State Registration for Investment Advisers: Complete Guide

Registration at a Glance

Most investment advisers register with their state, not the SEC. If your firm manages less than $100 million in assets, you’ll file Form ADV through the IARD system and register with your home state’s securities regulator. IARs file Form U4 separately and must pass the Series 65 exam.

Who Registers Where: SEC vs State

The first question every investment adviser must answer: do I register with the SEC or with state regulators?

<$100M State Registration File with your home state and any state where you have clients
$100-110M Buffer Zone Can remain state-registered or elect SEC
>$110M SEC Registration Must register with SEC; states require only notice filing

The $100 million threshold has been in place since 2012. The SEC is currently evaluating whether to raise this threshold to between $150 million and $250 million, which would shift thousands of advisers from federal to state regulation.

The Buffer Zone Explained

The buffer zone prevents advisers from constantly switching between SEC and state registration as AUM fluctuates. Once SEC-registered, you only need to withdraw if AUM drops below $90 million. State-registered advisers only need to switch to SEC when AUM reaches $110 million.

Exceptions to the $100 Million Rule

Several situations allow or require registration different from the standard AUM threshold:

New York Advisers

New York does not register advisers with $25 million to $100 million in AUM. If you’re based in New York with AUM in this range, you must register with the SEC.

Multi-State Operations (15+ States)

If your firm would need to register in 15 or more states, you can elect SEC registration regardless of AUM. This reduces the administrative burden of managing multiple state registrations.

Internet Advisers

Investment advisers that provide advice exclusively through a website or app (robo-advisers) may register with the SEC without meeting the $100 million AUM threshold.

Private Fund Advisers

Advisers to private funds have different rules. Those managing less than $150 million in private fund assets may qualify as Exempt Reporting Advisers (ERAs), filing a limited Form ADV without full registration.

The IARD System: Your Central Filing Hub

The Investment Adviser Registration Depository (IARD) is the electronic filing system for investment advisers and their representatives. Sponsored by NASAA and the SEC, IARD provides a single point for filing registrations and notice filings with all regulators.

How IARD Works

1

Create Your Account

Request access through FINRA’s Entitlement system. You’ll receive login credentials within a few business days. New firms should consult the IARD Users Manual for detailed instructions.

2

Fund Your Flex Account

Before you can submit any filings, you must deposit funds to cover registration fees and IARD system fees. Wire transfer or ACH are typical funding methods. Plan for all state fees plus a buffer.

3

File Form ADV

Complete and submit Form ADV Parts 1 and 2 through the IARD system. Select which states you’re registering in. The system calculates fees automatically based on your selections.

4

Register IARs

Each investment adviser representative files Form U4 through the CRD system (linked to IARD). IARs must demonstrate exam qualification (Series 65 or equivalent) before approval.

5

State Review and Approval

Each state reviews your filing and either approves, requests additional information, or denies registration. Review timelines vary from days to weeks depending on the state.

IARD System Fees (2026)

NASAA announced no changes to IARD system fees for 2026:

Fee TypeAmountNotes
IAR Initial Setup$15Per representative
IAR Annual Renewal$15Per representative
IA Firm Setup$0Fee waived for state-registered firms
IA Firm Annual Renewal$0Fee waived for state-registered firms

These fees are separate from state registration fees, which vary significantly by jurisdiction.

Historical Context

When IARD launched in 2001, IAR system fees were $45. The reduction to $15 reflects NASAA’s ongoing effort to reduce barriers to entry for investment advisory professionals.

State Registration Fees: What to Expect

State registration fees are paid through IARD but vary widely by jurisdiction. Here’s what you’ll encounter:

Fee Ranges by State

Investment Adviser Firm Registration:

  • Range: $50 to $500+
  • Average: $150-$250 for most states

Investment Adviser Representative (IAR):

  • Lowest: $0 (Louisiana, Minnesota)
  • Highest: $285 (Texas)
  • Typical range: $50-$200

Fees are subject to change. Always verify current fees on the IARD system before filing.

