2025 Industry Report

The State of Advisor Discovery

How Americans search for financial advisors in 2025

January 2026 · Based on analysis of consumer assessment data

Executive Summary

AdvisorFinder occupies a unique position in the financial services industry: we observe actual consumer behavior when people actively search for a financial advisor. This isn't survey data. This data is aggregated from thousands of users from our platform. It's what real people do when they're ready to find professional financial guidance.

This report distills insights from our 2025 consumer assessment data to help advisors and wealth management firms understand who is searching for financial advice, what they're looking for, and how to position themselves to serve these prospective clients.

Key Findings

  1. Wealth builders, not just retirees. Nearly half of people searching for advisors are focused on building wealth, not preserving it. The narrative that advisor searches are dominated by retirees is outdated.
  2. Virtual is the new default. Roughly two-thirds of prospects prefer virtual or hybrid meetings. Advisors who don't offer flexible meeting options are limiting their reach.
  3. High-net-worth clients are different. Affluent prospects show stronger preference for in-person relationships and are more likely to be retirement-focused. One-size-fits-all messaging doesn't work.
  4. Industry specialization matters. Healthcare, technology, and business owners represent significant segments with distinct planning needs. Generalist positioning may be leaving opportunities on the table.
  5. Life transitions drive searches. About one in ten prospects are navigating significant life changes: divorce, inheritance, career transitions. These high-stakes moments create urgency and opportunity.

Key stats icon

Key Stats at a Glance

45% of searches come from wealth builders, not retirees
67% prefer virtual or hybrid meetings
1 in 10 prospects are navigating major life transitions
#1 Healthcare leads industry searches, followed by tech

Who's Searching for a Financial Advisor?

Understanding who is actively seeking financial advice—not who advisors think should be seeking advice—is essential for effective positioning and client acquisition.

Life Stage Distribution

The conventional wisdom that advisor searches are dominated by pre-retirees and retirees doesn't match what we observe. The largest segment of people searching for advisors are those focused on building their financial foundation—individuals in the wealth accumulation phase who want professional guidance on investment strategy and long-term planning.

Life Stage of Advisor Seekers
Building financial foundation
45%
Planning retirement transition
20%
Managing retirement assets
15%
Family financial goals
12%
Life transitions
8%
Source: AdvisorFinder consumer assessment data, 2025

"Nearly half of people searching for advisors are focused on building wealth, not preserving it."

What we found:

  • Wealth builders are the largest segment. People focused on "building their financial foundation" represent the single largest life stage category. These are not beginners—they're established professionals seeking sophisticated wealth-building strategies.
  • Retirement planning remains significant. Combined, those planning retirement transitions and managing retirement assets represent a substantial minority—roughly a quarter to a third of searches depending on the period.
  • Life transitions create urgency. About one in ten prospects are navigating significant life changes—major transitions requiring immediate financial adjustments. These include divorce, inheritance, job changes, and other inflection points.
  • Family financial goals drive searches. A meaningful segment is focused on balancing family responsibilities with financial planning—college savings, protection planning, and multi-generational considerations.
Advisor Insight

If your marketing focuses exclusively on retirement planning, you may be missing the largest segment of people actively searching for an advisor. Consider how your messaging addresses wealth accumulation, not just wealth preservation.

Industry & Professional Background

What industries do advisor-seekers work in? This matters because different professions have distinct financial planning needs, and industry expertise can be a powerful differentiator.

Healthcare
#1
Physicians, nurses, pharma executives
Technology
#2
RSUs, ISOs, equity compensation
Business Owners
#3
Succession & exit planning
Finance
#4
Seek objective guidance
Military
Niche
TSP, pensions, VA benefits

What we found:

  • Healthcare leads specific industries. Healthcare professionals—physicians, nurses, pharmaceutical executives—represent the leading specific industry searching for advisors. Their needs are complex: high income, significant student debt, stock options, deferred compensation, and demanding schedules.
  • Technology workers are a growing segment. Tech employees with equity compensation—RSUs, ISOs, NSOs—face unique planning challenges around vesting schedules, concentration risk, and liquidity events. This segment has distinct needs that generalist advisors may not address.
  • Business owners seek succession expertise. Entrepreneurs and business owners represent a significant segment, typically seeking help with business succession, exit planning, and tax optimization strategies.
  • Finance professionals know they need planning. Perhaps counterintuitively, finance industry professionals actively seek financial advisors. These sophisticated clients understand the value of objective guidance.
  • Military is a niche opportunity. While a smaller segment, military personnel and veterans have highly specific needs—TSP optimization, military pensions, VA benefits—and tend to be loyal clients who refer within their community.
Advisor Insight

Industry specialization creates differentiation. If you have expertise serving physicians, tech executives, or business owners, make it prominent in your profile. Prospects searching for advisors increasingly look for someone who understands their specific situation.


