How to Use AI Before Meeting With a Financial Advisor
If you are going to use AI before a financial conversation, here is how to do it properly.
Quick answer: how should you use AI before a financial advisor meeting?
Use AI before meeting with a financial advisor to organize your thoughts, understand financial concepts in plain language, surface questions you may have missed, and frame the trade-offs behind a major decision. Used this way, AI makes the meeting better. The one rule that matters: treat what it gives you as a starting point to review with your advisor, not as personalized advice to act on alone.
This article is part of our larger guide, How to Use AI With a Financial Advisor in Canada.
Should you use AI before a financial advisor meeting?
Yes. If you are already using AI to think through your finances, keep going. I encourage it.
A client who works at a senior level in technology told me recently that he had built an AI agent to watch his portfolio. He mentioned it a little carefully, as if he were admitting something. He was not. He was doing exactly the right thing: engaged, curious, using the tools in front of him to understand something that matters in his life.
That is the spirit I want. The question was never whether you should use AI. The question is how.
AI earns its place when it helps you organize your thinking, clarify what has changed, and prepare sharper questions. It becomes a problem when you treat the answer as automatically correct, personally complete, or ready to act on without context. So I see it as a resource, not a threat, and not something to feel awkward about bringing to the table.
Use it to prepare for the conversation. Just do not let it replace the conversation.
Why does AI make financial advisor meetings better?
A prepared client has a better meeting. Not because they arrive with all the answers, but because they arrive with better context.
Most financial stress does not come from one missing piece of information. It comes from too many open loops: questions in your head, decisions you have delayed, information scattered across accounts and inboxes. AI is good at closing those loops before you sit down, which makes the human advice more valuable, not less. Financial Advice decision domain
What is the best way to ask AI about a financial decision?
The best questions sound less like What should I do and more like What should I be thinking about. That shift turns AI from a decision-maker into a thinking partner, which is the role it is actually good at.
Instead of asking AI:
- Should I retire at 58?
- Is this investment good?
- Should I help my child buy a home?
- Should I sell my business?
- Pay down debt or invest?
Try asking AI:
- What should I discuss with my advisor before deciding whether retiring at 58 is realistic?
- What questions should I ask to understand whether this investment fits my overall plan?
- What trade-offs should we weigh before helping an adult child with a home purchase?
- What financial, tax, family, and lifestyle questions should I review before selling a business?
- What factors should I weigh before choosing between debt repayment and investing?
Use AI to explore. Use your advisor to pressure-test, prioritize, and decide.
How do you use AI to organize your financial thoughts?
Most people do not need more information before a meeting. They need a cleaner way to sort what they already know, feel, wonder, and worry about.
Prompt to try
I am preparing for a meeting with my financial advisor in Canada. Help me organize my
thoughts. Identify the topics I should raise, the information I should gather, the questions I
should ask, and any areas where I may need more clarity.
That surfaces the documents to bring, the questions to ask, and the decisions you have been avoiding. The goal is not perfection. It is walking in with less fog.
How do you use AI to prepare better questions for your advisor?
The quality of a financial conversation improves when the questions improve. Most people ask broad questions like Are we okay or Can we retire. AI can sharpen them into something the meeting can actually use.
Prompt to try
Help me turn these general concerns into better questions for my advisor: retirement timing,
helping our kids, reducing taxes, simplifying our accounts, and being organized if something
happens to one of us.
For a ready-made set, see our list of helpful questions to ask a financial advisor.
How can couples use AI before meeting with a financial advisor?
In many households one partner carries more of the financial load, and the other can feel a step behind. AI can help both partners arrive with a voice.
Prompt to try
My spouse and I are meeting with our financial advisor. Help us create a short conversation
guide so we can each identify what we are worried about, what we want clarity on, and what
decisions we may be avoiding.
That is not just preparation. It is alignment, and alignment usually matters more than optimization.
How do you use AI to identify what has changed since your last meeting?
Financial planning is not static. Life moves between reviews: income, work, family, aging parents, health, taxes, business decisions. AI can help you spot what is worth raising.
Prompt to try
Since my last advisor meeting, these things have changed in my life: [list changes]. Help me
identify which ones may be relevant to my financial plan and what I should ask my advisor.
Should you tell your advisor you used AI?
Yes. If AI gave you a question, an idea, or a recommendation that made you think, bring it in. Do not hide it, and do not spring it on your advisor mid-meeting. Send the useful parts ahead of time.
A short note is enough: I asked AI about this. I am not assuming it is right, but it gave me a few things I would like to talk through. Most good advisors will welcome that. I do.