Sample State Fees

StateIA Firm FeeIAR FeeNotes
California$300$50DBO (now DFPI) oversight
Florida$200$50No state income tax state
Georgia$100$255Higher IAR fee
Illinois$200$150CE required starting 2026
Montana$200$100
New YorkN/A$50Most advisers register with SEC
South Dakota$200$200
Texas$300$285Highest IAR fees

Multi-State Fee Calculation

If you’re registering in multiple states, costs add up quickly. For example, registering an IA firm with two IARs in five states might cost:

  • IARD system fees: $30 (2 IARs x $15)
  • Average state IA fees: $1,000 (5 states x $200)
  • Average state IAR fees: $1,000 (5 states x 2 IARs x $100)
  • Total: $2,030

This is why firms approaching 15-state registration often elect SEC registration for administrative simplicity.

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Form ADV: The Registration Document

Form ADV is the uniform application for investment adviser registration. Understanding its components is essential for successful registration.

Part 1: Business Information

Part 1 is a check-the-box, fill-in-the-blank form covering:

Identifying Information

Firm name, address, CRD number, fiscal year end, website, and form of organization (LLC, corporation, etc.)

SEC/State Registration

Registration status, AUM, number of clients, and selection of states where you’re registering

Ownership and Control

All owners with 5%+ interest, control persons, and key personnel. Includes background questions about disciplinary history.

Business Operations

Types of advisory services, client types, compensation methods, custody of assets, and affiliations

Part 1B contains additional questions specifically for state-registered advisers, including detailed questions about your state’s specific requirements.

Part 2: Client Brochure

Part 2 is your client-facing disclosure document, written in plain English:

Part 2A (Firm Brochure):

  • Advisory services offered and fees
  • Types of clients and account minimums
  • Methods of analysis and investment strategies
  • Material conflicts of interest
  • Disciplinary information
  • Code of ethics

Part 2B (Brochure Supplement):

  • Background on supervised persons providing advice
  • Educational and business history
  • Disciplinary information for individuals
  • Other business activities
Plain English Requirement

Part 2 must be written in plain English that clients can understand. Avoid technical jargon. If you wouldn’t say it in a client meeting, don’t write it in your brochure. Regulators review Part 2 for clarity, not just accuracy.

Filing and Update Requirements

RequirementDeadlineNotes
Initial FilingBefore conducting businessMust be approved before advisory activity
Annual UpdateWithin 90 days of fiscal year endCalendar year firms: March 31
Material ChangesWithin 30 daysEmployment changes, disciplinary events, etc.
Brochure DeliveryAt client engagementMust offer updated brochure annually

Form U4: Registering Individual IARs

Each person who will provide investment advice must register as an Investment Adviser Representative using Form U4 through the CRD (Central Registration Depository) system.

U4 Requirements

To be approved as an IAR, individuals must:

  1. Pass a qualifying exam:

    • Series 65 (Uniform Investment Adviser Law Examination), OR
    • Series 7 + Series 66 combination, OR
    • Hold a qualifying credential (CFP, CFA, ChFC, CIC, or CPA/PFS)
  2. Complete background disclosure:

    • Employment history (10 years)
    • Residential history (5 years)
    • Criminal, regulatory, and civil disclosure questions
    • Fingerprint submission for background check
  3. Pay registration fees:

    • State IAR fees for each state
    • IARD system fees ($15)
Exam Timing

You can file Form U4 before passing the Series 65, but your registration won’t be approved until exam results are reported. Many firms file U4 while candidates are studying, then wait for exam passage to complete registration. If you’re coordinating U4 filing with exam prep, a structured study schedule helps you balance registration paperwork with focused exam preparation to avoid delays.

