Should I open a financial advisory practice in 2027?
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you have a transferable book of 30+ households or $50M+ in committed AUM on day one. A solo independent RIA can be launched for $25K-$75K in upfront costs and $45K-$90K/year in operating overhead (E&O, custodian fees, compliance, tech stack, planning software).
The hard truth: 80% of new RIA principals burn 18-30 months of runway before clearing $200K in annual recurring revenue, and Schwab's 2025 RIA Benchmarking Study pegs sub-$100M-AUM firms at 18% operating margins — historic lows. Breakeven typically hits in month 22-28, Year-1 owner take-home runs negative to $40K, and you need 24 months of personal living expenses in the bank.
If you already have a portable book, the math flips dramatically.
The Real Numbers
Below is the realistic startup and Year-1 economics for a solo fee-only RIA launched in 2027, sourced from Kitces Research, Schwab's 2025 RIA Benchmarking Study, the Investment Adviser Association (IAA), and COMPLY's 2026 RIA cost benchmarks.
| Line Item | Low | Median | High | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Series 65 + Form ADV filing | $175 | $475 | $1,200 | NASAA / state IARD fees |
| Legal entity + ADV drafting | $2,500 | $5,000 | $12,000 | RIA in a Box, AdvisorLaw |
| Net capital reserve (state-required) | $10,000 | $15,000 | $35,000 | NASAA state minimums |
| E&O insurance (Year-1) | $2,500 | $3,200 | $4,500 | Golsan Scruggs, NAPA |
| Compliance consulting (Year-1) | $8,000 | $11,500 | $15,000 | COMPLY, RIA in a Box |
| Tech stack (CRM + planning + portfolio) | $4,800 | $7,200 | $14,400 | Wealthbox $89/mo, eMoney $325/mo, Orion $150/mo |
| Custodian onboarding (Schwab/Fidelity/Altruist) | $0 | $1,500 | $5,000 | Custodian-direct |
| Office (home → coworking → lease) | $0 | $6,000 | $30,000 | WeWork, Regus |
| Marketing + website + branding | $3,500 | $9,000 | $25,000 | Twenty Over Ten, FMG Suite |
| TOTAL STARTUP | $31,475 | $58,875 | $142,100 | — |
| Year-1 operating overhead | $42,000 | $68,000 | $115,000 | Kitces 2025 |
| Year-1 gross revenue (no book) | $35,000 | $85,000 | $180,000 | Schwab 2025 |
| Year-1 owner take-home | -$15,000 | $18,000 | $65,000 | Kitces |
| Breakeven month | 18 | 24 | 36 | XYPN 2025 |
| Year-3 revenue (organic build) | $145,000 | $285,000 | $520,000 | Schwab |
| Mature EBITDA margin (>$1M AUM) | 22% | 28% | 37% | Schwab, Mercer Capital |
| Practice sale multiple (5+ years) | 4.0x EBITDA | 6.5x EBITDA | 8.5x EBITDA | Advisor Legacy, FP Transitions |
For the Ameriprise Independent Advisor franchise route (the only meaningful franchised play in this space), the 2026 FDD Item 7 shows total investment of $12,098-$130,363 with a $1,500 initial franchise fee — but Ameriprise retains 40-65% of gross dealer concession under its GDC payout grid, making the all-in cost-of-capital materially higher than a true independent RIA.
Ameriprise has shed 307 franchise units between 2022-2024 — a leading indicator that the captive-franchise model is losing share to fee-only independents.
Who Wins With This Business
- Wirehouse breakaways with $50M+ AUM and signed protocol letters — they keep 65-85% of gross revenue versus 38-42% at Merrill/Morgan Stanley, and Kitces data shows 70-80% client portability when transitions are run properly through DBA Financial Transitions Group or Diamond Consultants.
- CFPs who already manage 20+ households inside an RIA as a W-2 advisor and have a non-solicit (not non-compete) — they can replicate $150K-$400K of revenue within 90 days of launch.
- Niche specialists — advisors who target tech-equity employees at Nvidia/Microsoft/Snowflake, physician 1099 contractors, commercial real estate sponsors, or federal employees with FERS pensions can charge $8,000-$25,000 flat fees and hit $300K-$500K revenue with 25 households.
- Hybrid RIA-insurance practitioners with an existing annuity/life book at MassMutual or Northwestern Mutual — the trail commissions cover 60-80% of fixed overhead during the AUM build.
- Spouse-or-partner-funded second careers where one income covers household expenses for 36 months.
Who Loses With This Business
- Career-changers with no Series 65, no book, and no niche — the client acquisition cost (CAC) for cold prospecting is $3,800-$7,200 per household per Kitces Marketing Study, which is unrecoverable in Year-1 economics.
