Updated: March 2025 • 9 min read

How to Find a Certified Financial Planner (CFP) in Canada 2025

A Certified Financial Planner (CFP) is one of the most rigorous financial credentials in Canada. CFP holders must complete extensive education, pass a comprehensive exam, accumulate professional experience, and commit to ongoing professional development and ethical standards. If you need professional financial advice, finding a CFP is one of the safest ways to ensure you're working with a qualified practitioner.

Here's exactly how to find, vet, and hire a CFP in Canada in 2025.

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What Is a CFP in Canada?

The CFP designation in Canada is administered by FP Canada, the national organization responsible for setting and upholding financial planning standards. To earn the CFP designation, candidates must:

As of 2025, there are approximately 17,000 CFP professionals in Canada.

How to Find a CFP in Canada

Step 1: Use FP Canada's Find a Planner Tool

FP Canada maintains an official searchable directory of all active CFP professionals in Canada at fpcanada.ca. You can search by location, name, or area of specialty. This is the most reliable source — everyone in the directory holds a verified, active CFP designation.

Step 2: Filter by Fee Structure

When using the directory, filter for "fee-only" or "fee-for-service" planners if you want unbiased advice with no product-selling conflict of interest. Commission-based CFPs are still required to follow ethical standards, but fee-only removes the structural conflict entirely.

Step 3: Check Additional Credentials and Specializations

Some CFPs specialize in specific life situations: retirement planning, divorce financial planning (CDFA designation), small business, or newcomers to Canada. If your situation is specific, look for a planner with relevant specialization experience.

Step 4: Book a Discovery Call

Most CFPs offer a free 20–30 minute introductory call. Use this to assess fit, confirm their compensation model, and ask key questions (see below). Don't commit to a working relationship without this conversation.

Step 5: Verify Their Registration

Confirm the planner is in good standing with FP Canada by searching their name in the public directory. Also check if they're registered with CIRO (formerly IIROC and MFDA) if they manage investments, or with provincial insurance regulators if they sell insurance.

Questions to Ask a CFP Before Hiring Them

  1. How are you compensated? (Fee-only, commission, fee-based hybrid?)
  2. Do you have a fiduciary duty to me?
  3. What is your area of specialty?
  4. How many clients do you currently serve?
  5. What is your investment philosophy?
  6. Can you provide references from existing clients?
  7. What does the engagement include and what does it cost?
  8. How often will we communicate?
  9. What happens if I want to end the relationship?

How Much Does a CFP Cost in Canada?

Service TypeTypical Cost
Hourly consultation$200–$500/hour
Comprehensive financial plan (one-time)$1,500–$5,000
Ongoing retainer (annual)$3,000–$100+
Assets under management (% fee)0.5–1.5% of portfolio annually
Commission-based (insurance/funds)"Free" to you — paid by product provider

A one-time comprehensive financial plan for $2,000–$3,000 can be exceptional value — especially if it clarifies RRSP vs. TFSA contribution strategy, retirement projections, and tax optimization. Many Canadians only need this review every 3–5 years, or at major life events.

Alternatives to Hiring a CFP

Red Flags When Evaluating a CFP

Final Thoughts

Finding a CFP in Canada is straightforward via FP Canada's official directory. The key differentiators are compensation model (fee-only vs. commission), specialization, and personal fit. For most Canadians, a single comprehensive financial plan from a fee-only CFP — paid once every few years or at major life events — provides more value than an ongoing commission-based advisory relationship. Start your search at fpcanada.ca, ask the right questions, and verify credentials before engaging.