Have or plan to get the Series 7? Take the Series 66. No Series 7 and want to give investment advice only? Take the Series 65. The Series 66 combines the Series 63 and 65 but requires the Series 7 as a corequisite. The Series 65 stands alone with no prerequisites.
Quick Decision Tree
The choice between Series 65 and Series 66 comes down to one question: Do you have (or plan to get) the Series 7 license?
Do you have the Series 7 or plan to get it?
Yes → Take the Series 66
Shorter exam, combines Series 63 + 65 content, one exam instead of two
No → Take the Series 65
No prerequisites, can work as IAR immediately after passing
The Series 7 is the General Securities Representative exam that allows you to sell securities products (stocks, bonds, mutual funds). If your career involves selling products in addition to giving advice, you need the Series 7. If you only want to provide fee-based investment advice without selling, the Series 65 alone is sufficient.
Key Differences at a Glance
| Factor | Series 65 | Series 66 |
|---|---|---|
| Full Name | Uniform Investment Adviser Law Exam | Uniform Combined State Law Exam |
| Prerequisites | None | Series 7 (corequisite) |
| Exam Fee | $187 | $177 |
| Questions | 130 scored + 10 pretest | 100 scored + 10 pretest |
| Time Limit | 180 minutes (3 hours) | 150 minutes (2.5 hours) |
| Passing Score | 71% (92/130 correct) | 73% (73/100 correct) |
| Qualifies You As | Investment Adviser Representative only | Both Securities Agent AND IAR |
| Administered By | NASAA / FINRA | NASAA / FINRA |
Prerequisites & Requirements
Series 65: No Prerequisites
The Series 65 is unique among securities exams because it has no prerequisites whatsoever:
- No degree required
- No sponsoring employer required
- No other exams required first
- Anyone can register and take it via FINRA’s TESS system
This makes the Series 65 ideal for career changers, entrepreneurs starting their own RIA, or professionals (like CPAs and attorneys) adding advisory services. Career changers should plan for 80-100+ hours of study time over 6-8 weeks. For a detailed breakdown of how study hours scale by background. And to understand if you fall into a faster or slower study group. See our complete study time guide.
Series 66: Series 7 Corequisite
The Series 66 requires the Series 7 as a corequisite (not a prerequisite). This means:
- You can take the Series 66 before passing the Series 7
- You can take them in any order
- However, you must pass both before you can register with a state
- The Series 7 itself requires the SIE (Securities Industry Essentials) exam
To actually use your Series 66 registration, you need: SIE ($80) + Series 7 ($300) + Series 66 ($177) = $557 in exam fees plus a sponsoring firm for the Series 7. The Series 65 path costs only $187 with no sponsorship needed.
Start Your Series 65 Prep Without Sponsorship
No FINRA firm required. CertFuel covers all four exam sections: Economic Factors (15%), Investment Vehicles (25%), Client Recommendations (30%), and Laws & Regulations (30%). Our 36-subtopic tracking mirrors exactly how NASAA organizes the exam, so you know where you stand.
Access Free BetaExam Format Comparison
Series 65 Exam Structure
- Total questions: 140 (130 scored + 10 unscored pretest)
- Time: 180 minutes (3 hours)
- Passing score: 92 out of 130 (approximately 71%)
- Format: Multiple choice, computer-based at Prometric
Series 66 Exam Structure
- Total questions: 110 (100 scored + 10 unscored pretest)
- Time: 150 minutes (2.5 hours)
- Passing score: 73 out of 100 (73%)
- Format: Multiple choice, computer-based at Prometric
Notice the Series 66 has a higher passing threshold (73% vs 71%) despite being shorter. This reflects its focus on regulatory content that NASAA considers critical.
Content Focus: What Each Exam Covers
The most important difference between these exams is what they test:
Series 65 Content Breakdown
The Series 65 covers a broad range of topics including investment products, analysis, and regulations:
| Section | Topics | Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Economic Factors & Analysis | GDP, inflation, monetary policy, business cycles | 15 (12%) |
| Investment Vehicle Characteristics | Stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, options, annuities | 32 (25%) |
| Client Investment Recommendations | Suitability, portfolio management, retirement planning | 39 (30%) |
| Laws, Regulations & Guidelines | USA, registration, ethics, fiduciary duty | 44 (33%) |
Series 66 Content Breakdown
The Series 66 focuses almost entirely on regulations since the Series 7 covers investment products:
| Section | Topics | Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Regulations, Including Prohibition on Unethical Business Practices | USA, registration requirements, exemptions, record keeping | 45 (45%) |
| State and Federal Acts and Related Rules and Regulations | Securities Act of 1933, 1934, Investment Advisers Act of 1940 | 45 (45%) |
| Client/Customer Investment Recommendations and Strategies | Suitability, client profiles, investment policy statements | 10 (10%) |
The Series 66 is 90% regulatory content, which many find drier and harder to retain. The Series 65 balances regulations with investment concepts that many candidates find more engaging. If you struggle with memorizing rules and definitions, you may find the Series 65 easier despite being longer.
