Short answer: A family office works exclusively for one family (or a few), coordinating investments, tax, estate, and lifestyle with no product-sales agenda. A wealth manager or private bank serves many clients and typically earns fees or commissions on the products and services it sells, which can create conflicts of interest.

Family office vs wealth manager vs private bank

  Family Office Wealth Manager Private Bank
Whom it serves One family (or a few) Many clients Many clients
Independence Fully independent Varies; may sell products Sells the bank’s products
Scope Investments, tax, estate, governance, lifestyle Mainly investments Banking + investments
Alignment Works only for the family Fee- and/or commission-based Fee- and/or commission-based
Cost model Family bears fixed cost % of assets and/or commissions Spreads, fees, and commissions

Which is right?

A family office suits families whose wealth and complexity justify a dedicated, conflict-free team. A wealth manager or private bank can be efficient for families who want professional management without building an office, provided they understand how the provider is compensated. Many families use a family office to coordinate the banks and managers they work with.

See TFOA’s research on what a single family office is, the multi-family office model, and our family office glossary. To connect with peers, see membership.