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ASIC released the results from the June 2026 Financial Advisers Exam cycle, showing that 209 people sat the exam and 71.7% passed. Among first-time candidates, the result was slightly stronger, with 104 of 137 candidates passing. The next exam is scheduled for 20 August 2026, giving another group of candidates an opportunity to move towards providing personal financial advice to retail clients.
On its own, a pass rate around 72% suggests the education pipeline is functioning. The more important issue for everyday Australians is whether enough qualified advisers are available to meet demand. Financial Standard reported that adviser numbers have slipped below 15,000, with the adviser population falling to 14,899 at the end of June. That matters because households are facing increasingly complex decisions around superannuation, retirement income, tax, insurance, debt and investing.
For consumers, the practical takeaway is not simply that more people are passing an exam. It is that the advice market is still adjusting to higher professional standards, compliance obligations and business model changes that have reshaped the sector in recent years. Fewer advisers can mean longer wait times, higher advice costs, or a greater need to be selective about when and how professional advice is used.
ASIC has also been checking compliance with the qualifications standard that took effect on 1 January 2026. According to the latest reporting, the regulator recently ceased the authorisations of 26 advisers and identified records where qualifications or training courses had not been properly marked on the Financial Advisers Register. While this may reduce numbers in the short term, it also reinforces the importance of a transparent register and consistent professional standards.
For Australians seeking help, the message is to do some groundwork before engaging an adviser. Check that the adviser is listed on the Financial Advisers Register, understand how they are paid, ask what areas they specialise in, and request a clear explanation of fees before proceeding. Good advice can be valuable, but it should be matched to your needs, not sold as a one-size-fits-all solution.
The adviser exam results show progress, but they also highlight a broader challenge: rebuilding advice capacity while maintaining trust. For consumers, staying informed and asking careful questions remain essential parts of making confident financial decisions.
Published:Tuesday, 7th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori
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