WASHINGTON–( BUSINESS WIRE )–The CFP Board is seeking public comment on the proposed changes to its Fitness standards, Procedural Rules and Sanctions Guidelines. This proposal improves the CFP Board’s existing process for evaluating the ethical fitness of CFPs® certificate and CFP candidate® certification.
“The integrity of CFP® certification is the foundation of CFP Board’s mission, and it depends on fair and transparent standards for candidates and CFP® professionals,” said CEO K. Dane Snowden.
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As part of the revision process, the CFP Board actively sought input from various stakeholders, including practitioners, candidates, firms, membership organizations and the public. The deadline for submitting comments is Thursday, April 30, 2026.
“CFP Integrity® certification is the foundation of CFP Board’s mission, and it depends on fair and transparent standards for candidates and CFP.® professionals,” said CEO K. Dane Snowden. “We invite stakeholders to share their perspectives as we work to safeguard customers and maintain a reliable, clear path to earning and sustaining CFP.® certification.”
Proposed Changes to Fitness standards
CFP Board proposes to modify the Fitness standards therefore, a candidate with a certain type of misdemeanor conviction must file a fitness petition only if the CFP Board’s Enforcement counsel (a lawyer who investigates potential misconduct) seeks public sanctions. Public sanctions can be a Public Notice, which will alert the public to the misconduct of the candidate, or a temporary or permanent bar that prohibits the candidate from applying for the CFP.® certification. In conducting that evaluation, Enforcement Counsel will rely on professional, relevant judgment Sanctions Guidelines (including mitigating and aggravating factors), and the decision of the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission (DEC) before. (DEC is a peer review body that makes ethical determinations.)
Fitness Petitions involve a more formal process where the DEC conducts an investigation and issues a written decision, and most candidates with wrongful convictions who file a Petition are granted certification with a personal caution. Often, the conduct that requires a candidate to file a Petition for Fitness (such as misconduct during college) occurred years ago or involves episodes of youthful indiscretion that may seem unrelated to current ethical fitness. With this change, DEC, DEC legal counsel and Enforcement Counsel will no longer have to adjudicate Fitness Petitions where the outcome would be personal caution, lowering the volume of Fitness Petitions to manageable levels and allowing DEC to focus on issues involving more serious misconduct.
The CFP Board will also adopt a new section “D” in Fitness standards which brings together all the categories of conduct for which the candidate may be directed to file a Fitness Petition, depending on the evaluation of the Enforcement Counsel. Section “C” will continue to identify the categories of conduct for which candidates must file a Fitness Petition.
Check the redlined copy of the proposed changes Fitness standards >
Proposing Changes to Procedural Rules
CFP Board proposes to modify the Procedural Rules therefore if the candidate has a “Relevant Misdemeanor” (certain term) and both the candidate and the Enforcement Counsel agree that the CFP Board should grant the candidate’s Fitness petition with Public Notice, the Enforcement Counsel will have the discretion to file a joint motion for an order granting the Petition with Public Notice. In those circumstances, DEC Counsel will grant the motion and DEC will not hear the Fitness Petition. This language builds upon the approach the CFP Board adopted last year to improve the process for resolving Petitions involving a single bankruptcy and multiple misdemeanor convictions involving a second (or more) alcohol and/or drug offense.
As noted above, the new section “D” in Fitness standards will consolidate all categories of conduct for which the candidate may be directed to file a Fitness Petition, depending on the evaluation of the Enforcement Counsel. Therefore, the CFP Board will move to Fitness standards language in Article 5.5 and 5.6 of Procedural Rules which clarifies if the petition is required based on the recency of bankruptcy or some alcohol or drug offenses.
CFP Board also proposes to modify Article 17.1 of Procedural Rules to enable the Enforcement Team to provide CFP® professional firms with updates on the status of investigations involving their professionals. It is in response to requests from several firms, through their trade association the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, that the CFP Board notify the CFP.® professional firm when CFP® professional in research. In addition, the CFP Board proposed a technical revision to clarify if the CFP candidate® certifiers who file a Fitness Petition may be reimbursed for their fees. Finally, the CFP Board proposed a change that would require persons seeking reinstatement after suspension to demonstrate that they would be eligible for certification under Fitness standards if they were an applicant for CFP® certification.
Check the redlined copy of the proposed changes Procedural Rules >
Proposed Revision to Sanctions Guidelines
CFP Board proposes changes to Sanctions Guidelines clarify that if a CFP® professionals engaged in misconduct that would prevent a candidate from obtaining a CFP® certification, then DEC may not mitigate (lower) sanctions. The addition applies to three types of misconduct — Lack of Integrity, Unauthorized Falsification and Fraud or Misrepresentation involving Professional Services — for which the sanction guidelines are lifted.
Check the redlined copy of the proposed changes Sanctions Guidelines >
Together, the proposed update to Fitness standards, Procedural Rules and Sanctions Guidelines refine the standards that determine when a fitness petition is required, how the petition is reviewed and how sanctions are applied. All of the proposed updates are designed to strengthen the efficiency and consistency of the CFP Board’s enforcement and certification process.
The CFP Board welcomes all input on the proposed revisions. Comments can be submitted to the CFP Board through an online form. The CFP Board will post all comments on the CFP.net website with the name of the commenter and the date they were submitted. The deadline for comments is Thursday, April 30, 2026.
The CFP Board will review the comments and determine what changes, if any, should be made to the proposed revisions. Sanctions Guidelines, Fitness standards and Procedural Rules.
About CFP BOARD
The CFP Board is the professional body for personal financial planners in the U.S. The CFP Board consists of two affiliated organizations focused on advancing the financial planning profession for the public good. CFP Standards Board define and set standards for financial planning and manage the prestigious CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER.® certification – widely recognized by the public, advisors and firms as standard for financial planners – so that the public has access to the benefits of competent and ethical financial planning. CFP® certification is held by more than 107,000 people in the US CFP Board Center for Financial Planning addresses the diversity and challenges of workforce development and conducts and publishes research that adds to the financial planning profession’s body of knowledge.
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