Cost Comparison: Total Investment
The exam fee is just one part of the cost. Here is the full picture:
Series 65 Path (IAR Only)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Series 65 Exam Fee | $187 |
| Study Materials | $200 - $500 |
| State Registration | $30 - $150/state |
| Total | $417 - $837 |
Series 66 Path (Agent + IAR)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| SIE Exam Fee | $80 |
| Series 7 Exam Fee | $300 |
| Series 66 Exam Fee | $177 |
| Study Materials (all exams) | $500 - $1,200 |
| State Registration | $30 - $150/state |
| Total | $1,087 - $1,907 |
The Series 66 path costs roughly 2 to 3 times more than the Series 65 path. However, it also qualifies you for significantly more roles (both selling securities and advising).
Career Path Implications
Series 65 Opens These Doors
- Fee-Only Investment Adviser: Charge clients based on AUM or flat/hourly fees
- Independent RIA Owner: Start your own Registered Investment Adviser firm
- Financial Planner (non-sales): Create financial plans with investment recommendations
- Portfolio Manager: Manage client assets on a discretionary basis
Limitation: With only the Series 65, you cannot execute securities transactions. You would use a custodian (Schwab, Fidelity, etc.) to place trades on behalf of clients.
Understanding the fee-only business model in depth. Including compensation structures, regulatory advantages, and how it differs from commission-based sales. Is crucial for career planning. See our fee-only vs commission guide for a complete comparison.
Series 66 Opens These Doors
- Everything the Series 65 offers, plus:
- Securities Sales: Sell stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and variable products
- Dual Registration: Work as both a broker and adviser at a single firm
- Wirehouse Positions: Work at major broker-dealers (Merrill, Morgan Stanley, etc.)
- Insurance + Securities: Sell variable annuities and variable life insurance
Best for Series 65
- Fee-only advisors - RIA firm owners - CPAs adding advisory services - Attorneys doing estate planning - Career changers wanting quick entry
Best for Series 66
- Full-service financial advisors - Wirehouse employees - Insurance agents adding securities - Anyone at a broker-dealer - Those wanting maximum flexibility
Once you’ve decided on the Series 65, your next step is planning your study schedule. Our study schedule guide provides 4-week, 6-week, and 8-week timelines with day-by-day breakdowns tailored to your available study hours and timeline.
Difficulty Comparison: Which Is Harder?
This is the most debated question among candidates. The answer may surprise you.
Conventional Wisdom: Series 65 Is Easier
Most study providers suggest the Series 65 is easier because:
- It covers market knowledge that many find intuitive
- The regulatory portion is balanced by investment concepts
- The passing score (71%) is lower than Series 66 (73%)
What Test Takers Report
Many candidates who have taken both exams report the opposite experience. One common story: candidates who failed the Series 66 multiple times passed both the Series 65 and Series 63 on their first attempts.
Possible reasons the Series 66 may be harder:
- 90% regulatory content: Less variety makes studying feel monotonous
- Higher stakes: You have already invested time in SIE and Series 7
- Burnout: By exam three, many candidates are fatigued
- Overconfidence: Candidates assume it will be easy since it is shorter
NASAA does not publish official pass rates for the Series 65 or 66. Claims about relative difficulty are based on candidate reports, not verified data. Your experience may vary based on your background and study approach.
For a complete analysis of what these unofficial pass rates mean, how Series 65 and Series 66 candidates compare, and what factors actually predict success vs failure, see our pass rate guide.
Bottom Line on Difficulty
If you struggle with pure memorization and regulatory minutiae, consider whether the Series 65 + Series 63 combination (if you need agent registration) might be easier for you than the Series 66. The extra exam fee may be worth the reduced stress.
Retake Policy: What If You Fail?
Both exams have identical waiting periods:
| Attempt | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| After 1st failed attempt | 30 days |
| After 2nd failed attempt | 30 days |
| After 3rd failed attempt | 180 days (6 months) |
You must repay the exam fee for each attempt. Plan for potential retakes in your budget.
Summary: Making Your Decision
Choose Series 65 If...
- You do not have or want the Series 7 - You want to start working as an IAR quickly - You plan to be a fee-only advisor - You are starting your own RIA firm - You want the lowest-cost entry into advising - You are a CPA, attorney, or other professional adding services
Choose Series 66 If...
- You already have the Series 7 - Your employer requires it - You want to sell securities products AND advise - You work at a broker-dealer - You want maximum career flexibility - You prefer one exam over two (Series 63 + 65)
Remember: the “right” choice depends entirely on your career goals and current credentials. Both exams lead to legitimate, rewarding careers in financial services.