Monday, December 29, 2025

One key credential sets trustworthy financial advisors apart, and many still lack this qualification

When it comes to getting advice about your money, you want to have confidence that the guidance you’re getting is in your best interest.

In the U.S., that means working with a financial advisor who has fiduciary status. But here’s something many people don’t realize: not everyone in this profession is required to honor these rules and place your needs ahead of theirs.

Here’s how to make sure your advisor is the best fit for the job and why being fiduciary matters.

Under U.S. law, registered investment advisers (RIAs) are required to act as fiduciaries. They owe clients both a duty of care and a duty of loyalty.

The duty of care means the advisor has to have a reasonable understanding of your financial situation, objectives and constraints, and make recommendations in your best interests.

The duty of loyalty means the advisor has to put your interests ahead of their own. They must avoid or disclose any conflicts of interest. In other words, they can’t place their own financial incentives over your well-being.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) reaffirmed in 2019 that these fiduciary obligations can’t be waived away by contract or disclosure (1), so it’s actually illegal for a fiduciary advisor not to act in your best interest.

Now that you know what it is, how can you find out if an advisor is a fiduciary? By doing the following: Ask the advisor. In your first conversation, ask whether they act as a fiduciary in all the advice they provide. If the answer is evasive — or they say “only for some services” — treat it as a red flag.

Use public databases. The Investment Adviser Public Disclosure (IAPD) website is the official U.S. database for RIAs and advisor representatives. Check there to see whether a firm or person is registered, what services they provide, whether there have been disciplinary events and how they are compensated.

BrokerCheck. If your advisor also works in a broker role (selling securities), review their licensing and employment, complaints and violations history via the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s (FINRA) BrokerCheck tool.

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