Advisory Fee
Advisory Fee
Compensation charged by investment advisers for providing investment advice and portfolio management services, typically calculated as a percentage of assets under management (AUM). Must be disclosed in Form ADV Part 2A, subject to a reasonableness standard, and generally cannot be based on performance unless the client qualifies as a qualified client ($1.1M+ under management or $2.2M+ net worth).
An investment adviser charges a tiered fee structure: 1.00% annually on the first $500,000 of AUM, 0.75% on assets from $500,000 to $1,000,000, and 0.50% on assets above $1,000,000. A client with $1,200,000 would pay $5,000 on the first $500K, $3,750 on the next $500K, and $1,000 on the remaining $200K, totaling $9,750 annually (0.8125% effective rate).
Students often confuse advisory fees (ongoing compensation for advice, typically AUM-based) with commissions (transaction-based compensation for broker-dealers). Also commonly confused: performance-based fees require qualified client status ($1.1M+ with adviser or $2.2M+ net worth), not just accredited investor status ($200K income or $1M net worth excluding primary residence).
How This Is Tested
- Calculating total annual advisory fees based on AUM and fee percentages
- Identifying proper fee disclosure requirements in Form ADV Part 2A
- Determining when performance-based fees are permissible (qualified client threshold)
- Understanding the reasonableness standard for advisory fees
- Distinguishing between advisory fees (advisers) and commissions (broker-dealers)
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Qualified client threshold (AUM with adviser) | $1.1 million under management | Required to charge performance-based fees |
| Qualified client threshold (net worth) | $2.2 million net worth | Alternative threshold for performance-based fees |
| Fee disclosure requirement | Must be in Form ADV Part 2A | Including fee schedule, billing practices, and any additional costs |
| Reasonableness standard | Fees must be reasonable | No specific percentage cap, but must be justified by services provided |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Michael, a new investment adviser representative, is meeting with a prospective client who has $800,000 to invest. The client mentions that his previous financial advisor charged commissions on each trade and asks Michael how his firm is compensated. Michael's firm charges 1.25% annually on assets under management. Which of the following would be the most appropriate response?
A is correct. Michael must clearly explain how advisory fees work: they are typically charged as a percentage of AUM (in this case 1.25% annually, usually billed quarterly), cover ongoing advice and management, and do not include additional transaction commissions. This transparency helps the client understand the fee-based compensation model and satisfies disclosure obligations.
B is incorrect and misleading because advisory fees and commissions are fundamentally different: advisory fees are ongoing percentage-based compensation for advice (creating potential conflicts to recommend inaction), while commissions are transaction-based compensation (creating conflicts to recommend excessive trading or churning). C violates the brochure rule, which requires delivering Form ADV Part 2A at or before contract signing, not after. D is inappropriate because investment advisers are compensated through advisory fees, not commissions; offering commission-based compensation would change the relationship structure and regulatory framework.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to explain advisory fee structures to clients and distinguish between fee-based (adviser) and commission-based (broker-dealer) compensation models. Understanding these differences is critical for proper disclosure, managing conflicts of interest, and ensuring clients understand how their adviser is paid.
Under SEC regulations, what is the minimum qualification threshold for a client to be charged performance-based fees by an investment adviser?
B is correct. SEC Rule 205-3 permits investment advisers to charge performance-based fees only to qualified clients, defined as those with either $1,100,000 (adjusted for inflation) under management with the adviser OR $2,200,000 in net worth. These thresholds are higher than accredited investor standards to ensure clients can bear the additional risk of performance-based compensation.
A describes accredited investor thresholds (for private placements under Regulation D), which are lower than qualified client standards and do not permit performance-based fees. C describes a potential threshold for institutional investors, but the specific qualified client standard in Rule 205-3 uses the $1.1M/$2.2M thresholds. D describes qualified purchaser status (for investing in certain private funds under the Investment Company Act), which has a higher threshold but is not the standard for performance-based advisory fees.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests knowledge of the qualified client threshold for performance-based fees. Understanding that this standard is different from (and higher than) accredited investor status is essential because advisers face regulatory violations if they charge performance fees to clients who do not meet the qualified client criteria.
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Access Free BetaSummit Advisory Group charges a tiered annual fee structure: 1.00% on the first $1,000,000, 0.75% on assets from $1,000,000 to $3,000,000, and 0.50% on assets above $3,000,000. If a client has $2,500,000 under management, what is the total annual advisory fee in dollars?
