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Platform Reports

Wealthfront: Verification Report — What the Registries Show

By Ruslana · July 16, 2026 · Updated July 16, 2026

Wealthfront sits beside Betterment as the other name people mean when they say “robo-advisor,” and its report earns its place for a different reason: it shows how a platform’s registry profile changes shape as the business evolves — from pure automated investing toward a banking-style cash product. Live scan below, reading follows.

RECORDSFOUNDPLATFORM VERIFIER

wealthfront.com

Registry matches found — confirm the exact legal entity

Name-based registry matches exist. Registration is not an endorsement; confirm the CRD/SEC number the platform itself discloses matches the record.

Checked: 2026-07-16 18:19 UTC · sources named on each card · cached 12h
RDAP · registry

Domain age

2002-03-12
24.4 years — fraud platforms cluster under 1 year
PASS
Wayback Machine

Earliest snapshot

2000-08
Archived history exists — review it for identity switches
FOUND
DNS-over-HTTPS

Mail (MX) configured

Yes
Operational infrastructure
PASS
SEC IAPD

Investment adviser records

4 possible match(es)
Name-based match for "Wealthfront" — open IAPD to confirm the exact legal entity
FOUND
FINRA BrokerCheck

Broker-dealer records

No record
Neutral unless the site claims to be a US broker
NO RECORD
SEC EDGAR

Filings mentioning name

2707 filing hit(s)
Name appears in EDGAR filings — check context before drawing conclusions
FOUND
FCA Register

UK authorization

Not configured
Add RECAP_FCA_KEY in wp-config.php (free key from register.fca.org.uk) to enable UK checks
SETUP

Reading the registry results

The structure mirrors the industry standard: Wealthfront Advisers LLC (SEC-registered investment adviser) paired with Wealthfront Brokerage LLC (FINRA member, SIPC). The wrinkle worth understanding is the cash account: Wealthfront is not a bank — its high-yield cash product works by sweeping deposits to partner banks where FDIC insurance applies through those banks. That’s a legitimate, disclosed structure, but it’s exactly the kind of detail that separates reading a platform from reading its homepage: the yield is real, the FDIC coverage is indirect, and the mechanics live in the disclosures.

The Form ADV read

The filings show the second robo-survivor profile: AUM deep into the tens of billions, a 0.25% advisory fee on investment accounts, and meaningful revenue from the cash sweep spread — the quiet second engine our economics guide describes. The product’s evolution (automated index portfolios, then cash, then stock investing) is the survival playbook in action: platforms that outlived the graveyard cohort did it by widening the funnel beyond the 0.25% fee.

Verdict

Fully verifiable. Both entities check out, the cash-product mechanics are disclosed and standard, and scale is well past viability. Same closing calibration as every report (methodology): registries verify that the platform is real and accountable — fit, fees and the cash-vs-invest decision are yours. Current status is always one search away at adviserinfo.sec.gov and brokercheck.finra.org, or one scan in our Verifier.