Accountex London 2026 | 13–14 May · Stand #1574 · ExCeL London

Paraplanning Capacity: How Much Should an IFA Practice Budget Per Suitability Report?

Paraplanning Capacity

Ask most IFA principals how much their paraplanning costs per suitability report, and you will get one of three answers: a confident but inaccurate number, a vague estimate, or a blank look.

Whether a practice uses an in-house paraplanner, outsources the work to a specialist team, or relies on advisers to prepare their own reports, there is a real cost per report. Understanding that cost accurately, not approximately, is the starting point for making good decisions about how paraplanning should be resourced as a practice grows.

This guide sets out the true cost per suitability report across different delivery models and what IFA practices should be budgeting for paraplanning in 2026.

Why Most IFA Practices Do Not Know Their True Paraplanning Cost

Pricing transparency is a challenge across professional services. The reasons are structural:

  • Adviser Time is Rarely Tracked at the Report Level: When an adviser prepares their own suitability reports, the hours involved are absorbed into the working day without being logged as a cost against that specific piece of work. The labour cost is real; it simply does not appear in any budget line.
  • In-House Paraplanner Costs are Spread Across Multiple Budget Lines: Salary is visible, but employer NI, pension, recruitment amortisation, CPD, and management time are rarely consolidated into a cost-per-report calculation. The true annual cost of an in-house paraplanner is consistently higher than the salary figure alone.
  • External Fees Vary Widely With No Published Benchmark: Outsourced paraplanning fees are not standardised. A straightforward ISA transfer report and a defined benefit pension transfer report are priced very differently, but many practices do not have a clear sense of where their work typically sits on that spectrum.

The result is that many practices either overspend on in-house capacity they do not fully utilise, or undercharge for advice services that take significantly more paraplanning time than they assumed when the original fee was set.

In-House Paraplanning Cost Per Report (UK Breakdown)

The table below shows a realistic breakdown of the total annual cost of employing a qualified in-house paraplanner in a UK IFA practice in 2026, along with a derived cost-per-report at typical volume:

In-house cost componentEstimated annual costBudget visibility
Salary , qualified paraplanner£32,000–£50,000/yrCore cost , always visible
Employer National Insurance (15% from April 2025)£4,050–£6,750/yrOften undercosted in practice budgets
Pension contributions (3% minimum)£1,600–£2,500/yrStatutory , cannot be omitted
Holiday and sick cover£2,500–£5,000/yrAbsorbed by practice or bought in ad hoc
Recruitment cost (amortised over 3 years)£1,500–£3,000/yr£5k–£10k per hire, spread over tenure
CPD, software, professional subs£1,000–£2,500/yrFCA-required , frequently underestimated
Management and supervision time£2,000–£5,000/yrSenior adviser time , rarely costs
TOTAL REALISTIC ANNUAL COST£44,650–£74,750/yrPer in-house paraplanner
Cost per suitability report*£220–£370/report*Based on 200 reports/yr , varies by volume

Estimates based on UK financial services salary benchmarks, April 2026. Employer NI reflects the rate increase from 13.8% to 15% effective April 2026.

At 200 reports per year, a reasonable assumption for a paraplanner serving a 100–120 active client practice, the true cost per report sits between £220 and £370. At lower volumes, the per-report cost rises further because the fixed costs remain constant regardless of output.

The April 2026 National Insurance Increase has changed the Cost Model

The NI rate and thresholds are unchanged between 2025/26 and 2026/27 — the rate of employer NI remains at 15% and the secondary threshold stays at £5,000 for the 2026/27 tax year. There is no additional £920 cost when comparing 2025/26 to 2026/27, because the parameters are identical. The cost increase happened between 2024/25 and 2025/26. 

