Panoramic: Automotive and Mobility 2025
On 11 December 2025, the UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published PS25/22, which contains its near final rules on the new concept of “targeted support” which firms can use to help consumers make their investment decisions.
Targeted support will be available for investment products and pensions only.
The new rules are expected to come into effect on 6 April 2026. Regulated firms who wish to provide targeted support will have to apply for a variation of their permission to enable them to do the new activity – which raises questions of whether they will able to achieve this in time to take advantage of the new regime when it comes into effect.
This note is an updated version of the note we prepared in July 2025 when the FCA published its Consultation Paper for targeted support. Where the FCA has made noteworthy changes from the draft rules it consulted on, we have identified this in the note below.
The FCA's Consultation Paper also included separate discussions regarding the concept of “simplified advice”. Further FCA consultations on this issue, and on reforming the investment advice rules more generally, are expected in early 2026. This update does not cover simplified advice.
The FCA has had a long-standing concern that consumers are not getting sufficient help to make investment decisions. The FCA describes this as an “advice gap”, where consumers who could invest in other products and face complex decisions are not being given advice or guidance. This advice gap, in turn, leads to consumers not making the most of their finances or making decisions that are not right for them.
There are many reasons why the advice gap has arisen and why regulated firms are sometimes reluctant to give advice or guidance, including the following:
These are not new issues. The FCA has recognised the challenges for many years and there have been several previous initiatives to try and address them.
In 2022, the FCA and the Government began a joint review to examine the regulatory boundary between financial advice and other forms of support. This is known as the Advice Guidance Boundary Review.
The FCA is now making a series of changes to the rules relating to advice. In particular, there is an entirely new concept of “targeted support”, which will be a type of advice. Separate consultations and/or FCA guidance are expected in relation to simplified advice, the investment advice rules generally and the boundary between advice and guidance.
The new targeted support regime introduces a new regulated activity of “providing targeted support”, for which legislative change is required. On the same day as the FCA published its near-final rules, HM Treasury also published a response to the separate consultation that it had published in July 2025 regarding the draft legislation. The response shows that, save for some minor changes, HM Treasury is proceeding with the draft legislation as planned.
The HM Treasury response also noted that concerns had been expressed about whether the Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003, which set out rules for how firms may contact consumers for marketing purposes through electronic means, could act as a barrier to targeted support. In relation to that, the Information Commissioners Office (ICO) and FCA have published a Jointly Prepared Statement which seeks to provide more clarity on how firms can deliver targeted support while complying with existing data protection regulations. HM Treasury recognises, however, that that statement will not cover all the issues and so it has announced that it will make further legislation to enable to workplace pension providers to deliver targeted support communications to members to have not opted-out of direct marketing.
The FCA has also issued a separate joint statement with the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS), which is considered in Chapter 4 below.
Targeted support is a service under which a regulated firm can follow a four step process:
(1) Situations: Pre-define situations in which to provide targeted support (such as where consumers have a common financial support need or objective)
(2) Consumer segments: Pre-define a consumer segment (that is, a group of consumers with common characteristics).
(3) Ready-made suggestions: Pre-define a “ready-made suggestion” for the consumer segment.
(4) Delivery: Deliver the ready-made suggestion to a consumer who is aligned to that consumer segment.
If a firm follows this process, it can make suggestions to clients (in effect, a form of financial advice) without having to comply with all the obligations that would have applied if they had been making personal recommendations to those clients.
The FCA’s Consultation Paper gave examples of a number of consumer needs or objectives which the FCA anticipates might be met by targeted support. These included: consumers under-saving for retirement; consumers drawing down their pension unsustainably; consumers in a position to start investing; consumers who are investing in an expensive fund when a cheaper alternative is available; and consumers choosing between investments and pension products.
The new FCA rules include provisions relating to when and how firms should be providing targeted support. These include the following requirements:
These requirements mean that, in practice, a firm will have to be selective about which of its clients it considers for targeted support.
“Consumer segments” are groups of consumers in a common situation and, where relevant, sharing common characteristics. Firms will be required to identify the relevant consumer segments as part of any targeted support offering, and then only deliver a ready-made suggestion to a client where they identify that the client aligns with a consumer segment.
