Your adviser sent a bill for ₹2,40,000 a year and called it a “standard planning fee”. That is not legal. A SEBI registered Investment Adviser cannot charge more than ₹1,51,000 a year per family under the fixed fee mode, or 2.5 percent of your assets under advice per year per family under the AUA mode. One mode applies at a time, and the cap binds across every service the adviser gives you.
These limits come from SEBI, the market regulator. They protect ordinary investors from being talked into open ended advisory fees that quietly eat your returns. If you have been billed above the cap, you do not have to argue alone. You can complain to SEBI through the SCORES portal and seek a refund.
A Registered Investment Adviser, or RIA, must pick one of two fee modes for you. The adviser may switch your mode later, but the overall yearly cap still binds. The adviser cannot stack both modes to charge more.
| Fee mode | What it is based on | Legal cap per year per family |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed fee mode | A flat amount, not linked to your portfolio size | ₹1,51,000 across all services |
| AUA mode | A percentage of your Assets under Advice | 2.5 percent of AUA across all services |
The “family” here means your family unit, not each person separately. So one adviser cannot bill you ₹1,51,000 and your spouse another ₹1,51,000 for the same advisory relationship. The fixed fee figure of ₹1,51,000 is reviewed once every three years by the Investment Adviser Administration and Supervisory Body, known as the IAASB, which is run by BSE Limited, in consultation with SEBI, so the number can change at the next revision.
These caps apply only to advisers who are actually registered with SEBI as Investment Advisers. A registered adviser must give you a Most Important Terms and Conditions document, called the MITC, which spells out the fee, the mode and your rights before you pay anything.
To check that the person advising you is genuinely registered:
If the person is not registered with SEBI at all, the fee cap is not your only problem. Unregistered advice and stock tips can be illegal in themselves.
If your bill crosses the cap, or the adviser charges in a mode you never agreed to, act in this order.
Your complaint is only as strong as your paperwork. Keep these from day one:
Real-life example. Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, a retired professor in Lucknow, signed up with a city adviser in February 2026. The adviser billed him ₹2,40,000 for a year of “comprehensive planning” under a fixed fee arrangement. After reading the rules, Dr. Pathak emailed the adviser in March 2026 quoting the ₹1,51,000 fixed fee cap and asked for the excess of ₹89,000 back. When the adviser stalled, he lodged a complaint on the SEBI SCORES portal with his agreement, invoice and bank statement attached. The adviser refunded the ₹89,000 within weeks rather than face a regulatory review.
Under the fixed fee mode the cap is ₹1,51,000 a year per family across all services. Under the AUA mode it is 2.5 percent of your Assets under Advice a year per family. The adviser uses one mode, not both, and the cap binds across every service.
No. The two modes are mutually exclusive for a given client. The adviser cannot add an AUA percentage on top of a fixed fee. If a minimum AUA fee effectively becomes a flat charge, it is treated as fixed fee and is still capped at ₹1,51,000.
It is per family per year, across all the advisory services the adviser provides. An adviser cannot bill each family member separately to get around the limit.
First raise it in writing with the adviser and ask for a refund of the excess. If that fails, file a complaint on the SEBI SCORES portal at scores.sebi.gov.in, and if needed use SEBI's online dispute resolution mechanism, SMART ODR.
It can. The IAASB, run by BSE Limited, reviews the fixed fee limit periodically, in consultation with SEBI. Always check the current figure before signing.
SEBI is not an ordinary public authority for routine commercial grievances, so the right tool against your adviser is a SCORES complaint, not an RTI. But if your dispute involves records held by a government body or public authority, you can file an RTI for those records. The AI RTI Drafter below helps you frame such a request.