What Outsourced Paraplanning Costs Per Report

The alternative to in-house delivery is working with a specialist outsourced paraplanning team on a per-report or retainer basis. The fee structure varies by complexity, report type, and provider, but the ranges below reflect what IFA practices in the UK are typically paying in 2026:

Report / task typeTypical fee rangeTime involvedWhen it applies
Simple suitability report£75–£1503–5 hrs preparationISA transfers, simple investments
Standard suitability report£150–£2505–7 hrs preparationPension consolidation, protection
Complex suitability report£250–£4507–12 hrs preparationDB transfers, inheritance planning
Annual review documentation£75–£1502–4 hrs preparationUpdate, reconfirm, Consumer Duty log
Cashflow modelling (standalone)£100–£2003–6 hrs preparationRetirement projections, scenario planning
Consumer Duty compliance pack£50–£1001–3 hrs preparationPROD, fair value, vulnerability notes

Fee ranges are indicative and reflect the UK outsourced paraplanning market as of April 2026. Actual fees depend on complexity, turnaround time, provider, and volume commitments.

At these rates, a practice producing 120 mixed reports per year would typically spend £12,000–£22,000 annually on outsourced paraplanning. Compare that to the £44,650–£74,750 true annual cost of an in-house paraplanner at the same volume, and the cost-per-report differential is significant, particularly for practices where report volume is variable or growing.

The Key Advantage: Cost Scales With Volume

Unlike the fixed cost of an in-house paraplanner, which is constant regardless of output, outsourced paraplanning fees are directly proportional to the work produced. In a slow month with ten reports, you pay for ten reports. In a busy month with thirty, you pay for thirty. This variable cost structure is especially helpful for practices experiencing growth or seasonal peaks in review and advising activity. 

How to Budget for Paraplanning Based on Practice Size

The right budget and the right delivery model depend on the practice’s size, growth trajectory, and the complexity mix of its advice work. The table below provides a planning framework:

Practice size

Est. annual volume

Paraplanning budget

Recommended model

Sole adviser , 50 clients

~60 reports/yr

~£6,000–£10,000/yr

External most cost-efficient at this volume

Small practice , 100 clients

~120 reports/yr

~£12,000–£20,000/yr

External vs in-house close , volume dependent

Growing practice , 150+ clients

~200+ reports/yr

~£18,000–£35,000/yr

In-house may be viable; hybrid is often preferred

Multi-adviser firm , 300+ clients

~400+ reports/yr

~£35,000–£70,000/yr

A dedicated delivery team is most effective at scale

A hybrid model combining a smaller in-house paraplanning resource for complex or sensitive cases with an external team for standard volume work is increasingly common among mid-sized practices. It captures the cost efficiency of external delivery while retaining in-house expertise for cases that genuinely benefit from it.

When evaluating external paraplanning providers, fee transparency is important, but it is not the only factor. Turnaround times, integration with your back-office system, quality assurance processes, and the team’s familiarity with the FCA’s Consumer Duty requirements all affect the practical value delivered. Our guide on factors for selecting the right outsourced paraplanning partner covers these criteria in detail.

Making the Build vs Buy Decision for Your Practice

The build-versus-buy decision for paraplanning is not purely financial. It is also a question of control, quality consistency, scalability, and what the principal adviser wants to spend their time managing. For practices genuinely weighing both options, our analysis of paraplanning outsourcing pros and cons covers the full decision framework from an IFA practice perspective.

In purely cost terms, the decision typically comes down to three questions:

  1. What is the practice’s current report volume , and what will it be in 12 months? If volume is growing, a per-report outsourcing fee scales naturally. If it is stable and high, the in-house fixed cost may amortise more favourably.
  2. What is the true cost of adviser time spent on paraplanning? An adviser charging £200 per hour for client-facing work who spends 8 hours preparing a suitability report has spent £1,600 of billable time on a task that could cost £150–£250 to outsource. That differential funds the outsourcing cost many times over.
  3. What is the cost of not having capacity? Delayed reports mean delayed advice completions, delayed adviser charging, and, in some cases, delayed client decisions on time-sensitive matters. The revenue impact of a capacity bottleneck is rarely factored into the cost comparison , but it is frequently the most material number in the analysis.

