CFP Board Survey Reveals Financial Misinformation Crisis: Why CFP® Professionals Matter Now More Than Ever

CFP® Board Updates
In June 2025, the CFP Board released results from its latest national survey titled: “Steering Clear of Financial Misinformation: A Survey of Americans.” The findings were striking — and a wake-up call for financial professionals everywhere.
Key Findings from the CFP Board Survey
- 57% of Americans say they’ve made financial decisions they regret based on bad or misleading information.
- 1 in 5 lost more than $1,000 from poor financial advice.
- Nearly half (48%) say social media is a primary source of financial guidance — especially among younger adults.
This signals a growing challenge: in an era of viral content and algorithm-driven advice, misinformation is more accessible — and more dangerous — than ever.
The Role of the CFP® Professional in Combating Misinformation
These survey results confirm what many of us already suspect — too many Americans are relying on unreliable sources instead of vetted professionals. The CFP® mark stands in direct contrast to that trend. It represents:
- Credibility: CFP® professionals meet rigorous standards for ethics, education, and competency.
- Objectivity: Fiduciary responsibility places client interests first — not product sales or personal opinions.
- Clarity: In a noisy, fragmented landscape, clients need advice grounded in facts, strategy, and personalization.
For current CFP® professionals, this is a call to step forward as educators and truth-tellers. For prospective candidates, it’s a reminder that earning the CFP® designation isn’t just a smart career move — it’s an opportunity to be part of the solution.
Why This Matters to Firms and Candidates Alike
This is more than a social media trend — it’s a long-term threat to consumer financial well-being. Firms that invest in developing CFP® talent are also investing in public trust, long-term relationships, and a stronger brand.
Candidates should take this as fuel for their mission. People need guidance — and they’re actively looking for it. The question is: will they find it in someone qualified, or someone with a clever YouTube channel?
Bottom Line
Financial misinformation is here, and it’s costing Americans time, money, and confidence. But the solution isn’t complicated — it’s credentialed, ethical, and client-first financial professionals. That’s where you come in.
📎 Source:
“Bad Online Advice Leads Majority of Americans to Make Regrettable Financial Decisions” – CFP Board (June 13, 2025)
https://www.cfp.net/news/2025/06/bad-online-advice-leads-majority-of-americans-to-make-regrettable-financial-decisions