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Why a 1% Fee Is Eating a Third of Your Wealth

Most investors focus on returns. The professionals obsess over fees. Here is why a single percentage point can mean the difference between comfort and compromise after thirty years.

By Sarah ChenReviewed by Marcus Weber15 March 20258 min readUpdated 15 March 2025

Direct Answer

A 1% annual fee on a £100,000 portfolio can cost you over £230,000 over 30 years due to compound drag. The fee is taken from the total, not just the gains, so the loss grows exponentially.

The headline figure on a fund factsheet is the annual return. The number buried in the small print is the total expense ratio. And over a thirty-year horizon, the second number matters more than the first.

The invisible mathematics

Imagine two investors, both starting with £100,000 and earning 7% gross annual return. Investor A pays 0.2% in fees. Investor B pays 1.2%. After thirty years, Investor A has £574,000. Investor B has £411,000. The 1% gap cost £163,000. That is not a typo.

Why fees hurt more than taxes

Taxes are levied on gains. Fees are levied on the total pot — year in, year out, in bull markets and bear markets. A 1% fee in a year when your portfolio falls 20% still takes 1% of the remaining balance. Fees are mercenary.

What to do about it

1. Use a total-cost calculator. Platform + fund + custody + FX.
2. Prefer accumulating share classes in tax-advantaged accounts to defer income tax.
3. Check whether your broker charges a percentage of assets (bad) or a flat fee (better for large portfolios).
4. Rebalance less frequently. Every trade costs something, even when commission is zero.

Disclaimer

This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

FAQ

Are cheap ETFs always better?

Not always — tracking error, liquidity, and tax treatment matter. But all else equal, lower fees reliably produce higher net returns over long periods.

What is a reasonable total fee?

For a single-fund portfolio, aim for under 0.25% total expense ratio. For multi-asset portfolios, keep platform + fund fees combined under 0.5%.

Author
S

Sarah Chen

CFA, ex-Morningstar