About this service
About Edinburgh Wealth Management
An information service for households and small-business owners across Scotland's Capital and the Lothians. Plain English on pensions, ISAs, investments, retirement, Scottish Income Tax and inheritance, with referrals to FCA-authorised advisers where regulated advice is needed.
Who we are
Edinburgh Wealth Management is an information and signposting service for households across the city and the wider Lothians. We sit between people trying to make sense of pensions, ISAs, investments and tax (with the Scottish tax overlay that makes Edinburgh planning meaningfully different from rUK), and the regulated advice market that handles the formal product recommendations. We are not a financial adviser, we do not sell financial products, and we do not earn commission from any provider. The site exists because most Edinburgh households have specific, practical questions that get lost in the gap between Google searches and an adviser's office.
Why this exists
Plain answers to ordinary financial questions, Scottish-tax-aware.
Most Edinburgh households we talk to are not looking for a salesperson. They want clarity: what do I already hold, what is it costing, what does my Scottish Income Tax position look like this year, and when do I need to actually take regulated advice. The advice industry has spent years arguing about RDR, MiFID II, consumer duty, and the advice gap. From a household's point of view those debates are abstract. The practical question is much simpler. Where can I get a straight answer in plain English, written down, that helps me decide what to do next, from someone who knows that Scottish Income Tax bands and Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) work differently from rUK.
That is what this service is for. A first conversation costs nothing. A written follow-up confirms what was discussed. Where the question goes beyond information, we point you toward an FCA-authorised adviser whose firm is appropriate to the question, with a preference for advisers who actually understand the Scottish tax overlay rather than treating it as an afterthought. Where it does not, we say so. The aim is to leave you better informed, not to enrol you in an ongoing relationship.
What we are
An information service, not a regulated adviser.
We provide general wealth management information. We do not give regulated financial advice. We are not FCA-authorised. We do not give recommendations on specific investments, pensions, transfers or financial products. We do not handle client money. We do not earn commission from product sales or referrals to advisers.
Where a question requires regulated advice, for example a defined-benefit pension transfer, a recommendation to invest in a specific fund, or detailed inheritance tax structuring on a real estate, we refer households to FCA-authorised firms. Always check any firm and adviser on the FCA Financial Services Register at register.fca.org.uk before instructing them. The Financial Services Compensation Scheme covers regulated advice up to £85,000 per person per institution where advice turns out to have been negligent.
What we cover
Seven service areas across the household balance sheet.
The information on this site covers seven service areas: pensions (workplace, personal and SIPP, with Scottish-rate relief properly modelled), investments (platforms, fund choices, GIAs), retirement planning (drawdown, annuities, sequencing across Scottish Income Tax bands), tax planning (ISAs, capital gains, dividend allowance, Scottish Income Tax band traps around the £75,000 to £125,140 income range), inheritance tax (nil-rate bands, gifting, trust structures at an introductory level, with the Scots-law legal-rights overlay), ISAs and savings (Cash, Stocks & Shares, Lifetime and Junior), and business protection (relevant life cover, key person, shareholder protection at an introductory level).
The depth of information we provide stops at the point where regulated advice begins. We will explain how the seven-year gifting rule works; we will not tell you to make a specific gift. We will explain what a SIPP is and what consolidating three legacy pensions involves; we will not recommend a transfer. We will set out how the residence nil-rate band tapers above £2,000,000; we will not draft a trust deed.
Where we work
Edinburgh, the Lothians and the wider central belt.
The home market is Edinburgh itself, covering the New Town, Old Town, Leith, Stockbridge, Morningside, Bruntsfield, Marchmont, Newington, Portobello, Corstorphine, Murrayfield, Trinity and the surrounding postcodes. Beyond the city we cover Midlothian (Dalkeith, Bonnyrigg, Penicuik), East Lothian (Musselburgh, Haddington, North Berwick, Dunbar), West Lothian (Livingston, Linlithgow, Bathgate), Stirlingshire, and across the Forth into Fife (Dunfermline, Inverkeithing, Burntisland). We also help households in adjoining parts of the Borders and central Scotland where the questions are the same and the regulated-adviser network we work with extends.
Distance is not the constraint. Most discovery calls run on phone or video. Where a face-to-face conversation helps, we are happy to meet anywhere across Edinburgh or the wider Lothians. Most enquiries start with a 15-minute call to confirm what the question is and whether information or regulated advice is the right next step.
Regulatory note
Information on this site is general in nature and does not constitute regulated financial advice. Seek advice from an FCA-authorised adviser for decisions affecting your circumstances. We are not authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority, we do not give regulated financial advice, and we do not sell financial products. Where a question requires regulated advice (for example a defined-benefit pension transfer recommendation, a specific investment recommendation, or detailed inheritance tax structuring on a real estate), we refer households to FCA-authorised firms. Always check any firm and adviser on the FCA Financial Services Register at register.fca.org.uk before instructing them.
Next step
Talk to an Edinburgh wealth specialist.
A 30 to 45 minute discovery call covers what you already hold, what you are trying to achieve, your Scottish-taxpayer status, and what the right next step looks like. Information only; nothing said on the call constitutes regulated financial advice.