Savings & Investing

Robo-Advisor Comparison UK — Nutmeg, Wealthify & More (2026)

Compare the best UK robo-advisors including Nutmeg, Wealthify, Moneyfarm and others. Fees, performance, features and which automated investing service suits you.

Savings and investment information is for educational purposes only. The value of investments can go down as well as up. Cash savings up to £85,000 per person per institution are protected by the FSCS.

Robo-advisors have transformed UK investing by making professional portfolio management accessible and affordable. Instead of needing a traditional financial advisor (typically requiring £50,000+ in assets), you can get a managed, diversified portfolio from as little as £1.

How Robo-Advisors Work

  1. You answer a questionnaire — about your goals, timeline, risk tolerance, and experience
  2. The platform builds a portfolio — typically using low-cost ETFs across equities, bonds, and other asset classes
  3. Automatic management — the platform rebalances your portfolio, adjusts allocations, and reinvests dividends
  4. You contribute regularly — set up a direct debit and the platform handles the rest

UK Robo-Advisor Comparison

Platform Management Fee Fund Costs Total Annual Cost Minimum Investment ISA SIPP
Nutmeg 0.25–0.75% 0.15–0.20% 0.40–0.95% £500 (£100 monthly) Yes Yes
Wealthify 0.60% ~0.16% ~0.76% £1 Yes Yes
Moneyfarm 0.35–0.75% ~0.20% 0.55–0.95% £500 Yes Yes
InvestEngine 0.25% (managed) ~0.10% ~0.35% £100 Yes No
Vanguard LifeStrategy 0.15% (platform) 0.22% (fund) ~0.37% £100 Yes Yes

Fees as of early 2026 — check platforms for current rates

Nutmeg

The UK’s largest robo-advisor (owned by JP Morgan). Offers three tiers:

  • Fixed Allocation — cheapest, pre-set portfolios
  • Fully Managed — actively adjusted by the investment team
  • Socially Responsible — ESG-focused portfolios

Solid track record, good user interface, and a range of risk levels (1–10). The main downside is that fully managed fees (0.75% + fund costs) approach 1%, which is expensive for what is largely passive investing.

Wealthify

Owned by Aviva. Very low minimum investment (£1), making it ideal for beginners:

  • Five risk levels: Cautious, Tentative, Confident, Ambitious, Adventurous
  • Free plan available for basic ethical investing
  • Simple, clean app and website

Slightly higher overall fee than some competitors, but the low barrier to entry and simplicity make it popular with new investors.

Moneyfarm

Italian-origin platform with a growing UK presence:

  • Seven risk levels with more granularity than most competitors
  • Includes access to a human investment consultant at no extra cost
  • Active-like management with passive instruments

Fees reduce as your portfolio grows, starting at 0.75% for under £10,000 and falling to 0.35% for £500,000+.

InvestEngine

The most cost-competitive managed option:

  • 0.25% management fee with a DIY option at 0% (free)
  • ETF-focused portfolios
  • Limited account types (no SIPP currently)

For cost-conscious investors who want managed portfolios, InvestEngine offers the best value.

Vanguard LifeStrategy (DIY Alternative)

Not technically a robo-advisor, but Vanguard’s LifeStrategy funds achieve a similar outcome:

  • Five funds with fixed equity/bond splits (20%, 40%, 60%, 80%, 100% equity)
  • Automatic rebalancing within the fund
  • Total cost around 0.37% on Vanguard’s platform
  • The simplest one-fund solution for DIY investors

Robo-Advisor vs DIY Investing

Factor Robo-Advisor DIY Investing
Effort Minimal — fully managed More involvement needed
Portfolio construction Professional You choose your own funds
Rebalancing Automatic You do it yourself (or pick a LifeStrategy fund)
Cost 0.35–0.95% total 0.15–0.40% total
Control Limited Full
Best for Hands-off investors, beginners Cost-conscious, experienced investors

The cost difference of 0.2–0.5% per year may seem small, but over 30 years on a £100,000 portfolio growing at 7%, it amounts to £30,000–£75,000 less wealth. Whether the convenience justifies this cost is a personal decision.

Who Should Use a Robo-Advisor?

Robo-advisors suit you if:

  • You are new to investing and want guidance on portfolio construction
  • You want a hands-off approach — set it and forget it
  • You do not want to learn about asset allocation and rebalancing
  • You value convenience over absolute cost minimisation
  • You have a medium-sized portfolio — large enough for the fee to matter but small enough that a traditional advisor is not cost-effective

Who Should Invest Themselves?

DIY investing suits you if:

  • You are comfortable selecting index funds and rebalancing your portfolio
  • You want to minimise fees to keep more of your returns
  • You enjoy learning about investing and want full control
  • You are willing to spend 30–60 minutes per year reviewing and rebalancing

How to Choose

  1. Compare total fees — management fee + fund costs + any trading charges
  2. Check account types — do you need ISA, SIPP, LISA, or junior accounts?
  3. Review risk levels — ensure the platform’s options match your tolerance
  4. Try the questionnaire — most platforms let you see the recommended portfolio before committing
  5. Check minimum investment — some require £500+, others as little as £1
  6. Consider ethical options — if ESG investing matters to you, check what is available

Sources

  1. FCA — Investment platforms