SEC / FINRA / state securities regulators

Series 65 exam study map for investment adviser representatives

How Series 65 fits US investment adviser representative readiness, state registration, Form ADV/IARD context, and adviser versus broker-dealer boundaries.

Exam focus

Uniform Investment Adviser Law Exam context for investment adviser representative roles.

Who this helps

  • - Investment adviser representative candidates
  • - RIA founders
  • - Private fund adviser staff
  • - Compliance teams checking state registration

Why this matters

  • - Series 65 is commonly used for investment adviser representative qualification, subject to state rules.
  • - The exam is not the same as SEC adviser firm registration or Form ADV effectiveness.
  • - Candidates should understand adviser fiduciary, disclosure, conflicts, custody, marketing, and state registration concepts.

Study map

Adviser knowledge

  • - Study adviser regulation, ethics, fiduciary concepts, client recommendations, securities products, economics, and portfolio theory.
  • - Use NASAA outlines and FINRA exam pages to check the current structure and source documents.

State registration fit

  • - Map whether the person needs IAR registration in one or more states.
  • - Separate Series 65 from Series 66 plus Series 7 routes.

Licensing tie-in

  • - Series 65 can support individual IAR qualification, but the adviser firm route depends on SEC/state/Form ADV facts.
  • - A person can still need state registration or notice-related analysis even where the firm is SEC registered.
  • - Broker-dealer activity and transaction compensation require separate analysis.

Booking and sponsorship

  • - Use FINRA and NASAA official pages to verify enrollment, content outline, waivers, and state-specific use.
  • - Confirm whether sponsorship is required for the candidate's filing route.
  • - Keep exam evidence with Form U4/IARD/state registration notes where relevant.

Verify before studying

  • - Whether Series 65, Series 66 plus Series 7, or another exemption/credential route applies.
  • - Which state or states drive the IAR requirement.
  • - Whether the person is advising, selling securities, soliciting, or doing both.

Common mistakes

  • - Thinking Series 65 registers the adviser firm.
  • - Ignoring state-by-state IAR rules.
  • - Using Series 65 to paper over broker-dealer compensation issues.

Disclaimer

Information on LicenseCompare is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, regulatory, financial, tax, investment, or professional advice. Licensing requirements depend on facts and change over time. Always consult official regulator materials and qualified professional advisers.