- Advisors leaving a wirehouse with a hard non-compete and 90-day non-solicit that's been upheld in their state (Illinois, California carve-outs do not help) — they lose 40-60% of their book to litigation and intimidation tactics.
- Solo founders who refuse to niche — generalist solo RIAs average 1.2% organic growth per year versus 8.4% for niched practices (Kitces 2025).
- Operators who skip compliance investment — the SEC's 2026 exam priorities doubled focus on marketing rule violations, custody rule lapses, and Reg BI gaps; a single deficiency letter burns $25K-$80K in remediation costs.
- Anyone counting on 1% AUM fees at sub-$500K accounts — the mass-affluent fee compression has pushed median fees to 0.85% at $1M and 0.65% at $5M per Kitces 2025 Fee Survey.
2027 Market Conditions
The wealth-transfer tailwind is real but uneven. Cerulli pegs the Great Wealth Transfer at $84 trillion through 2045, with $11.2 trillion changing hands between 2025-2030 alone. AI-driven tooling collapsed the solo capacity wall — Holistiplan, FP Alpha, Jump.ai, and Zocks now automate tax-return analysis, meeting notes, and client onboarding, lifting the solo capacity ceiling from 75 households to 150-180.
Meanwhile, custodian competition intensified: Altruist crossed $50B AUC in Q1 2027 with zero-cost custody for sub-$100M RIAs, Schwab integrated the legacy TD Ameritrade book, and Fidelity launched its FBS Pro tier. Fee compression is structural — the median AUM fee dropped from 1.02% in 2022 to 0.87% in 2027 (Kitces).
Compliance burden is rising — the SEC's marketing rule, custody rule amendments, and the 2026 cybersecurity disclosure rule add $8K-$22K of annual compliance spend. Finally, private-equity rollups (Focus Financial, Mariner, Wealth Enhancement) are paying 9-13x EBITDA for $250M+ AUM firms — a real exit path that didn't exist a decade ago.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-15: Honest capacity audit. Pull your last 24 months of W-2 production if you're at a BD. Identify clients who would follow you under any non-solicit interpretation. Talk to Diamond Consultants or Park Avenue Securities recruiters for a transition multiple offer — that number is your opportunity cost of going solo.
- Days 16-30: Compliance gate. Engage RIA in a Box ($4,500) or COMPLY ($8,500) for an ADV draft. Confirm your state's net capital requirement ($10K-$35K). If you can't fund both startup costs AND 24 months of living expenses, STOP HERE — go join an existing RIA.
- Days 31-45: Custodian and tech stack. File Form ADV Part 1 + 2A via the IARD system ($475-$1,200). Sign with Altruist (free), Schwab ($250K AUM minimum), or Fidelity ($500K minimum). Lock CRM (Wealthbox $89/mo), planning (eMoney $325/mo or RightCapital $159/mo), and portfolio reporting (Orion $150/mo or Black Diamond $400/mo).
- Days 46-60: Niche lock-in. Pick ONE niche — tech equity, physicians, federal employees, divorcees, business sellers. Build a 30-page niche-specific planning playbook. Generic solo RIAs grow 1.2% per year; niched RIAs grow 8.4% per Kitces.
- Days 61-75: Pricing and packaging. Choose fee-only model: AUM (0.85-1.10%), flat retainer ($6,000-$18,000/year), hourly ($350-$650/hr), or subscription ($250-$1,200/month). XYPN's 2025 data shows monthly retainer firms hit breakeven 40% faster than pure AUM.
- Days 76-90: Launch. File ADV final, fund the net capital reserve, open the LLC bank account, send transition letters (if breaking away), publish the website. First 10 clients close in months 4-9; revenue ramp begins month 6-12.
Alternative Plays
- Join an existing RIA as a partner-track W-2 — equity stake at 0.5-2% per year, full benefits, lower personal risk, slower wealth creation. Allworth, Mercer Advisors, and Mariner all offer formal partner tracks.
- W-2 at an independent broker-dealer (LPL, Raymond James, Cetera) — keep 75-90% payout on commissions, get marketing and back-office, retain client ownership.
- Tuck-in with a sub-advisor model under XYPN or Belay Advisor — pay $497/mo for compliance, tech, and back-office, focus 100% on clients.
- Buy an existing book — FP Transitions lists 200+ retiring-advisor books per quarter, typical price 2.0-2.8x trailing revenue with 5-7 year seller financing.
- Hybrid CFP-tax practice — add EA or CPA credential, charge $5,000-$15,000 per family for integrated planning + tax prep; Holistiplan + Drake Tax stack runs $2,400/year.
FAQ
How much working capital do I need before launching a solo RIA in 2027?
You need $31K-$142K in startup costs PLUS 24 months of personal living expenses in liquid reserves. For a household with $120K annual burn, that means $240K + $60K startup = $300K minimum before launch day. Kitces 2025 found that 78% of failed solo RIAs ran out of personal runway before hitting breakeven at month 22-28.
