Financial advisers will see a 27 per cent rise in the ASIC adviser levy, with the regulator’s cost recovery estimate for FY26 coming in at $48.72 million for financial advisers.
ASIC released its Cost Recovery Implementation Statement for FY26 on Monday, showing the usual minimum licensee levy of $1500 plus $3037 per adviser.
This is a rise from the $2398 per adviser revised levy released last November (ASIC’s initial estimate this time last year was $2314).
Around $30 million will be allocated towards enforcement, supervision and surveillance with the rest focused on industry engagement, education, guidance, policy advice and other indirect costs.
| Estimated costs for financial advice oversight | |
| Expense | FY26 estimate |
| Supervision and surveillance | $6.348m |
| Enforcement | $24.269m |
| Other regulatory activities | |
| Industry engagement | $1.216m |
| Education | $0.747m |
| Guidance | $0.827m |
| Policy advice | $0.362m |
| Indirect costs | |
| Commission, corporate legal support, strategy and communications | $1.900m |
| Digital, data and technology | $6.754m |
| Enabling services | $2.950m |
| Property and accommodation services | $2.893m |
| Total operating expenditure | $48.267m |
| Allowance for capital expenditure | $0.222m |
| Less costs funded by own-source revenue | Nil |
| Adjustment for prior year (under or over recovery) | $0.235m |
| Total levy to recover costs | $48.724m |
| Source: ASIC. | |
The profession has grappled with the rising costs of the levy over the past few years as the number of financial advisers declined in the aftermath of the Hayne royal commission andthe introduction of the Compensation Scheme of Last Resort levy added thousands of dollars annually to the regulatory levy bills of advisers.
There were approximately 28,000 advisers on the ASIC Financial Advisers Register at the start of 2019, just before the final report from the royal commission was released.
As of last week, there were 15,023 advisers on the FAR according to weekly analysis done by Padua Wealth Data.
The revised FY24 levy came in at $2691 per adviser (plus $1500 flat fee); in FY23, the regulator projected a $3217 per-adviser levy, which was reduced to $2818 later that year.
The former Coalition government froze the ASIC levy in 2021 and 2022 due to rising enforcement costs and a shallower pool of advisers to sustainably fund the scheme, with a review of the Industry Funding Model taking place a year later.
ASIC estimated that advisers would need to pay a flat fee of $1500 plus $3138 per adviser in 2021, but the freeze put the levy at the same level as FY19.
The outcome of the Treasury-run review led to a return to the status quo for the funding model.
While the ASIC levy covers enforcement of registered advisers, it also covers enforcement of unlicensed financial advice which Treasury said in its IFM review was justified as advisers were beneficiaries of such action.
Earlier this year, the Financial Advice Association Australia argued advisers aren’t the only beneficiaries of action against unlicensed advice and the whole system should be paying for enforcement.
The unfreezing of the ASIC levy came simultaneously with the introduction of the CSLR levy, further compounding regulatory costs for advisers.
The CSLR released its revised FY27 levy estimate for financial advice earlier this month, with the financial advice subsector contributing $190.3 million of the $198.1 million total, surpassing the $20 million subsector cap.
Earlier estimates for FY27 indicated a total CSLR levy of $137.5 million, including $126.9 million solely for financial advice.
The FY26 levy was the first to exceed the subsector cap (by $47.3 million), leading to Minister for Financial Services Daniel Mulino applying the special levy across multiple sectors including financial advisers and APRA-regulated funds.
The FY25 levy was the first full year levy and the only one so far to not exceed the cap, coming in at $18.5 million.












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