C is correct. Calculate the tiered fee structure:
Tier 1: First $1,000,000 × 1.00% = $10,000
Tier 2: Next $1,500,000 ($2,500,000 - $1,000,000) × 0.75% = $11,250
Tier 3: $0 (client has not reached the $3,000,000 threshold)
Total annual fee: $10,000 + $11,250 = $21,250
A is incorrect because it applies 0.75% to the entire $2,500,000 ($2,500,000 × 0.75% = $18,750), ignoring the tiered structure. B is incorrect because it applies 1.00% only to the first million and miscalculates the second tier. D is incorrect because it applies 1.00% to the entire $2,500,000 ($2,500,000 × 1.00% = $25,000), ignoring the lower rates on higher asset tiers.
Fee calculation questions are common on the Series 65 exam to test your understanding of how tiered fee structures work. Many advisers use declining fee schedules (lower percentages on higher asset amounts) to incentivize larger accounts, and you must be able to calculate total fees accurately across multiple tiers.
All of the following statements about advisory fees are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Advisory fees do NOT require FINRA approval. FINRA regulates broker-dealers, not investment advisers. Advisory fees must be reasonable and fully disclosed, but there is no requirement for pre-approval by any regulator. Investment advisers are regulated by the SEC or state securities regulators, not FINRA.
A is accurate: The brochure rule requires investment advisers to deliver Form ADV Part 2A (which includes fee schedules and billing practices) to clients at or before entering into an advisory contract. B is accurate: Most investment advisers charge fees based on a percentage of AUM, typically billed quarterly (e.g., a 1% annual fee is charged as 0.25% each quarter). D is accurate: While there is no specific regulatory cap on advisory fees, they must satisfy a reasonableness standard and be justified by the services provided. Excessive fees could violate fiduciary duty.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of regulatory oversight distinctions. Investment advisers are regulated by the SEC and state regulators, while broker-dealers are regulated by FINRA. Confusing these regulatory frameworks is a common mistake, and understanding which regulator has authority over which type of firm is critical for exam success.
Pinnacle Wealth Advisers manages $50,000,000 in client assets and is considering implementing performance-based fees for certain high-net-worth clients. Which of the following statements about performance-based advisory fees are accurate?
1. Performance-based fees create a conflict of interest because they incentivize the adviser to take excessive risk
2. Clients must have at least $1,100,000 under management with the adviser or $2,200,000 net worth to qualify
3. Performance-based fees must be disclosed in Form ADV Part 2A like all other fee arrangements
4. Performance-based fees are prohibited for all investment advisers under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
B is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 3 are accurate.
Statement 1 is TRUE: Performance-based fees do create a conflict of interest because advisers are incentivized to pursue higher-risk strategies to maximize returns (and thus maximize their own compensation). This conflict must be disclosed and managed under fiduciary duty. This is why performance fees are restricted to sophisticated investors who can understand and bear this risk.
Statement 2 is TRUE: SEC Rule 205-3 permits performance-based fees only for qualified clients, defined as those with either $1,100,000 or more under management with the adviser OR $2,200,000 or more in net worth (amounts adjusted periodically for inflation).
Statement 3 is TRUE: All fee arrangements, including performance-based fees, must be disclosed in Form ADV Part 2A. This includes the fee calculation methodology, benchmarks used, and any high-water marks or hurdle rates.
Statement 4 is FALSE: Performance-based fees are NOT prohibited; they are permitted for qualified clients who meet the $1.1M/$2.2M threshold. The Investment Advisers Act restricts but does not prohibit performance-based compensation.
The Series 65 exam tests multi-dimensional understanding of performance-based fees: the qualified client requirements, disclosure obligations, and conflicts of interest they create. Understanding that performance fees are permitted (not prohibited) but restricted to sophisticated investors is essential for questions about fee structures and fiduciary obligations.
💡 Memory Aid
Think of advisory fees as "AUM Rent": You pay a percentage to "rent" the adviser's expertise, charged on your Assets Under Management. Unlike commissions (pay-per-trade), you pay whether the adviser trades or not. Remember "1-1-2-2" for performance fees: $1.1M with adviser OR $2.2M net worth = qualified client.
Related Concepts
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Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: