M1 Finance occupies a deliberately different square than the robo-advisors we usually verify: it’s self-directed investing with automation, not advice — a distinction that changes what the registries should show and what protections you have. Scan below, reading follows.
m1.com
Name-based registry matches exist. Registration is not an endorsement; confirm the CRD/SEC number the platform itself discloses matches the record.
Domain age
Earliest snapshot
Mail (MX) configured
Investment adviser records
Broker-dealer records
Filings mentioning name
UK authorization
Reading the registry results
M1’s core entity is a FINRA-member broker-dealer (SIPC member) rather than an advisory firm managing your money — because in M1’s “pie” system, you design the portfolio and the platform automates the buying and rebalancing. That’s why an adviser-registration search can look thinner than for Betterment-style platforms without anything being wrong: match the registration to what the platform claims to be, which is the whole method of our broker-check guide. The practical difference for you: a self-directed broker owes you best execution and custody protections, not fiduciary portfolio advice (what fiduciary means).
The business model read
No advisory fee is the headline — so trace the revenue: interest on cash and margin lending, payment for order flow (how that works), subscription/platform fees that have changed form over the years, and banking-side spread. All standard, all disclosed; pricing details change often enough that the disclosures, not this page, are the source of record for current numbers.
Verdict
Fully verifiable — as a broker, not an adviser. The registrations match the self-directed model, custody and SIPC are in place, and the “free” economics are the usual traceable four. Confirm current fee schedules in the platform’s own disclosures before opening an account, and current registration status at brokercheck.finra.org or via a Verifier scan.