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Financial advisers' published asset minimums are increasingly symbolic rather than operational. MarketWatch reported on April 10, 2026 that roughly 90% of advisory firms will waive stated thresholds — typically $500,000 or $1,000,000 — to onboard clients that meet other criteria (MarketWatch, Apr 10, 2026). For households classified as HENRYs (High Earner, Not Rich Yet), this shift lowers the friction to access fiduciary advice but raises questions about segmentation, pricing and service economics. Institutional investors evaluating the wealth-management ecosystem need to understand how marketing minimums, waiver practices and client economics interact to reshape client funnels and AUM growth. This analysis dissects the data, models the revenue implications for advisory firms, and offers a Fazen Capital perspective on where value is likely to accrue.
Context
Published minimums have long served as both gatekeeping tools and marketing signals for advisory firms. A cursory review of firm websites shows $500,000 and $1,000,000 as common thresholds; MarketWatch highlighted that these figures are often industry-standard marketing numbers rather than hard rules (MarketWatch, Apr 10, 2026). Historically, minimums performed two functions: protect economics (minimum workable AUM per client) and communicate target clientele (private-banking or UHNW focus). The recent pattern of widespread waivers suggests a rebalancing: firms want the growth potential of lower-AUM clients while preserving premium branding for legacy or institutional channels.
From an investor base perspective, the HENRY cohort is notable because it bridges affluent households and traditional mass-affluent customers. HENRY is commonly used to describe earners in the roughly $100,000–$250,000 household income band who do not yet have nine-figure net worths but exhibit high savings and accumulation potential (MarketWatch, Apr 10, 2026). By comparison, the U.S. median household income was $74,580 in 2022 (U.S. Census Bureau, 2023), underscoring that HENRYs sit materially above median earners but often below published advisory minimums in investable assets. That gap creates both an acquisition opportunity and a margin trade-off for advisers.
The practical effect of waiver behavior has implications for distribution economics. If 90% of firms are willing to bend published policies to attract the right client profile, then published minimums function more as signaling devices than fixed business rules. For institutional investors and allocators, that shift matters: it influences the composition of future AUM flows, the competitive dynamics among RIAs (registered investment advisers), and how platforms price access for different cohorts. Investors should treat published thresholds as plastic inputs to client acquisition models rather than hard constraints.
Data Deep Dive
The headline figure — 90% waiver rate — comes from MarketWatch’s April 10, 2026 coverage, which analyzed adviser's public-facing policies and practitioner commentary (MarketWatch, Apr 10, 2026). That single data point conceals variation by channel and firm size: wirehouse branches and private banks are more likely to enforce higher thresholds than boutique RIAs focused on growth. For example, firms that prioritize recurring advice and holistic planning are more willing to accept lower initial AUM in exchange for recurring revenue and potential future referrals.
Published thresholds centered on $500,000 and $1,000,000 align with historical product design and fee schedules. A $1,000,000 threshold at a 0.75% advisory fee produces $7,500 of annual recurring revenue per client; by contrast, $250,000 at the same fee yields $1,875. That delta matters for operating breakeven: firms with high fixed-cost advisor teams and bespoke services may be unwilling to accept materially lower fees unless they can scale service delivery. Waivers therefore often come with alternative conditions — phased onboarding, higher minimum fees, digital-only service tiers, or referral expectations.
Comparatively, the HENRY pool’s income profile (roughly $100k–$250k) suggests a path to AUM accumulation that is faster than median households but slower than traditional HNW clients. If a typical HENRY has investable assets of $100k today and saves 15% of a $150k household income, that client could approach a $250k–$500k investable base within 3–5 years — a timeline attractive to advisers that can cultivate long-term relationships. The comparison — faster AUM velocity vs. median household, but lower starting AUM vs. published thresholds — is central to why firms are more willing to make concessions on minimums.
Sector Implications
In wealth management, the interplay between published minimums and waiver practices is reshaping the advisor marketplace. Firms with scale and technology stacks (robo-advice, planning workflows, CRM automation) can profitably onboard lower-AUM clients because variable servicing costs decline with digitalization. Conversely, high-touch models that rely on in-person meetings and bespoke investment solutions face a tougher margin calculus. This bifurcation is analogous to product-market segmentation in asset management where active strategies command premiums while passive, scalable strategies win share on cost.
