Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC) Review
Our take: An advisor with a Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC) certification has studied a broad range of personal finance topics, and that’s a plus in our books. In fact, the courses for the ChFC designation can be counted towards the highly regarded CFP designation — an advisor who holds the ChFC must take just one additional class plus the CFP exam (which has a pass rate of about 60%) to add CFP to their name. Unlike the CFP, the ChFC has no comprehensive exam requirement.
The ChFC certification requires eight courses, and the program can be completed in 18 months or less, according to the American College of Financial Services, the accredited college that offers the designation. We’re big fans of the ChFC’s coursework requirements — including classes titled “fundamentals of financial planning,” “fundamentals of insurance planning,” and “fundamentals of income taxation” — and we like that, like the CFP, the ChFC requires 30 hours of continuing education every two years.
Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC)
Offered by: The American College of Financial Services
Website: https://www.theamericancollege.edu/learn/professional-designations-certifications/chfc-chartered-financial-consultant
Overall summary
Here’s a summary of how the ChFC designation stacks up on our criteria:
Feature |
Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC)
|
---|---|
Overall | |
Nonprofit | |
Independent accreditation | |
Exam required | |
Number of questions | |
Continuing Education requirement | |
Background check | |
Ethics requirement | |
Fiduciary requirement | |
Consumer complaint forum | |
Check credential status |
Compare financial advisor certifications
Check out how advisor certifications stack up against each other.
Feature |
Accredited Financial Analyst (AFA)
|
Accredited Wealth Management Advisor (AWMA)
|
Certified Financial Planner (CFP)
|
Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA)
|
Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC)
|
Retirement Income Certified Professional (RICP)
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overall | ||||||
Nonprofit | ||||||
Independent accreditation | ||||||
Exam required | ||||||
Number of questions | ||||||
Continuing Education requirement | ||||||
Background check | ||||||
Ethics requirement | ||||||
Fiduciary requirement | ||||||
Consumer complaint forum | ||||||
Check credential status |
Methodology
To generate star ratings for financial advisor certifications, investor.com ranks the certification on each of 10 criteria. Below are the questions we sought to answer for each certification. We then applied a weighted score for each response, leading to an overall star rating for each certification.
- Is the organization that offers the certification nonprofit or for-profit?
- Is the certification accredited by an independent, third-party organization?
- Is an exam required to earn the certification?
- How many questions are on the exam?
- Is a background check required of certificants?
- Is continuing education required to maintain the certification?
- Is there any type of ethics requirement, e.g. certificants must sign a code of ethics?
- Is the certificant required to agree to an explicit fiduciary duty in interactions with clients?
- Can consumers easily submit a complaint against a certificant?
- Can consumers easily check advisors’ certification status online?
Popular Financial Advisor Content
- How Much Does a Financial Advisor Cost?
- What Does a Financial Advisor Do?
- Find a Financial Advisor Near Me
- Certified Financial Planner (CFP) Review
- Find a Financial Advisor
- Types of Financial Advisors and How to Choose
- What's a Fiduciary (and Why It Matters So Much)
- Infographic: Conflicts of Interest at Financial Advisor Firms