string(9) "wordpress" What You Should NOT Delegate To A Financial Planner In Real Estate | Inman Real Estate News

Delegating financial tasks can free up your time, but some decisions should never leave your hands, Amanda Neely writes. Here’s what to keep close.

Real estate agents hear it constantly: Delegate more, focus on dollar-productive activities, build a team. And when it comes to finances, that advice often translates to “hire professionals, and let them handle it.”

There’s wisdom in that. A good CPA saves you from tax surprises. A skilled financial planner helps you see the bigger picture. But somewhere along the way, many agents cross from smart delegation into dangerous abdication.

Here’s the truth no one tells you: no one should care about your money more than you do. I do mean no one, not your CPA, not your financial advisor and definitely not your bookkeeper. They may be excellent at their jobs, but your financial future isn’t their financial future.

That doesn’t mean you need to become a tax expert, manage your own investment portfolio or do your own bookkeeping. It means specific financial responsibilities should never be fully handed off, no matter how talented your team is.

Your cash flow patterns

You know your business rhythms better than any spreadsheet can capture. You know that January is slow, that spring brings a flood of closings, and that referrals and expenses spike after your annual client event.

A financial advisor can build systems around this information, but only if you provide it accurately and stay engaged as patterns shift. According to a 2025 QuickBooks survey, 43  percent of small businesses consider cash flow a problem, and 74 percent say it has worsened or stayed the same over the last year. They link the cause of cash flow problems to inefficiencies inside the business.

When you rely on someone else for cash flow feedback, the information isn’t available soon enough to make good decisions fast enough to make a real difference.

Delegate the financial maintenance system. Own the knowledge of cash flow in the day-to-day of the business and your personal life, too.

Your definition of ‘enough’

No advisor can tell you when you have enough. Enough is not a calculation. It’s a values question.

What does financial security mean to you? Is it six months of reserves or two years? Is it retiring at 55 or working forever because you love it? Is it leaving a legacy or spending your last dollar on your last day?

These questions don’t have “right” answers, only your answers. Yet too many agents let advisors set targets based on industry averages or generic retirement calculators.

I’ve seen agents with $2 million feel anxious about their future, and agents with $400,000 feel entirely secure. That’s because security isn’t a number; it’s alignment between your money and your values.

Your advisor can help you reach your targets. Defining those targets is your job.

The ‘why’ behind every financial planning strategy

S-corp elections, Solo 401(k)s versus SEP IRAs, Whole life insurance versus term … These decisions have real consequences that compound over years and decades.

You don’t need to become an expert in tax code or retirement vehicles. But you do need to understand the reasoning behind recommendations well enough to ask good questions. Why this approach? What are the alternatives? What happens if my situation changes?

When you understand the “why,” you can recognize when circumstances shift enough to revisit the decision. When you don’t, you’re flying blind and hoping your advisor remembers to flag changes for you.

Conflicts of interest

Most financial professionals are honest and competent. But incentive structures vary widely, and not all advice is created equal. Does your advisor earn commissions on products they recommend? Are they compensated more for certain solutions than others? Do they have sales quotas or proprietary products they’re encouraged to push?

Don’t get me wrong, these aren’t accusations. These are questions you should be able to answer about anyone handling your money. The CFP Board’s fiduciary standard requires certified planners to act in clients’ best interests, but not all financial professionals are certified, and even fiduciary advisors work within business models that shape their recommendations.

Trust your team. Verify always.

Where your money actually lives

Here’s a simple test: Could you list every account where you have money right now? Checking, savings, retirement accounts, brokerage accounts, HSAs, old 401(k)s from previous jobs, cash value in insurance policies?

If you hesitated, you’re not alone. But that hesitation represents a vulnerability. If something happened to you tomorrow, could your family locate everything? If an advisor made a mistake, would you catch it?

Knowing where your money lives isn’t micromanagement. It’s basic financial awareness that protects you and your family.

The bottom line

Build a great financial team. Delegate the tasks that drain your time and fall outside your expertise. Let professionals handle the complexity of tax filings, investment rebalancing and insurance procurement. But never delegate your engagement. Stay curious. Ask questions. Understand enough to know when something doesn’t fit your situation.

Your financial advisor, CPA and bookkeeper work for you. Those relationships function best when you show up as an informed, engaged client who cares deeply about the outcome. No one should care about your money more than you do.

Amanda Neely is a Certified Financial Planner with Wealth Wisdom Financial. Connect with her on LinkedIn.

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