbridge
"We had an NHS Pension on the way and a private SIPP we did not really understand. The discovery call set out the trade-offs in plain English without ever pushing us toward a product. The Scottish-tax angle on the SIPP drawdown timing was something I had never had explained properly before."
P.M. · EH10
Retired NHS Lothian consultant, Morningside
"Inheritance tax on our parents' estate had been worrying us for years and nobody had ever sat us down to explain what the rules actually say, including how Scottish legal rights interact with the gifting plan. A two-hour conversation and a written follow-up answered most of it. We took regulated advice on the trust piece and felt prepared rather than ambushed."
S.H. · EH3
Small-business owner, New Town
Talk to us
Book a discovery call.
A no-cost 30 to 45 minute call. We cover what you already hold, what you are trying to achieve, and what the right next step looks like. No drip emails, no commission, no sales pressure.
FAQs
Frequently asked questions
How does wealth management work in Edinburgh?
+
Wealth management is the umbrella term for coordinating pensions, investments, tax and estate planning across a household. In practice that means knowing what you already hold (pensions, ISAs, GIAs, property, cash), what the fees on each are, and what you want the money to do over the next 5, 10 or 20 years. For most Edinburgh households the work breaks into three layers: information, where you understand the rules and your own numbers; planning, where you set a written framework for how the pots fit together; and regulated advice, where you sit down with an FCA-authorised adviser for a specific recommendation on a product or transfer. Information on this site is general in nature and does not constitute regulated financial advice.
Does Scottish Income Tax affect my pension and investment planning?
+
Yes, in two important ways. First, pension tax relief is given at your marginal Scottish rate, which means a Higher-rate Scottish taxpayer (42%) gets more relief on a personal pension contribution than a higher-rate rUK taxpayer (40%), and Advanced (45%) and Top (48%) Scottish bands push the relief higher again. That makes pension salary sacrifice particularly valuable for Edinburgh households earning above the Scottish Higher rate threshold. Second, the Scottish bands diverge from rUK at multiple income points, creating planning traps and opportunities around bonus timing, dividend versus salary mix for limited company directors, and the interaction between the personal allowance taper and the Top rate. Savings interest and dividend tax remain UK-wide and unaffected. The Scottish bands and rates only apply to non-savings, non-dividend income, and only to Scottish taxpayers (identified by HMRC using the S prefix on your tax code).
Are you FCA-authorised?
+
No. This site provides general wealth management information for Edinburgh and Lothian households. We do not give regulated financial advice and we do not sell financial products. Where a question goes beyond information, for example a pension transfer recommendation, a defined-benefit transfer, or a specific investment recommendation, we refer households to FCA-authorised advisers. Always check an adviser's status on the FCA Financial Services Register at register.fca.org.uk before instructing them.
What does it cost to get wealth management advice?
+
Costs split into three layers. Platform charges, the fee a provider charges to hold your investments, usually 0.15% to 0.45% per year on the balance. Fund charges, the underlying ongoing charges figure on each fund you hold, typically 0.05% to 0.15% on index funds and 0.5% to 1.0% on actively managed funds. Advice charges, where an FCA-authorised adviser is involved, typically a 1% to 3% initial fee on a transfer or new investment, plus 0.5% to 1.0% ongoing per year for continuing advice. Many advisers also work on a fixed-fee basis for specific pieces of work, particularly retirement planning and IHT planning. Always ask for total fees in writing in pounds and pence, not just percentages.
Should I consolidate my old pensions?
+
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Consolidation can simplify administration, reduce overall fees, and give you a single view of your retirement savings. It is usually wrong where the old scheme carries valuable guarantees, for example a guaranteed annuity rate, a defined-benefit safeguard, or protected tax-free cash above 25%. A pension transfer from a defined-benefit scheme worth more than £30,000 requires regulated advice by law. Even on simpler defined-contribution consolidations, the question of whether to consolidate and where to consolidate to is usually worth taking regulated advice on. Information about the rules is not the same thing as advice on your specific situation.
How much can I put into an ISA each year?
+
The total ISA allowance for 2026/27 is £20,000 per adult, refreshed every 6 April. You can split it across Cash ISAs, Stocks & Shares ISAs, Innovative Finance ISAs and a Lifetime ISA (Lifetime ISA contributions are capped at £4,000 of the £20,000). The Junior ISA allowance for under-18s is £9,000. ISA returns, whether interest, dividends or capital gains, are free of UK income tax and capital gains tax. ISAs are usually the first port of call for tax-efficient investing once any employer pension match is captured. Lifetime ISAs add a 25% government bonus on contributions up to age 50 but carry an early-withdrawal penalty if used outside the permitted purposes (first home up to £450,000 anywhere in the UK, or age 60).
