Suitability documentation is one of the most examined areas in any RIA review. The requirement itself is clear in principle: advisors must have a reasonable basis for believing that recommendations are suitable for the specific client, and they must document that basis. In practice, the gaps between the regulatory standard and what ends up in the client file are where most deficiency findings originate.
This article focuses on what the requirement actually demands, when during a client meeting the critical documentation moments occur, what a compliant suitability note looks like, and where independent RIAs most commonly fall short.
What the Suitability Requirement Actually Requires
For RIAs registered with the SEC, the primary standard is Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI), which applies to broker-dealers, and the Investment Advisers Act's fiduciary duty, which applies to investment advisers. Under the fiduciary standard, advisors must act in the client's best interest, which includes making recommendations that are suitable given the client's financial situation, investment objectives, risk tolerance, time horizon, and other individual circumstances.
The documentation obligation is implicit in the fiduciary duty: to demonstrate compliance, the advisor needs a written record that the relevant client information was gathered, considered, and reflected in the recommendation. That record must be contemporaneous or close to it. A note written six months after the fact to explain a past recommendation has significantly less probative value than one written at the time of the meeting.
For RIAs that are also FINRA members or whose associated persons hold broker-dealer registrations, FINRA Rule 2111 (suitability) and Rule 2090 (know your customer) impose additional explicit documentation standards. The two frameworks are not identical, but the documentation expectations overlap substantially.
Critical Moments During Client Meetings
Suitability documentation is not just about annual review meetings. The obligation attaches any time a recommendation is made or material client information changes. Several specific meeting moments require explicit capture:
- Life event disclosures. When a client mentions a job change, retirement, divorce, death of a spouse, inheritance, significant health diagnosis, or birth of a child, that information has potential suitability implications. If the client's employment situation has changed, their income picture has changed. If a spouse died, the household financial structure has changed. These moments need to be documented with enough specificity to show that the advisor registered them and considered whether they affect the client's investment profile.
- Risk tolerance changes. Risk tolerance is not a static number. Clients' expressed willingness to accept volatility changes over time, in response to market events, life circumstances, and shifts in proximity to retirement. When a client expresses concern about portfolio volatility during a meeting, or indicates they are more or less comfortable with risk than they were previously, that needs to be captured as an update to the suitability profile, not just as a discussion note.
- Investment objective updates. A client who was saving for growth over a 20-year horizon and is now three years from retirement has a different objective. If the advisor's records still show the original objective without an update, the current portfolio may look inconsistent with the documented profile even if the advisor mentally adjusted to the new circumstances years ago.
- Recommendation discussions and rationale. When a recommendation is made or declined, the note should capture both what was recommended and why, in terms of the client's specific situation. A note that says "recommended reducing equity allocation" without reference to the client's updated circumstances or stated goals does not establish the suitability basis.
What a Compliant Suitability Note Looks Like
A compliant suitability note is specific, timely, and connects the recommendation to the client's actual circumstances. The following elements should be present when a recommendation is made:
- The client's current relevant circumstances (those that bear on the recommendation): age, investment horizon, liquidity needs, risk tolerance as expressed, income situation, tax considerations, and any material changes since the last review
- The recommendation made, stated specifically (not just "reviewed portfolio" but the actual proposed action or confirmation that no change is warranted and why)
- The basis for the recommendation in terms of the client's circumstances: why this recommendation, for this client, at this time
- Any client questions, concerns, or objections, and how they were addressed
- Any client-initiated information provided that updates the profile on file
The note does not need to be lengthy. A well-structured 200-word note that covers these elements is more defensible than a 600-word narrative that covers them obliquely.
Common Documentation Gaps in Independent RIA Practices
The gaps that appear most frequently in independent RIA documentation practices:
- Annual reviews that document process but not content. Notes that show a review meeting happened, a performance report was presented, and the client seemed satisfied, but do not capture what the client's current circumstances are or whether any profile information was updated.
- Stale suitability profiles. Client profiles that show the same risk tolerance, objective, and time horizon from inception through years of changing circumstances. The advisor has adjusted the portfolio, but the documented basis has not kept pace.
- Undocumented life events. The client mentions a job change in passing during a market update call. The advisor makes a mental note. It never makes it into the CRM. A year later, the advisor has adjusted the portfolio to reflect lower risk capacity from reduced income, but there is no record of the information that prompted the adjustment.
- Rationale that references the strategy rather than the client. Notes that explain why a particular fund or allocation is a good investment generally, rather than why it is appropriate for this specific client's current circumstances.
The practical standard to apply is whether an examiner reviewing the file would be able to trace the logic from the client's documented circumstances to the recommendation made. If that chain is not present in the record, the documentation is incomplete regardless of whether the recommendation itself was sound.