What Do Today's Prospects Want?

Beyond demographics, understanding prospect preferences helps advisors position their services effectively.

Meeting Preferences: The Virtual Shift

The pandemic permanently shifted expectations around how financial advice is delivered. Our data confirms that virtual and hybrid meetings are now the norm, not the exception.

Meeting Preference Distribution
Mostly virtual with occasional in-person 40%
Virtual only 25%
In-person preferred 20%
Hybrid (equal mix) 15%
Virtual-leaning (65%) In-person (20%) Hybrid (15%)
Source: AdvisorFinder consumer assessment data, 2025

"Two-thirds of prospects prefer virtual or hybrid meetings. Advisors who don't offer flexible options are limiting their reach."

What we found:

  • Virtual preference is the majority. Roughly two-thirds of prospects indicate a preference for virtual or "mostly virtual" meetings. This represents a fundamental shift in how financial advice is consumed.
  • "Mostly virtual" is the sweet spot. The largest single preference is "mostly virtual with occasional in-person"—prospects want the convenience of video calls with the option for face-to-face meetings when needed.
  • Pure in-person preference is the minority. Only about one-fifth of prospects specifically prefer in-person meetings. Advisors who require in-person are excluding a significant portion of the market.
  • Virtual-only opens geographic markets. About one in four prospects indicate they're open to purely virtual relationships, meaning they'll work with advisors anywhere in the country.
Advisor Insight

Meeting flexibility is table stakes. If your profile doesn't mention virtual meeting capability, you're likely losing prospects before they even reach out. Consider leading with "virtual and in-person options available" to capture the widest audience.

Portfolio Complexity

What types of assets do prospects own? Understanding portfolio composition helps advisors tailor their messaging and service offerings.

90%
Cash & Savings
75%
Retirement Accounts
55%
Taxable Investments
40%
Real Estate
20%
Business Equity
Percentage of prospects holding each asset type
  • Cash and savings accounts are nearly universal—most prospects have basic savings in place.
  • Retirement accounts (401k, IRA, etc.) are held by a strong majority of prospects.
  • Taxable investment accounts are increasingly common, suggesting prospects have moved beyond basic retirement savings.
  • Real estate holdings are present in a meaningful portion of portfolios, requiring integrated planning.
  • Business equity and ownership stakes represent a smaller but growing segment, particularly among higher-asset prospects.

The High-Net-Worth Client: A Different Profile

Not all advisor searches are equal. High-net-worth prospects—those with substantial investable assets—exhibit distinct patterns that warrant specific attention.

How HNW Searches Differ

Our analysis reveals that affluent prospects search differently, prioritize different things, and respond to different messaging than the general population.

Preference
👥 General Population
💎 HNW Clients
Retirement-focused
35%
65%
Prefer in-person
20%
45%
Complex portfolios
40%
85%
Tech / business owners
15%
35%

"High-net-worth prospects behave differently. One-size-fits-all messaging doesn't work."

Key differences:

  • Retirement-focused, not wealth-building. While the general population skews toward wealth accumulation, high-net-worth prospects are dramatically more likely to be focused on retirement transitions and legacy planning. They've already built wealth—now they need help preserving and transferring it.
  • Stronger preference for in-person. Affluent prospects show notably higher preference for in-person meetings compared to the general population. The relationship matters more when the stakes are higher.
  • More complex portfolios. High-net-worth prospects are significantly more likely to own real estate, business equity, and diversified investment portfolios. Multi-asset coordination is essential.
  • Tech and business owners over-represented. Technology professionals and business owners are significantly over-represented in the high-net-worth segment, suggesting equity compensation and business succession expertise are particularly valuable.
  • More intentional research. Affluent prospects appear to conduct more thorough research before engaging. They're not impulse searchers—they're deliberate decision-makers.

Messaging Implications for HNW

If you're targeting affluent clients, your messaging should reflect their priorities—not the priorities of the general population.

