---
title: "Financial Advisor Statistics 2026: Headcount, AUM, and Demographics"
date: 2026-05-18
author: "Steven Burnett"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/financial-advisor-statistics.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Finance"
    url: "/finance.md"
tags:
  - name: "Statistics"
    url: "/tag/statistics.md"
---

# Financial Advisor Statistics 2026: Headcount, AUM, and Demographics

Personal financial advisors held about 326,000 jobs in the United States in 2024, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Yet total advisor headcount across all channels has grown just 0.2% over the last decade to 283,137 as of the end of 2023, per Cerulli Associates. Over the same window, assets under management at SEC-registered investment advisers gained 12.6% in a single year, climbing from $128.4 trillion to $144.6 trillion in 2024, the Investment Adviser Association reports.

**The arithmetic is striking:** A workforce barely growing, balance sheets compounding at double digits. The data below covers headcount across BLS, SEC, FINRA, NASAA, and Cerulli; client populations; compensation; demographics; consumer adoption; fee schedules; and 2025 record M&amp;A activity.

## Key Takeaways

- U.S. personal financial advisor jobs totaled about **326,000** in 2024, with the lowest 10 percent of earners under **$49,990**, and the BLS projects employment to grow **10 percent** from 2024 to 2034.
- SEC-registered investment advisers managed **$144.6 trillion** in [regulatory assets under management](https://coinlaw.io/asset-management-statistics/) in 2024, a record high and a **12.6%** year-over-year jump.
- The same SEC-registered advisers served **68.4 million** clients in 2024, up **6.8%** from the prior year, per the Investment Adviser Association.
- Roughly **109,093** advisors plan to retire over the next decade, comprising **37.5%** of industry headcount and **41.5%** of total assets, Cerulli Associates reports.
- [Certified Financial Planner professionals](https://coinlaw.io/financial-planning-industry-statistics/) in the United States reached an all-time high of **103,093** as of December 31, 2024, an increase of **4.3%** over 2023, according to the CFP Board.
- Only **27%** of Americans use a financial advisor, and **42%** of those surveyed think advisors are only for wealthy people, per YouGov 2024 polling.
- RIA mergers and acquisitions hit **322** transactions in 2025, surpassing the prior record of **272** in 2024, DeVoe &amp; Company reports.

## Editor’s Choice

- SEC-registered RIAs managed **$144.6 trillion** in regulatory assets in 2024.
- FINRA-registered representatives totaled **628,392**, up **1.2%** year over year.
- State-registered RIAs ended 2024 with **$361.8 billion** in assets across **27,782** firms.
- The median annual wage for personal financial advisors was **$102,140** in May, with the top **10 percent** earning more than **$239,200** and the lowest **10 percent** earning less than **$49,990**.
- About **12,000** advisors were affiliated with RIA consolidators at the end of 2023, up from **4,000** in 2018.
- Echelon Partners counted **466** wealth management transactions in 2025, with deal volume up **27.3%** from the prior year.
- Non-clerical employment at SEC-registered advisers grew **2.6%** to **1,032,455** workers, supporting assets under management.

## Recent Developments

- **January 15, 2026**: CFP Board reported that the number of CFP professionals reached **107,529** as of December 31, an all-time high and a **4.3%** annual increase, with **6,709** new certificants added.
- **April 21, 2026**: The March 2026 CFP Certification Exam drew **4,391** candidates, the largest exam administration in CFP Board history.
- **December 31, 2025**: FinCEN finalized a two-year delay of the Investment Adviser Anti-Money Laundering Rule, pushing the effective date from January 1, 2026, to **January 1, 2028**.
- **January 7, 2026**: The SEC proposed raising the regulatory assets-under-management threshold for the small-entity definition from **$25 million** to **$1 billion**, a change that would reclassify roughly **75%** of SEC-registered advisers.
- **2025 full year**: Echelon Partners’ year-end report counted **466** announced wealth management transactions, a **27.3%** jump that set a new industry record.

