Four RIA platforms announced advisor team acquisitions totaling roughly $3.2 billion in client assets during the week ended May 16, 2026, with each transaction landing in the $850 million to $1.2 billion range. Wealth Enhancement Group penned its third $1 billion-plus deal of the year. &Partners landed a $1 billion Illinois team on May 11. Lido Advisors added a $1 billion Tulsa firm. Integrated Partners closed on an $850 million Boston-area practice. None of these are the headline mega-deals that defined Q1 2026, when Echelon Partners booked 142 transactions and $1.67 trillion in transacted AUM. They represent the layer below: the $1 billion mid-market band, where most of the actual recruiting and integration work in wealth management actually happens.
For platform CEOs trying to hit 2026 growth targets, this band of the market is where the math gets harder, not easier. The Q1 record was concentrated in mega-deals where the buyer paid a premium for at-scale targets. Echelon’s report put average AUM per transaction at $1.8 billion, the highest level since 2021. The mid-May 2026 deal week reflects a different dynamic: buyers paying market multiples for teams that already cleared the diligence bar of an established institutional buyer.
Key Takeaways for Advisors
- Four RIA platforms closed $3.2 billion in combined advisor team assets in the week ended May 16, 2026
- Wealth Enhancement Group’s mid-May deal was its 3rd $1B+ transaction of 2026
- &Partners landed a $1 billion Illinois advisor team on May 11, accelerating its 2026 recruiting pace
- Strategic buyers (not PE rollups) drove all four deals, signaling a shift from financial to platform consolidation
- Average deal size of $800 million sits well below the Q1 mega-deal average of $1.8 billion per transaction
What Wealth Enhancement Just Did

Wealth Enhancement Group, headquartered in Minneapolis and majority-owned by Onex Partners since 2024, announced its third $1 billion-plus deal of 2026 during the week ended May 16. The firm’s deal flow this year has been front-loaded: the H Group and FocusPoint Solutions transaction announced earlier in 2026 brought $6.7 billion in combined assets, the February TFB Advisors deal added $1.2 billion, and the mid-May deal makes the third $1 billion-plus transaction in roughly five months.
The pattern matters because Wealth Enhancement now has firepower from two sources. Onex’s 2024 stake recapitalized the platform at a valuation reported by Financial Planning as multiple billions, giving the firm dry powder for both M&A and lift-out compensation. At the same time, the firm’s internal advisor network creates an integration template that newer entrants cannot replicate at speed. Each successive deal lands on infrastructure that has already absorbed dozens of similar transactions, which compresses the integration risk that PE-backed roll-ups have historically carried.
&Partners and the Illinois Landing
&Partners’ May 11 announcement of a $1 billion Illinois advisor team adds to a 2026 recruiting record that has been quietly compounding. Founded in 2022 as a wirehouse alternative offering equity ownership to producing advisors, the firm has positioned itself against the LPL and Raymond James independent broker-dealer model by emphasizing fiduciary-only operations and a flatter compensation structure.
The Illinois team’s $1 billion in client assets, while modest against the Q1 mega-deals, fits the &Partners profile. The firm has prioritized teams in the $500 million to $1.5 billion range where the lead advisor wants partnership economics rather than transaction proceeds. According to public deal coverage from AdvisorHub and WealthManagement.com, &Partners has now added more than $5 billion in advisor team assets across 2026 year-to-date, with no single deal accounting for more than 25 percent of the year’s total.
Lido and Integrated: The Strategic Acquirers

Lido Advisors’ $1 billion Tulsa addition and Integrated Partners’ $850 million Boston-area acquisition complete the week’s slate. Both buyers fit the “strategic acquirer” classification that Echelon Partners flagged as the dominant Q1 deal driver. Strategic acquirers prioritize platform expansion and service integration over financial engineering, and both Lido and Integrated have built their 2026 deal calendars around adding capability rather than simply adding AUM.
Lido’s Tulsa deal extends its Sunbelt footprint, a geographic priority the firm has been pursuing since its 2023 Charlesbank recapitalization. Tulsa specifically gives Lido entry into a market where high-net-worth client formation has accelerated post-pandemic, with energy sector wealth and Oklahoma trust law combining to support family office work.
Integrated Partners’ Boston deal complements the firm’s existing CPA-channel strategy. Integrated has built its growth on a model that combines RIA services with CPA referral relationships, and the Boston metro area’s concentration of independent accounting firms creates a natural buyer profile for the firm’s platform.
Why the Mid-Market Band Matters More Than Mega-Deals
Wealth management M&A coverage has tilted heavily toward mega-deals in 2026. Echelon’s Q1 report showed 142 deals at $1.67 trillion in transacted AUM, with average deal size of $1.8 billion. DeVoe & Company’s tracking confirmed a 24 percent year-over-year increase in deal count, and the firm’s outlook puts 2026 on pace to surpass 2025’s full-year record of 466 deals.
Those numbers are real but unrepresentative. The Q1 transacted AUM total is skewed by a handful of platform-level transactions where private equity sponsors traded majority stakes in $100 billion-plus aggregators. The mid-May 2026 deal week, by contrast, is what the actual recruiting market looks like for most RIA platforms most of the year. Teams in the $500 million to $1.5 billion range represent the operational reality for buyer pipelines.
