Clients per advisor

How Many Clients Should a Financial Advisor Have?

Most financial advisors serve between 50 and 90 clients, though the number varies widely depending on the firm, client type, and service model.

Is an advisor serving 120 clients too many? Is 10 too few?

The answer: it depends on what you're looking for. Either can be perfectly reasonable—but it might reveal something about how the advisor works.

The Big Picture

Across the industry, client loads vary a lot:

  • About 20% of firms serve fewer than ~15 clients per advisor
  • About 80% serve fewer than ~90 clients
  • The median firm sits around ~40 clients per advisor

That median is pulled down by the many smaller firms. If you weight by where advisors actually work (larger firms), the typical experience is closer to ~70 clients per advisor.

In other words:

If you work with a large firm (as most clients do), you're more likely to work with an advisor serving 70 or more clients than 40.

Why Smaller Firms Serve Fewer Clients

Independent advisors—especially solo practitioners—tend to have lower client counts. 20-60 clients per advisor is typical.

Some are just getting started. If they onboard 1–2 clients per month, it can take years to build a full practice. Others intentionally stay small, focusing on high-net-worth clients and deeper relationships.

Around 50–60 clients, many solo advisors start to hit capacity. That's often when they hire support or join a team.

As Firms Grow, So Do Client Loads

Team-based and larger firms can serve more clients per advisor.

Why?

  • Shared staff and infrastructure
  • More standardized processes
  • Technology and operational leverage

This pushes the typical range higher—often 60 to 90 clients per advisor at larger firms.

The High End: Scaled Models (and Outliers)

A small number of firms operate highly scaled models—serving 150+ clients per advisor.

These are still the exceptions.

Even among large firms, many maintain lower client loads for certain segments (like high-net-worth clients). So you'll see both a higher median and wide variation at the top end.

What This Means for You

There's no "correct" number of clients per advisor. Instead, think of it as a signal:

  • Lower client loads → more personalized, relationship-driven service
  • Higher client loads → more efficient, scalable models (often lower minimums or fees)

The right fit depends on how much attention you want—and what you're willing to pay for it.

You can use this metric (along with others) to guide your decision.

Or, if you'd rather skip the guesswork, Warmer can help you find a financial advisor who fits your needs.

National 23,281 firms
Very Low 3-13 per advisor
Low 13-29
Typical 29-51
High 51-89
Very High 89-194
5th 20th 40th 60th 80th 95th

Median: 39

Independent 9,196 firms

Independent firms—solo advisors—typically serve fewer clients than the national average, with a median of about 24 clients per advisor. Many are early-stage practices still building their client base, while others intentionally stay small to focus on deeper, high-net-worth relationships. Around 50–60 clients, most solo advisors reach capacity.

Very Low 3-9 per advisor
Low 9-20
Typical 20-35
High 35-65
Very High 65-140
5th 20th 40th 60th 80th 95th

Median: 26

Supported 6,970 firms

Supported firms—one advisor with staff or small teams of 2–3 advisors—typically serve 35 to 60 clients per advisor, with a median around 47. With support in place, client loads become less about growth and more about how the firm is designed. Lower counts suggest more personalized service, while higher counts reflect more structured processes.

Very Low 7-21 per advisor
Low 21-40
Typical 40-64
High 64-105
Very High 105-209
5th 20th 40th 60th 80th 95th

Median: 51

Team 3,584 firms

Team firms—4 to 10 advisors or managing over $500 million in assets—typically serve 40 to 60 clients per advisor, with a median around 50. With repeatable systems and shared client coverage in place, client loads here reflect how the firm is structured rather than how early it is in its growth.

Very Low 17-34 per advisor
Low 34-51
Typical 51-73
High 73-109
Very High 109-216
5th 20th 40th 60th 80th 95th

Median: 61

Multi-team 625 firms

Multi-team firms—11 to 50 advisors or managing over $2 billion in assets—typically serve 40 to 60 clients per advisor, with a median around 50. With layered teams and specialized roles, client loads reflect firm-wide design and coordination. Lower counts suggest high-touch service, while higher counts indicate more standardized processes.

Very Low 17-33 per advisor
Low 33-51
Typical 51-74
High 74-111
Very High 111-279
5th 20th 40th 60th 80th 95th

Median: 62

Enterprise 95 firms

Enterprise firms—50 to 2,000 advisors or over $10 billion in assets—typically serve 45 to 70 clients per advisor, with a median around 55. Scale shows up clearly here, with about 20% serving 100+ clients per advisor. These firms balance centralized support and standardized processes with relationship-driven models for higher-value clients.

Very Low 24-39 per advisor
Low 39-56
Typical 56-80
High 80-115
Very High 115-387
5th 20th 40th 60th 80th 95th

Median: 64

Institution 27 firms

Institutions—the largest advisory organizations, often affiliated with banks, broker-dealers, or insurance companies—typically serve 60 to 90 clients per advisor, with a median around 80. The wide variation (roughly 30 to 130 per advisor) reflects multiple service models operating within the same organization, from highly scaled to relationship-focused teams.

Very Low 23-70 per advisor
Low 70-82
Typical 82-92
High 92-121
Very High 121-298
5th 20th 40th 60th 80th 95th

Median: 90

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