This matters most when AI says something that conflicts with your advisor's advice. Send it ahead anyway, framed as a question, not a challenge: some of this does not line up with what we discussed, and I would like to understand the difference. Raised that way and in advance, conflicting information makes the advice stronger. Sprung in the room with no warning, it just puts everyone on the defensive.
Then we look at it together. Is it relevant to your situation? What did it assume? What did it miss? Does it apply in Canada? That is the role of advice: separating useful information from incomplete advice.
Is AI accurate for Canadian financial advice?
Not reliably. It often defaults to US rules and gets Canadian specifics wrong: confusing a TFSA with a Roth IRA, quoting the wrong contribution limit, or misapplying capital gains. For business owners, those are not rounding errors.
It also does not know your full picture, from what your accountant told you to what is already in place. Treat AI output as a draft to review, not an answer to act on.
What should you not enter into AI tools?
You do not need to upload anything sensitive to get value. Avoid entering Social Insurance Numbers, account or policy numbers, full tax returns, estate documents, and passwords.
Use a placeholder instead, such as: Assume a Canadian couple in their early 50s with incorporated income, aging parents, and no firm retirement date. What should they think through before meeting an advisor?
The best AI prompt before a financial advisor meeting
Prompt to try
I am preparing for a conversation with my financial advisor in Canada. Help me organize my
thinking before the meeting. Identify: what information I should gather, what questions I
should ask, what blind spots I may be missing, what assumptions I should be careful about,
what my spouse or partner and I should discuss first, and what ideas are worth raising but
not acting on without advice. Keep it practical and plain-language.
That prompt alone can make your next meeting more useful. Not because AI is giving final advice, but because it is helping you prepare.
The bottom line
The point is not to need your advisor less. It is to make the time count for more: better questions, better context, better decisions.
AI clears the clutter. A good advisor helps you decide what to do next.
Frequently asked questions
Can AI replace a financial advisor?
No. AI can explain concepts and help you prepare, but it cannot replace personalized advice grounded in your full financial picture.
What should I ask AI before meeting a financial advisor?
Ask it to help you organize your thoughts, prepare questions, identify what to gather, and clarify what has changed. A useful prompt: help me organize the topics I should raise and the questions I should ask my advisor.
Should I tell my advisor I used AI?
Yes. Share the useful parts ahead of the meeting. A good advisor treats it as a head start, not a threat.
What if AI gave me financial advice?
Bring it to the meeting and review it together. Do not treat it as final. Your advisor can help identify what assumptions it made, what it missed, whether it applies in Canada, and whether it fits your full picture.
What if AI contradicts my advisor?
Share it ahead of the meeting, framed as a question rather than a challenge. Sending conflicting information in advance gives your advisor time to explain the reasoning and check the Canadian details, and it keeps the conversation constructive instead of defensive.
Is it safe to put financial information into ChatGPT?
Be careful. Do not enter Social Insurance Numbers, account numbers, tax returns, estate documents, or passwords. Use general descriptions and placeholders instead.
Is AI accurate for Canadian financial advice?
Not reliably. It often defaults to US rules. Treat its output as a draft to review with an advisor.
Can couples use AI before meeting with a financial advisor?
Yes. AI can help build a conversation guide so both partners can identify what feels unclear, what worries them, and what decisions they may be avoiding.
If you are working through a financial decision and want a clearer starting point, our first step is a Clarity Call. No pressure. No expectations. Just a conversation to understand what you are trying to solve.
About Shea Sanche
Shea Sanche, CFP®, is the founder of Insight Planning Wealth Management and has worked as a financial advisor since 1999. He specializes in financial planning, retirement strategy, and decision frameworks for Canadian families and business owners, with a focus on simplifying complex financial decisions and long-term wealth planning.
He is the creator of Insight 360 OS, a decision and life-design system built to help clients navigate financial complexity, uncertainty, and major life transitions.
Common Questions About This Topic
How do financial advisors in Canada get paid?
Common models include AUM fees, fee-for-service, commissions, or blended arrangements. What matters is understanding incentives and whether you receive coordination beyond investments.
What is a normal advisor fee in Canada?
Fees vary by service and complexity. Instead of comparing a single percentage, evaluate what the fee includes: planning outputs, coordination, accountability, and improved net outcomes.
Are financial advisors worth it in Canada?
They can be when the relationship coordinates investments, tax, estate, and decisions as a system. They are less valuable when the service is limited to reporting and portfolio-only management.