IAR Registration Timeline

1

Pass Series 65 Exam

Before filing Form U4, determine your study timeline (most candidates need 4-8 weeks) to plan backward from your desired registration approval date. Results are typically available within 24-48 hours. FINRA automatically updates your CRD record with passing scores.

2

Firm Files Form U4

Your sponsoring firm (or you, if starting your own RIA) submits Form U4 through CRD selecting appropriate states.

3

Background Check Processing

Fingerprints are processed and background checks run. This typically takes 1-2 weeks but can be longer for complex histories.

4

State Review

Each state reviews the U4 and either approves or requests additional information. Simple applications may approve in days; complex ones take weeks.

5

Registration Approved

Once approved, you can conduct advisory business in that state. Your CRD record shows “Approved” status.

Multi-State Registration

If you have clients in multiple states, you’ll likely need to register in each state where you conduct business.

When Multi-State Registration Is Required

You generally must register in a state if:

  • You have a place of business in that state (office, branch)
  • You provide advice to clients who are residents of that state
  • You hold yourself out to the public as providing advisory services in that state

De Minimis Exemptions

Some states have de minimis exemptions allowing you to advise a small number of clients without registration:

Exemption TypeTypical LimitNotes
Client count5-6 clientsPer 12-month period
No place of businessRequiredMust not have office in state
No holding outRequiredCan’t advertise in state
De Minimis Is Limited

De minimis exemptions are narrow and temporary. If you expect to do ongoing business in a state, register proactively. Relying on de minimis while actively marketing to a state’s residents can create compliance problems.

The 15-State SEC Election

If your firm would need to register in 15 or more states, you can elect SEC registration regardless of AUM. This exception exists because:

  • Managing 15+ state registrations is administratively burdensome
  • Each state has different requirements, fees, and deadlines
  • SEC registration provides uniform federal oversight
Planning for Growth

If you’re approaching 15 states, consider whether SEC registration makes sense. The higher compliance requirements of SEC registration may be offset by the simplicity of single-regulator oversight.

Ongoing Compliance Requirements

Registration is just the beginning. State-registered advisers have ongoing obligations:

Annual Requirements

Form ADV Annual Update

File within 90 days of your fiscal year-end (March 31 for calendar-year firms). Update all changed information in Parts 1 and 2.

Registration Renewal

Pay renewal fees by December 31 each year through IARD. Late renewals may result in registration lapse.

Continuing Education

If your state has adopted IAR CE requirements, complete 12 hours annually (6 Products/Practice + 6 Ethics). See our IAR continuing education guide for state-by-state requirements.

Books and Records

Maintain required records for the periods specified by your state (typically 5 years). Be prepared for periodic examinations.

Material Changes and Amendments

You must file Form ADV amendments within 30 days of material changes:

  • Changes in ownership or control
  • Changes in services offered
  • New disciplinary events
  • Significant changes in fee structure
  • Changes in custody arrangements

Some states require additional notifications (e.g., change in supervised persons, branch office additions).

Common Registration Mistakes to Avoid

Operating Before Approval

Never conduct advisory business before registration is approved. This is a serious violation that can result in fines, disgorgement, and bars from future registration.

Incomplete Disclosure

Disclose everything required on Forms ADV and U4. Omitting or minimizing disciplinary history is worse than the underlying issue. Regulators expect honesty.

Missing State Registrations

Register in every state where you have clients. De minimis exemptions are narrow. If you’re actively marketing or serving clients in a state, you likely need to register there.

Late Renewals

Mark your calendar for December renewal deadlines. A lapsed registration means you cannot conduct business until reinstated, which may require refiling and paying penalties.

Exam Failure Delays Your Timeline

The registration mistakes above have serious consequences, but exam failure creates the longest delays. If you fail the Series 65, you must wait 30 days to retest, pushing your entire registration timeline back 6-8 weeks minimum. Avoid common exam mistakes like underestimating difficulty, poor time management, and skipping practice exams. These cause most preventable failures.