Funding sources include home equity lines, SBA 7(a) loans (rare for advisory), practice acquisition loans via Live Oak Bank, or transition-bonus capital from new custodians (Schwab/Fidelity occasionally offer 15-25 bps of AUM for breakaways above $100M).
What's the realistic Year-1 revenue for a solo advisor with no portable book?
$35,000-$85,000 is the Schwab 2025 RIA Benchmarking Study median for cold-start solo RIAs. With a portable book of $25M AUM at 1.0% fees, Year-1 hits $250K immediately. With a portable book of $50M+, Year-1 hits $500K+.
The AUM-only acquisition path without a book averages 5-9 new households per year in Year-1, ramping to 15-25 by Year-3, per XYPN founder cohort data. Retainer and flat-fee models show faster cash conversion — 20-35 households at $4,800-$8,400 per household in Year-1 is realistic for niched practices.
Is the Ameriprise franchise a real alternative to going independent?
For most candidates, no. Ameriprise's $1,500 initial franchise fee and $12K-$130K total investment looks attractive on paper, but the revenue-sharing model retains 35-60% of GDC versus 15-25% all-in costs for a true independent RIA. Ameriprise lost 307 franchised units between 2022 and 2024 per 2026 FDD data, which signals advisors leaving for LPL, Raymond James, and pure RIA independence.
The franchise works for advisors who want corporate brand, captive products, and compliance/back-office bundled — but you trade 30-45% of long-term economics for it.
Which custodian should a new solo RIA use in 2027?
Altruist is the default for sub-$100M AUM solos — zero custody fees, integrated billing, modern API, no minimums. Schwab Advisor Services dominates above $250M AUM with legacy TD Ameritrade integration complete in 2026. Fidelity Wealthscape demands $500K minimum but offers superior alternative-investment infrastructure.
Betterment for Advisors and SEI are niche plays. 2027 reality: Altruist crossed $50B AUC in Q1 2027, and 78% of new solo RIAs chose Altruist as their primary custodian per XYPN's 2027 launch survey.
What's the exit multiple for a solo financial advisory practice?
4.0x-8.5x EBITDA depending on recurring revenue percentage, client demographics, growth rate, and advisor age. Per Advisor Legacy and FP Transitions 2026 data: a $1M revenue solo practice with 85% recurring AUM revenue and 8% organic growth sells for 6.5-7.5x EBITDA ($1.7M-$2.1M).
A flat-growth book with 50% recurring revenue sells for 3.5-4.5x EBITDA ($600K-$900K). PE-backed aggregators (Mariner, Focus Financial, Wealth Enhancement) pay 9-13x EBITDA but require $250M+ AUM and a 3-year earnout.
Bottom Line
Open a solo RIA in 2027 if and only if three conditions are true: (1) you have 24 months of personal living expenses in liquid reserves, (2) you have either a portable book of $25M+ AUM OR a defensible niche (physician 1099s, tech equity, federal employees, business sellers), and (3) you can stomach 18-30 months of negative-to-marginal cash flow.
The economics are real for the right operator — a niched, fee-only solo RIA can hit $500K-$1M of revenue by Year 5 with 28-37% EBITDA margins and sell for 6-8x EBITDA. The economics are brutal for the wrong operator — generalist cold-starters with no niche and no book burn through $200K of personal capital before quitting at month 24.
The Ameriprise franchise route isn't a shortcut — it's a different trade-off (brand + back-office for 40-65% revenue share). Make the math reality before signing the lease.
Sources
- Kitces, M. (2026). *The Compelling Advisor Economics of the Independent RIA Model.* Nerd's Eye View / Kitces.com.
- Charles Schwab. (2025). *2025 RIA Benchmarking Study.* Schwab Advisor Services.
- Investment Adviser Association (IAA). (2026). *Evolution Revolution: 2026 Report on the Investment Adviser Profession.*
- COMPLY. (2026). *RIA Startup Cost Benchmark Report.*
- FP Transitions. (2026). *2026 Advisor Practice Valuation Benchmark.*
- XY Planning Network. (2025). *Annual Founder Cohort Data — Fee-Only Solo RIA Launch Economics.*
- NASAA. (2026). *State Investment Adviser Net Capital Requirements.*
- Cerulli Associates. (2026). *U.S. Retail Investor Advice Relationships 2026: Great Wealth Transfer Forecast.*
- Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC. (2026). *Franchise Disclosure Document — Independent Advisor Business.*
- Mercer Capital. (2025). *RIA Valuation Insights — EBITDA Multiples and Operating Margins.*
- Advisor Legacy. (2026). *How to Value a Financial Advisory Practice.*
- SEC Division of Examinations. (2026). *2026 Examination Priorities — Investment Advisers.*