## How Many Financial Advisors Are in the United States?

- U.S. personal financial advisor jobs totaled about **326,000** in 2024, per the BLS.
- Cerulli Associates pegs total advisor headcount across employee and independent channels at **283,137** as of the end of 2023.
- FINRA-registered representatives, a broader category that includes brokers and dual registrants, reached **628,392** in 2023, up nearly **1.2%** from 620,873 in 2022.
- Of those FINRA-registered reps, **308,795** held only broker-dealer registration, while **319,597** were dually registered as both broker-dealers and Registered Investment Advisers.
- Cerulli notes that overall advisor headcount has grown just **0.2%** over the past decade, signaling a structurally flat industry headcount.
- BLS projects about **24,100** annual openings for personal financial advisors over the 2024-2034 decade, including replacement demand.
- The 10-year employment growth projection of **10 percent** is much faster than the average across all U.S. occupations (with starting pay less than $49,990 at the 10th percentile), BLS reports.
- The BLS and Cerulli numbers do not align because the definitions differ; BLS counts personal financial advisor occupations across all employers, while Cerulli measures advisor practitioners across affiliation channels. The roughly **42,863** gap between the two sources reflects scope, not error.

SourcePopulation CountedHeadcountAs ofBLS Occupational EmploymentPersonal financial advisor jobs326,000May 2024Cerulli AssociatesAdvisor practitioners across channels283,137End of 2023FINRARegistered representatives (broker-dealers + dual)628,392End of 2023FINRASolely broker-dealer registered308,795End of 2023FINRADually registered (BD + RIA)319,597End of 2023*Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cerulli Associates, FINRA Industry Snapshot*

## Investment Adviser Industry by the Numbers

- The number of SEC-registered investment advisers rose to **15,870** in 2024, the Investment Adviser Association reports.
- Regulatory assets under management at those advisers reached **$144.6 trillion** in 2024, a record high.
- Year-over-year regulatory assets under management growth came in at **12.6%**, climbing from $128.4 trillion the prior year.
- Total clients served by SEC-registered advisers increased **6.8%** to **68.4 million**.
- Non-clerical employment at SEC-registered advisers grew **2.6%** to **1,032,455** workers under those firms.
- SEC-registered advisers and exempt reporting advisers manage **$31.9 trillion** in private fund assets.
- Regulatory assets per SEC-registered advisory firm averaged in the multi-billion range in 2024, calculated from $144.6 trillion across 15,870 firms.
- Average regulatory assets per client at SEC-registered advisers landed in the low-millions range, calculated from $144.6 trillion across 68.4 million clients.

Metric20232024YoY ChangeSEC-registered advisers15,65215,870+1.4%Regulatory AUM$128.4 trillion$144.6 trillion+12.6%Clients served64.0 million68.4 million+6.8%Non-clerical employment1,006,3021,032,455+2.6%Private fund assetsn/a$31.9 trillionn/a*Source: Investment Adviser Association and COMPLY Investment Adviser Industry Snapshot*

> **By the numbers:** SEC-registered investment advisers managed **$144.6 trillion** for **68.4 million** clients in 2024, per the Investment Adviser Association. At those scales, advisor productivity (assets handled per practitioner), not raw headcount, has driven the industry’s growth this cycle.

## State-Registered Investment Adviser Statistics

- State-registered RIAs ended 2024 with **$361.8 billion** in assets under management, NASAA reports.
- The latest census found **27,782** state-registered RIA firms operating across the United States.
- More than **98%** of state-registered RIAs had **10** employees or fewer, underscoring the small-firm profile of the state-registered tier.
- State-registered RIAs collectively served almost **1.35 million** clients, including nearly **275,000** high-net-worth individuals and just over **1 million** retail investors.
- The top triggers of NASAA enforcement actions in 2024 included failure to register as an RIA or representative, improper fee practices, fiduciary duty lapses, and inadequate compliance policies and procedures.
- SEC-registered RAUM of $144.6 trillion outpaced state-registered RIA assets of $361.8 billion by roughly **399 to 1**, illustrating how the SEC-registration threshold sorts assets into the federal tier.

