Compliance
Verifying Accredited Investor Status Under Updated Rules – A Fund Administrator's View

Changes to how US Accredited Investors can be certified will encourage, so the author says, more emerging fund managers to embrace a rule allowing companies to publicly advertise and solicit investment in a private placement, provided all investors are accredited and the issuer takes "reasonable steps" to verify their status.
The following article is from Eric Schultz, founder and
managing member of Reliant Fund
Services. Schultz talks about new Securities & Exchange
Commission guidance on a rule surrounding how to verify
accredited investor status. This is crucial at a time when
policymakers have been looking at ways to widen accredited access
status in areas such as private markets.
This is, inevitably, a technical subject but the kind of detail
here is important for wealth managers and others advising and
working with high net worth individuals. The editors of Family
Wealth Report are pleased to share this content; the usual
editorial disclaimers apply. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
The SEC recently released new guidance that eases the burden
surrounding the accredited investor verification requirements
under Rule 506(c) of Regulation D. The guidance, which was
provided through a no-action letter on March 12, 2025, gives
clarity on the steps issuers can take to verify accredited
investor status.
Investors can now self-certify their accredited status if they
make a minimum investment of $200,000 for individuals or $1
million for public entities. Issuers also no longer need to
obtain extensive documentation such as IRS forms, bank
statements, or verification letters. Despite the update, issuers
must still take reasonable steps to verify accredited status.
From a fund administrator perspective, here is how we view
it.
What changed
In the past, every time a fund manager opened a new fund or
raised another round of capital under 506(c), they would often
have to perform an accredited investor re-verification, even for
repeat investors. This, of course, meant more paperwork, delays,
and going back-and-forth. This was especially frustrating when
nothing about the investor’s financial situation had changed.
However, under the new guidance, if an investor has already been
verified as accredited and it was done within the last five
years, the fund manager can reuse that verification if there is
no reason to believe their status has changed. So, if the
fund manager has maintained the documentation for the past five
years and everything still checks out, they are all set.
This is a smart, practical step forward by the SEC, acknowledging
that many accredited investors are not likely to become
unaccredited overnight. Re-verifying the same investors for each
new fund or capital raise under 506(c) added unnecessary friction
and cost.
What this means for fund managers
For fund managers, especially emerging managers, this is great
news:
-- They will spend less time chasing documents from
investors they already know since they can now reuse previously
verified investor data, assuming it is within the five-year
window and no status changes occurred;
-- This makes follow-on raises faster and less expensive
since they do not start from scratch with every 506(c) offering;
and
-- Legal and compliance teams can focus resources on new
investors, not repeatedly verifying long-term, stable LPs.
The result? Less friction during the fundraising process with
more focus on building investor relationships and fewer barriers
to deploying capital efficiently.
What this means for fund administrators
For fund administrators, this change:
-- Reduces the administrative lift when supporting fund managers
during ongoing or follow-on fundraising rounds;
-- It simplifies how they assist fund managers in
documenting verification without having to repeat due diligence
on existing, previously verified accredited investors;
and
-- It makes the entire investor onboarding process smoother
and faster, especially for follow-on funds and new capital
raises.
Fund administrators can now maintain and reference historical
verification files, track their dates, and help determine when a
re-verification is or isn’t needed, lowering compliance risks and
costs.
Fundraising Is easier
This change will encourage more emerging fund managers to embrace
506(c), especially now that the biggest compliance headache of
accredited investor verification has become more manageable.