How Befree Supports IFA Practices With Flexible Paraplanning Capacity

Befree provides outsourced paraplanning support for UK IFA practices on a per-report basis, covering suitability letters, annual review packs, cashflow modelling, Consumer Duty documentation, and back-office administration. Fees are agreed upfront by report type, with no fixed monthly retainer required. Our team integrates directly with your back-office platform and operates to your practice’s quality standards and turnaround requirements.For the FCA’s current requirements on suitability reporting, including what must be covered in a suitability letter, record-keeping obligations, and Consumer Duty evidencing standards, see the FCA’s suitability (including basic advice) guidance.

Know Your Numbers Before Making the Decision

Most IFA practices are making paraplanning delivery decisions consciously or by default, without knowing their actual cost per report. That is a difficult position from which to evaluate whether the current model is efficient, whether the fees charged for advice services are sustainable, and whether a change in delivery model would improve profitability.

The first step is always the same: calculate the true cost per report under the current model, using fully loaded costs rather than salary alone. Once that number is known, the comparison with alternative delivery models becomes straightforward, and the decision becomes considerably easier to make with confidence.

At Befree, we work with UK IFA practices to provide transparent, per-report paraplanning support so that principals can make a genuine cost comparison, plan their paraplanning budget accurately, and scale their delivery capacity without the overhead of permanent headcount.

Frequently Asked Questions about Paraplanning Cost and Budgeting

How much does a suitability report cost to produce in-house?
The true cost of an in-house suitability report depends on the fully loaded cost of the paraplanner producing it, divided by annual report volume. For a qualified paraplanner with a total employment cost of £44,650–£74,750 per year, producing 200 reports annually, the cost per report is approximately £220–£370. At lower volumes common in smaller practices, the per-report cost rises because fixed employment costs are spread over fewer outputs. Most practices significantly underestimate this figure when comparing in-house to outsourced delivery.

Outsourced paraplanning fees in the UK typically range from £75–£150 for straightforward reports (simple ISA transfers, basic investment advice) to £250–£450 for complex cases (DB pension transfers, inheritance tax planning, multi-asset portfolio reviews). Annual review documentation is typically priced at £75–£150 per client, and cashflow modelling as a standalone service at £100–£200 per model. Fees vary by provider, complexity mix, and volume commitment. Practices should request a per-report schedule rather than a single average fee.

At most volume levels, yes, particularly when the true in-house cost is calculated using fully loaded employment costs rather than salary alone. For a practice producing 120 reports per year, outsourced paraplanning at market rates typically costs £12,000–£22,000, compared to £44,650–£74,750 for the full annual cost of one in-house paraplanner. The cost-effectiveness of in-house delivery improves at higher volumes and where report complexity is consistently high, but even then, the variable cost structure of outsourcing offers flexibility that a fixed headcount cannot match.

The starting point is calculating the expected annual report volume, factoring in new client onboarding, annual reviews, Consumer Duty assessments, and any specialist work such as pension transfers or protection reviews. Apply a realistic per-report fee estimate based on the complexity mix. For practices using outsourced paraplanning, this produces a variable budget that scales with the client’s book. For in-house delivery, the budget should include the fully loaded employment cost, including NI, pension, recruitment, CPD, and management time, not just the salary figure.

The primary cost drivers are: the complexity of the advice being documented (a DB pension transfer requires significantly more research, analysis, and regulatory evidencing than a simple ISA transfer); the adviser’s recommendation notes quality (clear, detailed notes reduce paraplanner preparation time substantially); the client’s circumstances (vulnerable clients, complex existing portfolios, and cross-border tax considerations all add time); and the regulatory requirements involved (Consumer Duty documentation, PROD assessments, and specific FCA disclosure requirements each add to report length and preparation time).

The FCA’s Consumer Duty requirements, which have been fully in effect since July 2023, added materially to the documentation burden on each client file. Practices must now evidence fair value, assess and document client vulnerability, monitor outcomes over time, and complete PROD assessments for each product recommended. This additional compliance layer increases the time required to prepare suitability reports, as firms must evidence client understanding, demonstrate fair value, and document vulnerability and outcomes in line with Consumer Duty expectations.