Chartered Financial Planner

The Chartered Financial Planner [1] is a qualification for professional financial planners[2] and financial advisers[3] awarded by the Chartered Insurance Institute.

By definition, holders of the Chartered Financial Planner qualification are among the most experienced and most qualified advisers in the profession; in the United Kingdom, it is a widely accepted 'gold standard' within the profession.

As at May 2016, there were over 36,000 members of the Personal Finance Society (the principal professional body for financial advisers in the UK), of which over 5,000 hold Chartered Financial Planner status.[4]

Since 2012, financial adviser firms can apply for Corporate Chartered Financial Planners status, if they qualify under a number of criteria. Fewer than 500 firms can boast Corporate Chartered Financial Planners status.[5]

The titles of Chartered Financial Planner and Chartered Financial Planners were granted by the Chartered Insurance Institute (CII). The Privy Council authorised the CII to issue the Chartered title in 2005. Thus, a Chartered Financial Planner now carries comparable qualifications as other established professions such as Chartered Accountants[6] and Chartered Surveyors,[7] etc. Membership of the Personal Finance Society, the leading professional body for financial planners, is required to be able to use the professional designation Chartered Financial Planner.

The individual Chartered Financial Planner qualification fits into the National Qualifications Framework at Level 6,[8] equivalent to a Bachelor (first) Degree.

  1. ^ "The Chartered Insurance Institute". www.cii.co.uk.
  2. ^ "What Does a Financial Planner Do? | Sensible Money". www.sensiblemoney.com. 4 May 2018.
  3. ^ "What Does a Financial Adviser Do for You?". The Balance.
  4. ^ "Individual Chartered status". www.cii.co.uk.
  5. ^ "Corporate Chartered status". Thepfs.org. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  6. ^ "Chartered accountancy".
  7. ^ "Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors". www.rics.org.
  8. ^ "What qualification levels mean". GOV.UK.