When does inheritance tax start to bite?
+
Inheritance tax in 2026/27 starts at 40% on estates above the nil-rate band of £325,000 per person. A residence nil-rate band of up to £175,000 applies where a main home passes to direct descendants, taking the headline allowance per person up to £500,000. Married couples and civil partners can transfer unused allowances on first death, giving a combined potential allowance of £1,000,000. Above that, 40% applies on the excess. The residence nil-rate band tapers away on estates above £2,000,000. Gifts within the seven years before death can be brought back into the estate for IHT purposes, with taper relief reducing the IHT rate on gifts made 3 to 7 years before death. For Scottish estates an additional layer applies: legal rights give the surviving spouse and children a claim on the deceased's moveable estate (cash, investments, pensions are largely excluded but moveable assets are not), which can run alongside or against the IHT-driven plan. IHT planning is regulated-advice territory once the numbers get real.
What is LBTT and how does it affect property planning in Edinburgh?
+
Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) replaces Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) for Scottish property transactions. Residential LBTT runs nil to £145,000, 2% to £250,000, 5% to £325,000, 10% to £750,000 and 12% above. First-time buyer relief raises the nil threshold to £175,000. Additional Dwelling Supplement (ADS) of 8% applies to second homes, buy-to-lets and Holyrood-defined additional dwellings. For Edinburgh households the practical impact is two-fold: the LBTT rates on family homes in the New Town, Morningside, Stockbridge and the higher end of the market bite harder above £325,000 than the equivalent SDLT charge in England, and ADS on a second property (a Highland holiday home, a Newcastle buy-to-let, an Edinburgh-rental purchased while keeping the family home) is a meaningful cost worth factoring into the planning conversation early.
What is the difference between a SIPP and a workplace pension?
+
A workplace pension is set up by your employer, usually with your employer paying a contribution alongside yours, with the fund choice limited to whatever the scheme provider offers. A self-invested personal pension (SIPP) is a personal pension you open in your own name, with a much wider range of investment options and full control over which funds, shares or ETFs the money sits in. Most SIPP providers charge a platform fee plus the underlying fund charges. SIPPs are usually appropriate for consolidating old workplace pensions, or for self-employed savers who do not have an employer scheme. They are not always cheaper than a low-cost workplace scheme, and they should never be used to opt out of an employer match.
How do I choose a wealth manager in Edinburgh?
+
Three checks before you instruct anyone. First, confirm they are FCA-authorised on the Financial Services Register (register.fca.org.uk) and check the firm's permissions cover the advice you need (investments, pensions, defined-benefit transfers). Second, ask for the total fees in writing in pounds and pence, including platform, fund, initial advice and ongoing advice charges, with a worked example on your portfolio size. Third, ask whether they are independent (whole of market) or restricted (limited to certain providers), and ask what the adviser's recommendation process looks like in practice. A good adviser will write you a recommendation letter that sets out clearly what they have recommended, why, what it costs, and what the alternatives were. With Edinburgh's deep competitive market (Rathbones, UBS, LGT, Canaccord, Evelyn Partners, RBC Brewin Dolphin and St. James's Place all have offices in the city alongside Scottish-headquartered Tweed, Cormack, Seven Hills and RBK) the most useful differentiator is usually whether the adviser actually understands the Scottish tax overlay rather than treating it as an afterthought.
What does a discovery call cover?
+
A discovery call is a free 30 to 45 minute conversation to understand what you already have and what you are trying to achieve. We cover: what pensions you hold and the providers, ISA and general investment account balances, cash savings, mortgage and property position, expected retirement age, dependants, Scottish-taxpayer status, and the questions you want answered first. After the call you receive a short written summary of what was discussed and a clear next step, which may be more information, a specific question for a regulated adviser, or no further action where the situation is already well-organised. We do not sell products and we do not earn commission from referrals.
Do I need a financial adviser if I just want to use Vanguard or Hargreaves Lansdown?
+
Not necessarily. For straightforward ISA and SIPP saving on a low-cost passive platform, many households self-direct. The decision to take advice usually turns on three factors: complexity (multiple legacy pensions, defined-benefit entitlements, business interests), tax (IHT planning, capital gains tax timing, Scottish band traps around the £75,000 to £125,140 income range), and decision pressure (retirement income strategy, large lump sum from inheritance or sale of a business). Where any of those three apply, the cost of regulated advice is usually small relative to the cost of getting the decision wrong. Where none apply, a low-cost platform and a globally diversified passive fund usually does more good than an adviser charging 1% per year.
Next step
Talk to a Edinburgh wealth specialist.
A short triage email or call, then a no-cost 30 to 45 minute discovery call inside 48 hours. Written summary follows within a working week. Information only; nothing said constitutes regulated financial advice.