The registered investment advisor industry posted its busiest first quarter on record in 2026, with 93 transactions completed in the opening three months — up from 75 in the same period last year. The average transaction size also climbed sharply: $1.16 billion in AUM per deal, a record, reflecting how thoroughly the consolidation cycle has shifted from small bolt-ons to larger, more strategic acquisitions.
The data, sourced from DeVoe & Co., FinTRX’s Q1 report, and Markets Group’s deal tracking, points to more than $100 billion of advised assets in motion through the first 90 days of 2026 alone — a pace that, if sustained, would deliver another record-setting full year for the industry.
For RIA owners, aggregators, and the private equity firms backing them, the question is no longer whether the deal calendar holds. It is which firms are doing the buying.
The Q1 Leaderboard
Per the FinTRX and DeVoe data, three aggregators dominated the quarter:
- Beacon Pointe Advisors — 7 deals closed, the most active acquirer of Q1
- Hightower Advisors — 6 deals, with continued large-firm focus
- Savant Wealth Management — 5 deals, expanding its geographic and capability footprint
Beyond the top three, Wealth Enhancement Group completed its third $1B+ transaction of the year with a $1.2 billion RIA breakaway team — a cadence that signals the firm has moved past the proof-of-model phase into systematic deployment of its private equity backing.
The pattern is consistent with prior trade-press analysis: a small handful of well-capitalized aggregators are absorbing the majority of seller-side flow. Per InvestmentNews, 52% of RIA firms now position themselves as potential buyers, while only 25% identify as potential sellers — a buyer-heavy market that explains the upward pressure on valuations.
The Deal That Defined the Quarter

For pure scale, the OpenArc launch deserves particular attention. Per WealthManagement.com, OpenArc — the Dynasty Financial Partners-backed RIA built around a major Merrill Lynch breakaway — is on track to reach approximately $15 billion in client assets by year-end 2026. That trajectory would place it directly among the largest independent RIAs in the country within its first year of operations.
The OpenArc story matters for three reasons:
- It validates the breakaway-to-RIA path at a scale that materially changes how recruiters and aggregators build their pipelines
- It demonstrates Dynasty’s platform value proposition at a level that makes the firm a credible alternative to traditional aggregator equity transactions
- It signals that wirehouse-to-RIA economics are now favorable enough to support $5B+ team breakaways without the institutional bridge structures that defined earlier waves
For other aggregator and platform sponsors, OpenArc is both an opportunity and a competitive challenge. It opens the door to comparable launches, and it raises the bar on the support package needed to win the largest teams.
Why $1.16 Billion Is the Right Number
The record average deal size deserves more attention than it typically gets. A $1.16B average is roughly double the comparable figure from 2021 and reflects three structural shifts:
- Aggregators are skipping the small bolt-on tier. Sub-$300M acquisitions add operational complexity without meaningful platform leverage. Most aggregator deal teams now set $500M as a floor.
- Mid-size founders are reaching their succession window simultaneously. A generation of RIA founders who built firms in the 2000s are now in the 60–70 age bracket, producing a synchronized seller cohort.
- Private equity is willing to underwrite larger checks. The fund vintages that closed in 2024 and 2025 are mid-deployment, and the math of deploying capital through fewer, larger deals is more attractive than 30+ small acquisitions per fund.
The consequence: the “vanishing middle” we documented in our prior RIA M&A analysis is not just a hypothesis. It is now visible in the deal data.
What Buyers Now Pay For
Per DeVoe & Co. and Echelon Partners commentary, valuations remain stratified. Sellers commanding premium multiples in Q1 2026 typically share four characteristics:
- Double-digit organic growth. Flows from new clients and wallet expansion remain the single most-scrutinized due diligence metric.
- A defined client niche. Tech founders, physicians, multi-generational families, or corporate executives — sellers with a coherent niche command 10–15% valuation premiums versus generalist firms.
- Engaged G2 talent. Buyers price the post-close transition risk explicitly, and firms without credible second-generation leadership face heavier earn-out structures or outright valuation haircuts.
- Standardized operations. Centralized trading, model portfolios, and a modern tech stack translate directly into post-close integration ease.
Firms missing these traits are not unsellable, but they trade at 6–8x EBITDA rather than the 11.6x premium median Echelon and DeVoe documented in 2025. The deal structures lean heavily on earn-outs and equity rollovers rather than cash at close.
The Custodian Dimension

Q1 2026 also accelerated the shift in custodian competitive dynamics. Schwab’s Advisor ProDirect program, launched in April with 10 founding firms, gives growing RIAs structured coaching support without an equity transaction — a meaningful alternative for founders who want growth resources without a full sale.
That offering creates a new dynamic in seller decision trees:
- Sell to an aggregator (capital, immediate equity event, operational integration)
- Sell to another RIA (cultural fit, often slower process, narrower buyer pool)
- Don’t sell — use a structured growth program (ProDirect or comparable, retain ownership, accelerate organic growth)
The third option is now credible at scale for the first time. For aggregators, that raises the bar on the equity premium and platform value proposition needed to win deals.
What to Watch Through Year-End
Three signals will define whether 2026 sustains the Q1 pace:
- Whether large breakaway teams continue to choose RIA over wirehouse-to-IBD. OpenArc’s trajectory is a leading indicator. A second $5B+ team launching as a standalone RIA in Q2 or Q3 confirms the pattern.
- Whether private equity announces fresh wealth management capital. A $1B+ dedicated wealth fund raise in Q2–Q3 would extend the deployment runway through 2027 and beyond.
- Whether retention spending at wirehouses continues to escalate. As we noted in our April breakaway wave coverage, Raymond James disclosed a 22% quarter-over-quarter increase in recruiting and retention compensation. If that trajectory continues into Q2, the pressure that drives breakaways remains structural.
The intersection with the mutual fund-to-ETF migration story is also worth tracking. Aggregators centralize model portfolio construction, which redirects flows away from legacy mutual fund share classes and toward ETFs (active and passive). The two stories reinforce each other.
What Advisors Are Watching
Three practical questions for RIA founders evaluating their position in the cycle:
- Does the firm’s current organic growth rate, niche definition, and G2 readiness justify a premium valuation today, or are there 12–18 months of focused work that would materially raise the multiple at exit?
- For founders not actively considering a sale, has the firm benchmarked its operational economics against an aggregator-platform alternative recently — including ProDirect and similar structured growth options?
- For founders considering a sale, have the three buyer categories (aggregator, peer RIA, capital partner) each been engaged for a comparative term sheet, or has the process narrowed prematurely to a single counterparty?
The Q1 numbers tell a clear story: capital, deal flow, and seller demographics are aligned for another record year. The firms and founders treating those conditions as a window — not an indefinite state — are the ones positioning correctly.
Sources: InvestmentNews on DeVoe Q1 2026 record; FinTRX Q1 2026 RIA M&A report; Markets Group on $100B in motion; WealthManagement on Wealth Enhancement deal; WealthManagement on OpenArc trajectory; Connect Money on record pace.