The competitive dynamics in this band have tightened sharply. Carson Wealth led Echelon’s Q1 most-active list with 8 deals; Beacon Pointe followed with 7; Cerity Partners and Savant Capital with 5 each; Mariner, EP Wealth and Merit Financial with 4 each. The pipeline of newer spinouts (Threadline Wealth’s $5.8 billion liftoff from Baker Tilly being the recent reference point) feeds the same target pool. All of those firms are competing for the same mid-market teams that Wealth Enhancement, &Partners, Lido and Integrated landed in mid-May. The pricing pressure that result is creating shows up not in headline EBITDA multiples (which have stabilized at 10-13x for quality targets) but in the equity component and seller protections demanded by lead advisors.
What Sellers Now Want
Three asks have moved from negotiation outliers to standard requests in 2026 mid-market RIA deals:
- Equity rather than earn-out: lead advisors increasingly demand rollover equity in the parent platform rather than performance-based deferred consideration, particularly when the buyer is PE-backed and a future recapitalization is on the horizon
- Brand preservation for 24-36 months: regional firms with strong local client identity negotiate for runway to maintain their existing brand under a parent identity, with full integration deferred to year three or beyond
- Compensation grids that don’t reset: producing advisors want guarantees that their existing payout grid travels with them rather than re-pricing to the platform’s standard schedule
Buyers that can structure around all three asks (Wealth Enhancement, Mariner, Creative Planning, Cerity Partners) consistently win competitive auctions, and the lift-out equity math reshaping advisor moves in 2026 has accelerated that dynamic. Buyers that cannot, particularly newer PE-sponsored platforms, are losing deals at the term-sheet stage even when their headline price is competitive.
What Buyers Are Paying For
The Q1 2026 mega-deals were priced for scale. The mid-May 2026 deals are priced for fit. According to deal commentary from Echelon and DeVoe, the specific attributes that mid-market buyers paid premium for in early 2026 include:
- Existing tax and estate planning capability: teams that have already integrated CPAs and ERISA attorneys command 1-2 turn EBITDA premium over pure investment management teams
- Generation-2 succession bench: practices where the lead advisor has identified and partially transitioned book to a younger partner trade at higher multiples and close faster
- Recurring fee compression: targets where average client fee has compressed below 70 basis points show 2026 multiples 0.5-1.0 turn below targets with stable 85-100 basis point fee structures
- Custodian flexibility: teams custodied at Schwab or Fidelity (rather than legacy Pershing or Raymond James platforms) integrate more cleanly and command modest pricing premium
The mid-May deal week’s $800 million average size suggests buyers are not stretching for trophy assets right now. They are working through the operational targets that fit existing integration capacity.
What This Means for Platform CEOs
For RIA platform CEOs setting 2026 growth targets, the mid-May data points to three operational priorities:
First, the $1 billion advisor team is the unit of growth in 2026, not the $5 billion mega-firm. Building an organization that can absorb a $1 billion team per quarter is more valuable than building one that can close two $5 billion deals per year, because the deal flow exists in the smaller band and the integration risk is lower.
Second, the strategic acquirer model is winning over the financial buyer model. Echelon noted that 71.8 percent of Q1 deals included PE backing, but the buyers winning competitive auctions are the ones using PE capital to fund strategic platform expansion, not the ones running pure roll-up arithmetic. Wealth Enhancement, Mercer Advisors, Mariner Wealth Advisors, Creative Planning and EP Wealth Advisors are the named examples in Echelon’s report.
Third, the recruiting equation now favors platforms that offer real equity, full brand runway and grid preservation, even at the cost of slower integration. Buyers running a “buy, rebrand, repurpose” playbook are losing to buyers running a “buy, preserve, grow” playbook. The 2026 deal velocity rewards the second model.
What Advisors Are Watching for Q3 2026
The mid-May deal week sets up three questions for the rest of Q2 and into Q3 2026:
- Will Wealth Enhancement maintain its current pace of one $1 billion-plus deal per quarter through year-end, putting it on track for $5-6 billion in 2026 AUM additions?
- Can &Partners scale its equity-rollover model past the $10 billion total advisor assets mark without diluting the partnership economics that have driven its recruiting wins?
- How will the second tier of mid-market buyers (Mercer, EP Wealth, Merit, Wealthspire) respond to the pricing creep that strategic acquirers are creating in the $1 billion deal band?
Three Questions to Bring to Your Investment Committee
For advisors evaluating their own platform affiliation or considering a transition in 2026, three questions are worth raising at the next partner-level review:
- If our practice was on the market today at $800 million in AUM, which two or three buyers would we actually want to talk to, and have we confirmed they would actually want to talk to us?
- Are we structurally positioned in the attributes that mid-market buyers paid premium for in early 2026 (tax and estate integration, gen-2 succession, stable fee structure, modern custody)?
- How would our 2026 organic growth rate compare to the inorganic growth rates these four platforms just demonstrated, and what does that gap tell us about our long-term competitive position?
The mid-May 2026 deal week is not a single-week story. It is the operational baseline for what RIA M&A looks like outside the mega-deal headlines.
Sources: Wealth Management: Wealth Enhancement Lands $1.2B RIA Breakaway Team; Wealth Management: Deal & Moves Coverage; PR Newswire: Wealth Enhancement Acquisition Release; ECHELON Partners Q1 2026 RIA M&A Deal Report; InvestmentNews: RIA M&A Off to Record Start, DeVoe; Financial Planning: Onex Deal Valuation of Wealth Enhancement.
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