Institutional capital allocators should monitor where AUM growth originates. If a significant portion of net new flows across the industry are migrating from HENRYs aggregated via digital channels into large advisory platforms, then economics will favor platform owners and custodians. This will affect fee compression expectations and distribution of revenue among custodians, RIAs and fintech partners. For evidence of the trend, see our prior work on distribution economics and platform consolidation at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
A second implication is talent and succession planning. Firms that choose to lower thresholds effectively create longer client lifecycles but also increase the number of relationships per adviser. Without technology augmentation or changes to compensation models, advisor productivity — measured in AUM per adviser — will compress. That has knock-on effects for M&A activity in the RIA space, where buyers will value scalable client bases differently than traditional book-size metrics. Institutional investors negotiating partnerships or minority stakes in RIAs should price in these structural shifts.
Risk Assessment
There are execution risks in scaling HENRY-focused strategies. First, client stickiness is not guaranteed: HENRYs are mobile, digitally native, and may shop for cheaper or more convenient solutions. If firms waive minimums to acquire clients but fail to deliver demonstrable planning value, churn rates may rise and undermine unit economics. Second, a broad waiver practice can trigger adverse selection where only price- or promotion-seeking clients enroll — weakening long-term referral and retention dynamics.
Regulatory and compliance risks are non-trivial. Firms that advertise minimums but regularly waive them must ensure disclosures and suitability assessments are consistent with fiduciary duties and marketing claims. Inconsistent policy application can attract regulatory scrutiny if clients perceive differential treatment without adequate justification. For larger platforms, supervisory systems need to capture waiver approvals and the rationale, increasing operational complexity and cost.
From a competitive-risk perspective, the principal-agent trade-offs at play could pressure advisory fee schedules. If a critical mass of advisors competes on access rather than differentiated service, fee compression is likely. That compresses margins for traditional advisors and benefits technology-enabled, scale-focused providers. Institutional investors should stress-test valuation models for wealth management assets under scenarios of accelerated fee compression and higher client churn.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital sees the proliferation of waived minimums as a rational response to cohort economics and a sign that advisory distribution is entering a maturation phase. The contrarian insight is that waiver prevalence may increase the strategic value of advisor-led marketing funnels rather than reduce it. In other words, firms that can convert a larger base of HENRY clients into sticky, multi-product relationships will compound lifetime value significantly above headline AUM fees.
We recommend institutional investors prioritize operational differentiation over headline AUM growth when assessing partnership opportunities. That means focusing due diligence on CRM integration, client segmentation analytics, and lifecycle monetization strategies rather than top-line AUM alone. For further discussion on operational levers in wealth management, see our related research at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
A second non-obvious point: waiver behavior raises the value of predictive underwriting — the ability to identify which lower-AUM clients will become HNW within a 3–7 year window. Firms and platforms that invest in income trajectory modeling, behavioral analytics and tax-aware planning tools will outperform peers on client conversion and retention metrics. This is where institutional capital can create durable enterprise value if deployed strategically.
Outlook
Expect waiver practices to remain widespread in the near term as firms pursue growth and the HENRY cohort continues to accumulate investable assets. Operational divergence will deepen: scale players with automated advice will aggressively target HENRYs, while bespoke advisers will preserve higher thresholds and margins. M&A will be active with buyers preferring firms demonstrating robust conversion metrics from lower-AUM cohorts into higher-value clients.
For institutional investors, the key variables to monitor are client acquisition cost, churn, and unit economics over a 3–5 year horizon. Scenario analysis should include fee compression of 10–30% and a range of conversion probabilities from initial HENRY client to a $1m+ client. Those inputs materially change valuations for advisory platforms and counsel a preference for investments where operational leverage and predictive client analytics are demonstrable.
Bottom Line
The practical takeaway: published minimums no longer equal real access barriers — 90% of advisers reportedly waive them — and that changes where and how value will accrue across wealth management. Institutional investors should focus on operational differentiation and conversion economics rather than headline AUM thresholds.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
