For many advisory firm owners, deciding how much time to take away from work is largely a personal choice shaped by client needs, business demands, and personal priorities. But once a firm hires employees with their own need to step away from time to time, Paid Time Off (PTO) becomes much more than an individual preference: it evolves into a key part of firm culture, team wellbeing, operational resilience, and talent retention. As our own Kitces Research on Advisory Wellbeing consistently shows, autonomy over time and work-life balance are among the strongest drivers of professional satisfaction, even for highly compensated advisors. Because while compensation matters, there is a point where additional income delivers diminishing returns relative to the ability to enjoy more flexibility and personal time. On the other hand, firms that fail to create sustainable workloads and meaningful opportunities for rest may ultimately face lower morale, reduced productivity, and higher turnover costs than firms that proactively support employee time away from work. And so a well-designed PTO policy is ultimately an investment in employee wellbeing, productivity, and long-term sustainability.
The starting point of an effective PTO policy is a consistent structure. Advisory firms generally structure PTO using one of three approaches: separate leave, single-bank, or unlimited PTO. Traditional separate leave systems divide vacation and sick days into distinct categories (e.g., 15 vacation days and 5 sick days). Single-bank PTO combines all paid leave into one flexible bucket, allowing employees to allocate time according to their own needs. By contrast, unlimited PTO policies put no putative restrictions on the amount of time off available for any purpose – which while theoretically offering maximum flexibility for employees and reducing the administrative burden of tracking PTO accrual, often ends up resulting in employees taking less time off than under traditional plans due to the social stigma of taking the 'most' time off. To that end, although every system has its administrative benefits and burdens, the success of a firm's PTO policy depends less on the number of nominal days off it offers and more on whether employees can realistically use them without damaging their own career growth or creating more operational strain for themselves or their teammates.
Small advisory firms often struggle most with this challenge because employees typically wear multiple hats, and there may be little redundancy across roles. Research shows that advisors in very small teams frequently report greater difficulty taking time off than solo advisors or members of larger firms because there are too few people available to provide meaningful coverage. Which suggests that effectively implementing a PTO policy requires firms to build operational redundancy through cross-training, clear documentation of responsibilities, and managing each team member's workload to accommodate for the possibility of backing up other employees' work. Teams may also need to clarify which operational tasks must continue during absences (e.g., trading and rebalancing and handling client questions and requests) and ensure that more than one person understands each essential workflow to ensure that the firm can stay running smoothly during any team member's time off. All of which can help make sure that employees feel comfortable using the PTO they have available (and actually being fully 'off' from work while on PTO) without worrying about falling behind or burdening coworkers with extra work.
To enact this in real time, firms may choose to put together a piecemeal cross-training plan, training employees on different processes on a weekly or monthly cadence to ensure everyone remains up-to-date on the work they might be expected to cover. From there, every period of PTO becomes an opportunity to ensure that everyone fully understands each other's work – and as the team iterates and builds confidence in covering each others' roles, taking time off can become easier and easier over time. And for certain tasks requiring more specialization, advisory firms may also consider bringing in fractional help to ensure they can genuinely disconnect.
Ultimately, firms that encourage employees to take meaningful breaks, establish realistic workload expectations, and invest in cross-training and redundancy are better positioned to maintain both employee wellbeing and a consistent quality of client service. And importantly, firm owners must model these behaviors themselves. Advisors who encourage employees to take time off while never disconnecting themselves may unintentionally signal that true rest is incompatible with professional success. But when advisory firms thoughtfully design PTO systems that balance flexibility, accountability, and operational resilience – for both leaders and employees – they create healthier teams, stronger firm cultures, and ultimately more sustainable businesses that better serve both employees and clients alike!