Instead of
"Wealth building" "Getting started" "First-time investors" "Building your foundation"
Emphasize
Wealth preservation & transfer Complex financial situations Multi-generational planning Tax optimization strategies Established portfolio management
Advisor Insight

HNW prospects have already built their foundation. Messaging that emphasizes "getting started" or "first-time investors" will not resonate. Focus on complexity, sophistication, and preservation.


Geographic Demand Patterns

Where are people searching for financial advisors? Geographic concentration matters for advisors thinking about their target market.

Major Metro Concentration

Advisor searches concentrate heavily in major metropolitan areas, with particular strength in financial centers.

1
New York Metro Largest single market for advisor searches
2
Chicago Strong Midwest hub
3
Los Angeles West Coast leader
4
Dallas Texas growth center
5
Boston Northeast financial hub
6
Washington DC Government & contractors

Emerging Markets

Beyond established financial centers, several markets show disproportionate demand relative to their population—potentially representing less competitive opportunities.

Charlotte Strong HNW demand Particularly strong high-net-worth demand relative to its size
Atlanta Above-average volume Punches above its weight in advisor searches
Minneapolis, Denver, Phoenix Growth markets Growing markets with strong, consistent demand
Advisor Insight

For advisors offering virtual services, geography becomes less constraining. A virtual-first advisor in a smaller market can serve clients nationally, while an in-person-focused advisor in a major metro has a natural advantage in capturing local demand.


What This Means for Advisors

The data points to specific actions advisors can take to better align with how prospects actually search for financial guidance.

Recommendations for Individual Advisors

1

Audit your messaging for life stage alignment

If your profile emphasizes retirement planning exclusively, you may be missing the largest segment of prospects. Consider how your messaging addresses wealth accumulation alongside wealth preservation.

2

Highlight industry expertise prominently

If you have experience serving specific professions—healthcare, technology, business owners—make it visible. Generic positioning may be leaving differentiation on the table.

3

Lead with meeting flexibility

Virtual capability is expected, not optional. Make sure prospects know you can meet them however they prefer—and consider whether geographic limitations still make sense for your practice.

4

Differentiate your HNW strategy

If you're targeting affluent clients, your messaging should differ from mass-market positioning. Emphasize complexity, preservation, and in-person availability.

5

Consider life transition specialization

Divorce, inheritance, career changes—these moments create urgency. Positioning as a specialist in financial transitions may attract high-intent prospects.


What This Means for Wealth Management Firms

Beyond individual advisor positioning, these trends have implications for how wealth management firms recruit, train, and position their teams.

Strategic Implications

Recruiting

Prioritize industry expertise

The demand for advisors with specific industry knowledge—particularly healthcare, technology, and business owner expertise—suggests recruiting or training for these specializations may improve client acquisition.

Training

Equity compensation is in demand

RSUs, stock options, and equity compensation planning are increasingly relevant as tech professionals represent a growing segment. Firms may benefit from building this capability across their advisor teams.

Technology

Virtual infrastructure is table stakes

With two-thirds of prospects preferring virtual or hybrid meetings, firms without robust video conferencing and digital onboarding capabilities are at a competitive disadvantage.

Geographic Expansion

Consider virtual-first

The concentration of demand in major metros creates opportunity for virtual-first practices to serve underserved markets without physical presence.

Segmentation

One message doesn't fit all

High-net-worth prospects behave differently. Firms may benefit from distinct positioning and service models for different client segments rather than unified messaging.

Emerging Opportunities

Several underserved areas present potential growth opportunities:

  • Life transition specialists. Divorce financial planning, sudden wealth management, and career transition guidance represent high-stakes moments where prospects actively seek help.
  • Next-generation wealth builders. The "building financial foundation" segment is large but may be underserved by advisors focused on traditional wealth management minimums.
  • Emerging geographic markets. Charlotte, Atlanta, and other growing metros may offer less competitive environments than established financial centers.

Looking Ahead

The landscape of how Americans search for financial advisors continues to evolve. The trends we've observed in 2025 suggest several ongoing shifts:

Advisors and firms that align their positioning with these realities—rather than assumptions about who "should" be seeking advice—will be better positioned to capture the demand that exists.

Methodology

This report is based on analysis of consumer assessments completed on AdvisorFinder.com in 2025. Data has been aggregated and anonymized to protect user privacy. Percentages have been rounded and represent approximate distributions based on platform data.

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