MetricState-Registered RIAs (2024)Total firms27,782Assets under management$361.8 billionTotal clientsalmost 1.35 millionHigh-net-worth clientsnearly 275,000Retail clientsjust over 1 millionFirms with 10 or fewer employeesmore than 98%*Source: North American Securities Administrators Association*

## FINRA Broker-Dealer and Registered Representative Counts

- FINRA-registered representatives totaled **628,392** at the end of 2023, up from 620,873 a year earlier (a nearly **1.2%** gain), per the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
- FINRA member broker-dealers fell from 3,378 in 2022 to **3,298** in 2023, a decline of nearly **2.4%**.
- Solely broker-dealer registered representatives numbered **308,795** at year-end (close to the dually registered total).
- Dually registered representatives, who hold both BD and RIA licenses, totaled **319,597**, edging out the BD-only group for the first time at scale.
- Between 2022 and 2023, nearly **3,382** dually registered representatives dropped their brokerage license to operate solely as RIAs, while only **1,065** RIA-only advisors added a brokerage license.
- Dually registered reps (319,597 of 628,392) now make up a structural majority of all FINRA-registered representatives, signaling the broader migration from pure brokerage to fee-based advice.

![FINRA Industry Metrics Comparison](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/finra-industry-metrics-comparison.jpg "FINRA Industry Metrics Comparison")

## Certified Financial Planner Population

- CFP professionals in the United States reached an all-time high of **103,093** as of December 31, 2024, the CFP Board reports.
- That count represented an increase of **4.3%** over 2023, with more than **6,500** new CFP professionals added during the year.
- The 2024 cohort of exam candidates totaled **10,437**, the largest in CFP Board history at that time.
- By December 31, the U.S. CFP professional population reached **107,529** (more than the prior year’s record), another **4.3%** annual gain, per the CFP Board.
- **6,709** new CFP professionals were welcomed in the most ever single year (more than any previous cohort), with **3,964** under age 35.
- Exam candidates climbed to **11,037** across 2025, a **5.7%** increase over 2024 and a fresh record.
- The March 2026 CFP Certification Exam set a new single-administration record with **4,391** candidates sitting for the exam, including **908** racially and ethnically diverse candidates and **1,240** women candidates.
- Net U.S. CFP additions between year-end 2023 and year-end 2025 totaled more than 8,000, calculated from the 98,875 baseline rising to 107,529.

![CFP Certification Trends and Exam Candidate Data](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cfp-certification-trends-and-exam-candidate-data.jpg "CFP Certification Trends and Exam Candidate Data")

## Financial Advisor Compensation and Salary Statistics

- The median annual wage for personal financial advisors was **$102,140** in May, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports.
- The lowest **10 percent** of advisors earned less than **$49,990**, while the highest **10 percent** earned more than **$239,200**.
- BLS notes that personal financial advisors who work for [financial services](https://coinlaw.io/financial-services-industry-statistics/) firms are often paid a salary plus bonuses, with commissions, incentive pay, and production bonuses included in OEWS wage data.
- The 90th-percentile wage of more than $239,200 sits roughly **4.8 times** the 10th-percentile floor (less than $49,990), one of the widest pay distributions among business and financial occupations tracked by BLS.
- Total personal financial advisor compensation in the U.S. reaches the tens of billions annually at the median, calculated from $102,140 across 326,000 jobs (an under-estimate that excludes the long tail).
- The gap between the median and the long top tail is the practical economics of the profession: advisors who control significant assets earn multiples of the median, and that distribution shapes how firms recruit, compensate, and retain talent.

![Financial Advisor Median And Top Earnings](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/financial-advisor-median-and-top-earnings.jpg "Financial Advisor Median and Top Earnings")

## Financial Advisor Demographics: Age, Gender, and Retirement Outlook

- Nearly half of financial advisors, **46%**, say they are within 10 years of retirement, according to the JD Power 2025 U.S. Financial Advisor Satisfaction Study.
- More than one-fourth of current advisors, **26%**, are already 65 or older, per J.D. Power.
- Cerulli Associates estimates **109,093** advisors plan to retire over the next decade, comprising **37.5%** of industry headcount and **41.5%** of total assets.
- More than one-quarter (**26%**) of advisors who anticipate retiring within the next decade are unsure of their succession plan, Cerulli reports.
- The rookie advisor failure rate hovers around **72%**, Cerulli’s data shows, meaning fewer than three in ten new entrants establish lasting careers.
- Net new advisors per year work out to roughly **6,748,** assuming the 72% rookie failure rate applies to BLS’s 24,100 annual openings, well short of the **10,909** average annual retirements implied by Cerulli’s 109,093-over-a-decade estimate.
- The succession arithmetic compounds: more advisors leaving than the pipeline reliably replaces, larger asset books moving with each retirement, and a quarter of those leaving without a documented successor.