For firms who are planning to provide targeted support, the main points to note are as follows:
Ready-made suggestions could be suggestions to take action in relation to an existing product or service, or new products. They could also include suggestions to not take an action.
Firms will be required to have a reasonable basis for determining that the ready-made suggestion that it specifies for a consumer segment is suitable for all the individuals in that consumer segment.
Ready-made suggestions could include suggestions to invest in a particular product (subject to certain exceptions, in relation to which see further below). However, when designing a ready-made suggestion, the firm must be able to demonstrate how, for any product it intends to recommend, it has considered, at least (i) the costs and charges of the product; (ii) whether the target market of the product is consistent with the relevant consumer segment and ready-made suggestion; and (iii) the financial strength of the product provider. Firms will, in effect, have to do due diligence on any products that they recommend through targeted support.
The new rules only apply to “investments” and pensions. Investments in this context means securities (including investment funds and structured products) and investment-based life insurance products.
Other types of products, such as mortgages and non-investment insurance contracts (including pure protection insurance – i.e. life insurance without an investment element) are not in scope. The existing advice rules continue to apply in relation to those other products.
Within the category of investments and pensions, some types of products are also excluded. Targeted support cannot be used to recommend:
In some cases, such as with annuities and pension consolidation, part of the reason why targeted support is not available is because those products would require a detailed, personalised assessment which is incompatible with the targeted support framework.
Pensions dashboard service (PDS) firms cannot offer or provide targeted support as a post-view service.
The main points to note from the near-final rules are:
“Providing targeted support” will be a new, separate category of regulated activity in its own right. This will require legislation to be passed.
The new regulated activity will be different to the existing regulated activity of “advising on investments”. The Consultation Paper said that the activities that the new concept entails would be ones that already come within the definition of “advising on investments”. The intention is not to extend the regulatory perimeter to cover activities that are not regulated today.
One consequence of targeted support being a new type of regulated activity is that firms will need to apply to the FCA to vary their permission in order to be able to do it – even if they already have permission to give advice on investments.
The FCA is not proposing any kind of “grandfathering” arrangement, under which a firm that already has permission to advise on investments would be entitled to a permission to provide targeted support as well. See Chapter 8 regarding next steps.
During the consultation phase, it was not clear whether or not appointed representatives (ARs) would be able to provide targeted support.
In its consultation response, HM Treasury has now determined that AR will not be able to provide targeted support from the point of roll-out of the new regime. However, HM Treasury says that it will review this position once its separate reforms to the AR regime have been introduced and are well established.
Guidance will continue to be an unregulated activity. This means that firms providing guidance services can continue to do so without FCA authorisation.
The FCA says that it plans to improve its existing guidance on the boundary between (i) the provision of information and guidance, and (ii) the different forms of advice.
An FCA consultation on simplifying and consolidating its investment advice rules is scheduled for Q1 2026. This is expected to cover the concept of simplified advice and the advice/guidance boundary.
The new rules are likely to be helpful to firms in a number of respects:
However, there are still likely to be challenges for firms that wish to operate in this space:
We will have to wait and see whether this initiative is more successful than some of its predecessors, but the willingness of the FCA to try and find a creative way to fill the advice gap is likely to be regarded positively.
The FCA expects that the new rules will come into effect on 6 April 2026.
The only reason why there remains any doubt about the timing is because the timetable depends on legislative changes coming into effect first, and the FCA is not able to control that element of the process. However, on the same day that the FCA issued the near-final rules, HM Treasury issued a consultation response regarding the legislative changes, and there is nothing to suggest that the FCA's timetable cannot be met.
Firms who wish to provide targeted support will need permission from the FCA to carry on the new regulated activity of “providing targeted support”. For firms who are already authorised, this will mean having to apply to the FCA for a variation of permission (VOP). Under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, the FCA has a statutory deadline of six months for considering VOP applications, which raises the possibility that firms will not be able to obtain their VOP by the time the new rules come into effect. Such firms would not be able to start offering a targeted support service until they have the necessary VOP.
The FCA opened its Pre-Application Support Service in October 2025, and says that it is on track to open the gateway for applications in March 2026. Where firms (both solo and dual regulated) can demonstrate that they are ready to undertake targeted support, the FCA's ambition is to grant permission at or soon after the anticipated commencement of the rules in April 2026.
Authored by Dominic Hill.