Starting Your Own RIA: Registration Checklist

If you’re starting an independent RIA firm, here’s your registration roadmap:

1

Form Your Legal Entity

Establish your LLC, corporation, or other business entity. You’ll need this before filing Form ADV. Consider compliance, liability, and tax implications.

2

Determine SEC vs State Registration

Calculate your expected AUM. Under $100 million? You’ll register with your state. Review the exceptions (NY advisers, 15+ states, internet advisers) to confirm.

3

Request IARD Access

Apply for IARD/CRD entitlements through FINRA’s system. Allow several business days for processing.

4

Fund Your IARD Account

Deposit sufficient funds to cover all state registration fees plus IARD system fees. Include a buffer for potential multi-state expansion.

5

Prepare Form ADV

Complete Parts 1 and 2 thoroughly. Have your compliance consultant or attorney review before filing. Part 2 requires plain-English client disclosures.

6

Submit and Wait

File Form ADV through IARD. State review typically takes 2-6 weeks. Respond promptly to any deficiency letters or information requests.

7

Register IARs

Once the firm is approved, file Form U4 for each IAR. Ensure all IARs have passed required exams before attempting to complete registration.

For a complete guide to starting your own firm, see our how to start an RIA guide.

Key Takeaways
  • Under $100M AUM = state registration: most new advisers register with their home state, not the SEC

  • IARD is your central filing hub: Form ADV (firm) and Form U4 (IARs) are filed through this FINRA-operated system

  • State fees vary widely: from $0 to $285 per IAR, with most states charging $100-$200

  • Multi-state registration: required wherever you have clients; consider SEC registration if approaching 15 states

  • Form ADV annual updates: due within 90 days of fiscal year-end (March 31 for most firms)

  • Don’t operate before approval: conducting business without proper registration is a serious violation

Frequently Asked Questions

Investment advisers with less than $100 million in assets under management (AUM) generally register with their state. Advisers with $110 million or more must register with the SEC. There's a buffer zone between $90M-$110M to prevent advisers from constantly switching regulators.

Costs vary by state. IARD system fees are $15 per IAR for initial setup and annual renewal. State registration fees range from $0 (Louisiana, Minnesota) to $285 (Texas), with most states charging $100-$200. Total first-year costs typically range from $500-$2,000 depending on the state and firm size.

Yes. The IARD system allows you to register in multiple states simultaneously. You'll pay state fees for each jurisdiction, but the IARD system streamlines the process. If you'd need to register in 15 or more states, you can elect SEC registration instead.

Form ADV is the uniform registration form for investment advisers. Part 1 contains firm information (business, ownership, clients). Part 2 is your client-facing brochure with fees, practices, and disclosures. You file initially to register and must update annually within 90 days of fiscal year-end.

Initial registration typically takes 2-6 weeks depending on the state. Some states approve within days if your application is complete. Others conduct more thorough reviews. SEC registration generally takes 45 days. Building a buffer of 60+ days before you need to conduct business is wise.

Yes. The investment adviser firm files Form ADV, and each individual IAR files Form U4 through the CRD system. IARs must also pass the Series 65 (or equivalent) exam and pay separate registration fees in each state where they'll conduct business.

You generally need to register in any state where you have a place of business or provide advice to clients who are residents of that state. Some states have de minimis exemptions (typically 5-6 clients) but these are limited. If clients are in multiple states, you'll likely need multi-state registration.

No. You cannot conduct investment advisory business until your registration is approved. Operating without proper registration is a serious violation that can result in fines, enforcement actions, and disqualification from future registration.

You must file annual Form ADV updates within 90 days of fiscal year-end, pay annual renewal fees by December, maintain required books and records, file amendments within 30 days of material changes, and complete continuing education if required by your state.

If your AUM reaches $110 million, you must register with the SEC. You have 90 days to file for SEC registration after crossing the threshold. If you're SEC-registered and AUM drops below $90 million, you must withdraw SEC registration and register with your state within 180 days.