![Aging Financial Advisor Workforce Trends](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/aging-financial-advisor-workforce-trends.jpg "Aging Financial Advisor Workforce Trends")

> **Key finding:** Cerulli counts **109,093** advisors planning to retire over the next decade, controlling **41.5%** of industry assets, while the rookie failure rate sits around **72%** and BLS projects only about **24,100** annual openings. Net new entrants fall well short of the implied annual retirements, the structural shortage that defines hiring strategy across every channel.

## RIA Channel Growth and Consolidation

- Cerulli projects RIA channels will control nearly one-third (**31.2%**) of intermediary asset market share by 2027.
- The independent RIA channel is expected to grow its share of advisor headcount by **3.6%** over the next five years, per Cerulli.
- About **12,000** advisors were affiliated with RIA consolidators at the end of 2023, up from about **4,000** in 2018, a roughly threefold increase.
- The consolidator-affiliated advisor count tripled (**3x**) between 2018 and 2023, calculated from 4,000 advisors growing to 12,000.
- FINRA data on dual registrants reinforces the channel migration: nearly **3,382** dually registered representatives dropped their brokerage license between 2022 and 2023, more than three times the **1,065** going the other direction.
- Across CoinLaw’s coverage of [wealth management industry growth](https://coinlaw.io/wealth-management-industry-statistics/) cluster, the directional shift toward fiduciary, fee-based structures recurs at every layer of the data, from individual investor preferences to advisor channel migration.

Channel IndicatorValuePeriodProjected RIA share of intermediary assets31.2%2027Independent RIA headcount growth+3.6%Next 5 yearsAdvisors at RIA consolidators~12,000End of 2023Advisors at RIA consolidators (prior)~4,0002018Reps dropping BD license for RIA-only3,3822022-2023Reps adding BD license to RIA-only1,0652022-2023*Source: Cerulli Associates, FINRA Industry Snapshot*

## Consumer Use of Financial Advisors

- Only **27%** of Americans use a financial advisor, according to a 2024 YouGov survey.
- **60%** of consumers prioritize trust as the top factor when selecting an advisor.
- College graduates are most likely to pay for an advisor at **41%** adoption.
- People earning above $100,000 account for **55%** of those who use paid advisors.
- Men (**35%**) are more inclined than women (**25%**) to employ a paid advisor.
- Millennials (**31%**) and Baby Boomers (**36%**) are more likely to hire one than Gen Zers (**29%**) and Gen Xers (**24%**), per YouGov.
- **42%** of those surveyed think financial advisors are only for wealthy people, the leading barrier to broader adoption.
- Applying the 27% adoption rate to a U.S. adult population suggests tens of millions of advisor relationships nationwide, a figure that aligns with the [robo-advisor market data](https://coinlaw.io/robo-advisors-market-statistics/) showing further growth via automated platforms.

![Financial Advisor Adoption By Income And Generation](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/financial-advisor-adoption-by-income-and-generation.jpg "Financial Advisor Adoption by Income and Generation")

> **Why it matters:** **27%** of Americans use a financial advisor, yet **42%** of consumers surveyed by YouGov believe advisors are only for the wealthy. The perception gap, not capacity, is what limits adoption: trust outweighs price for buyers, signaling that advisor brands gain market share through credibility, not by chasing the underserved with cheaper offerings.

## Financial Advisor Fees and Pricing Models

- **92%** of advisors incorporate AUM fees in some way, with AUM-based revenue accounting for anywhere from **15% to 99%** of a firm’s revenue, according to Kitces Research.
- AUM has only grown more dominant: **82%** of advisors reported using AUM as their primary pricing method in 2022, rising to **86%** in 2024.
- The typical graduated fee schedule remains at **100 bps (1.00%)** for client assets up to at least $1 million.
- The schedule then declines to **90 bps (0.90%)** at $2 million, **75 bps (0.75%)** at $5 million, and **60 bps (0.60%)** at $10 million, per Kitces.
- **62%** of advisors charge at least **1%** AUM on portfolios up to $1 million, which is only true for **32%** of $2 million portfolios and continues to decrease at higher net-worth tiers.
- In 2024, the median charge for a standalone financial plan is **$3,000**, unchanged from 2022.
- Subscription or retainer-based models saw a median annual fee of **$4,500** in 2024, up from **$3,000** in 2022.
- The two-year jump in median retainer fees from $3,000 to $4,500 represents a sharp increase between 2022 and 2024, a pace that outstrips most other advisor revenue lines.

![Financial Advisor Pricing Models and AUM Fees](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/financial-advisor-pricing-models-and-aum-fees.jpg "Financial Advisor Pricing Models and AUM Fees")

## RIA Mergers and Acquisitions Activity

- The RIA M&amp;A industry shattered records in 2025, with **322** transactions announced, surpassing 2024’s record of **272**, DeVoe &amp; Company reports.
- DeVoe counted **94** transactions in the third quarter of 2025, well above the previous record of **81** deals set during the same period a year earlier.
- The third quarter result marked the fourth consecutive quarter of unusually strong activity, per DeVoe.
- Echelon Partners, using a broader wealth-management methodology, counted **466** announced transactions in 2025, with deal volume up **27.3%** from the prior year.
- Echelon notes the largest seller cohorts in 2025 continued to be sub-billion-dollar firms, while strategic acquirers continued to deploy capital at scale.
- The **144**-deal gap between Echelon’s 466 and DeVoe’s 322 reflects methodology, not error: DeVoe focuses on traditional RIA deals with at least $100 million in AUM, while Echelon counts a broader set of wealth management transactions, including breakaways and sub-scale rollups.

RIA M&amp;A Metric20242025YoY ChangeDeVoe transaction count272322+18.4%Echelon transaction count~366466+27.3%DeVoe Q3 record8194+16.0%*Source: DeVoe &amp; Company, Echelon Partners*

## Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

**How many financial advisors are there in the United States?**The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics counted about 326,000 personal financial advisor jobs in 2024. Cerulli Associates pegs total advisor practitioners across channels at 283,137 as of the end of 2023. FINRA reports 628,392 registered representatives, a broader category that includes brokers and dual registrants.

 

**How much money do financial advisors manage in total?**SEC-registered investment advisers managed $144.6 trillion in regulatory assets under management in 2024, a 12.6% increase over the prior year and a record high. State-registered RIAs added another $361.8 billion across 27,782 firms, per NASAA.

 

**What does a financial advisor earn on average?**The median annual wage for personal financial advisors was $102,140 in May, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $49,990, while the highest 10 percent earned more than $239,200, reflecting one of the widest wage distributions among business and financial occupations.

 

**How many Americans use a financial advisor?**A 2024 YouGov survey found that 27% of Americans use a financial advisor. Adoption skews toward higher income and education levels: people earning above $100,000 account for 55% of those who use paid advisors, and 41% of college graduates pay for advice. About 42% of those surveyed think advisors are only for wealthy people.

 

**How many CFP professionals are there?**The U.S. CFP professional population reached 107,529 as of December 31, 2025, an all-time high and a 4.3% increase over 2024, the CFP Board reports. The CFP Board added more than 6,709 new certificants, the most ever in a single year, and 11,037 candidates sat for the exam.

 

 

## Conclusion

The U.S. financial advisor industry runs on a productivity engine rather than a headcount engine. About **326,000** personal financial advisor jobs in 2024 supported **$144.6 trillion** in SEC-registered RAUM and **68.4 million** clients, a scale that climbs less than that pace year over year (**12.6%** annual growth) while practitioner counts barely grow.

Two structural forces will define the next decade. First, **109,093** Cerulli-projected retirements account for **41.5%** of assets, against a roughly **72%** rookie failure rate. BLS projects only about **24,100** annual openings over the decade, a number that points to a structural shortage. Second, channel mix continues to tilt toward fee-based, fiduciary structures, with RIA channels heading toward nearly 31.2% of intermediary asset market share by 2027 and consolidator-affiliated advisor counts already up roughly threefold since 2018.

For consumers, the implication is sharper than the headline adoption rate suggests: **trust beats price.** The **42%** of Americans who still see advisors as only for the wealthy represent the largest unmet demand pool in the data.

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