How the Series 82 Exam Prepares You for Selling Private Placements

Compliance
Last updated
December 31, 2025
Author
Finalis
Time
6 min read
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The Series 82 exam is a FINRA qualification designed for securities professionals who solicit and sell private placement securities as part of primary offerings. Officially known as the Private Securities Offerings Representative Exam, it applies to representatives operating under a FINRA member broker-dealer and focuses on Regulation D transactions and other exempt offerings. When paired with the Securities Industry Essentials (SIE) exam, the Series 82 enables registered representatives to participate in private placement activities within the U.S. securities regulatory framework.

The License Behind Private Capital

Private markets are expanding faster than ever — driven by founders, funds, and dealmakers seeking flexibility, privacy, and speed.

Formally known as the Private Securities Offerings Representative Exam, the Series 82 is a FINRA-administered qualification designed for professionals who solicit and sell private placement securities as part of a primary offering.

It is a qualification that allows registered representatives, when associated with a FINRA member broker-dealer, to solicit and sell private placement securities as part of primary offerings, including Regulation D transactions and certain private placement structures, subject to firm approval and supervision.

To register as a Private Securities Offerings Representative, candidates must pass both the Securities Industry Essentials (SIE) exam and the Series 82.

Understanding the Series 82 Exam

The Series 82 validates your ability to perform four critical functions within a broker-dealer environment:

  1. Prospect and engage clients for private offerings.

  2. Open accounts and assess investor suitability.

  3. Communicate, recommend, and maintain records for private transactions.

  4. Process and confirm subscription agreements and purchases.

Here’s how it’s structured:

  • Questions: 50 scored multiple-choice questions

  • Duration: 90 minutes

  • Passing score: 70 percent, as determined by FINRA

  • Sponsorship: Required by a FINRA member firm

  • Prerequisite: SIE exam (co-requisite)

The exam is intentionally narrower than the Series 7 or Series 79. It focuses exclusively on the primary sale of private placements, ensuring candidates understand the regulatory nuances that differentiate private offerings from public securities.

Why It Matters for Private Markets

1. Your Regulatory Foundation

The Series 82 is one of the accepted FINRA qualification exams that may be used to solicit and sell private placement securities in the U.S., when conducted under a FINRA member broker-dealer and subject to applicable supervision and state registration requirements.

Without it, you cannot engage investors in these transactions, even if you understand the deal mechanics.

2. Precision Over Breadth

Unlike broader licenses that cover retail, municipal, or public market activity, the Series 82 gives you a clean, targeted authority — perfectly suited for boutique investment banks, placement agents, and independent representatives focused on private deals.

3. Trust, Transparency, and Growth

In a private market built on relationships, credibility is currency.
Holding the Series 82 signals to investors and issuers that you understand the rules of engagement — from Regulation D exemptions to suitability standards — and that you operate with integrity and compliance rigor.

4. The Gateway to Expansion

For many professionals, the Series 82 becomes a stepping stone toward broader credentials like the Series 63 (for state registration) or Series 79 (for investment banking advisory).
It’s the logical starting point for anyone looking to build a long-term career in private capital.

What You’ll Learn — and Be Tested On

FINRA’s Series 82 Content Outline divides the exam into four Major Job Functions:

Function Weight Key Competencies
Soliciting business for the broker-dealer 50% Private vs. Regulation D offerings and other private placement transactions conducted as primary offerings, including certain PIPE structures, subject to regulatory requirements and firm approval
Opening accounts and evaluating clients 18% Investor accreditation, financial profiles, suitability, and risk assessment
Providing information and maintaining records 26% Disclosure requirements, recordkeeping, communication rules, and anti-fraud standards
Processing and confirming transactions 6% Subscription verification, documentation, and settlement procedures

In short: the Series 82 measures your ability to balance opportunity with compliance — to raise capital without crossing regulatory lines.

The Modern Relevance of the Series 82

The rise of private credit, venture funds, SPVs, and cross-border syndications has made private placements one of the fastest-growing segments of global finance.
But growth brings scrutiny. Regulators increasingly expect that anyone soliciting investors in these deals holds proper registration and operates under an approved broker-dealer structure.

For independent bankers and boutique firms, the Series 82 provides both legitimacy and leverage: the ability to engage clients in private placement transactions within a supervised broker-dealer framework and in accordance with applicable securities laws and firm policies.

It can be challenging to determine which exams are appropriate for your specific line of business. To help, we've provided a list of the most common FINRA qualification exams for those looking to establish and grow a career in M&A, investment banking, or becoming a placement agent.

Preparing for the Exam

If you’re considering the Series 82, focus on:

  • Reviewing FINRA’s official content outline

  • Studying with recognized prep providers (Kaplan, STC, Solomon, Wall Street Prep)

  • Practicing Regulation D case studies and suitability scenarios

  • Understanding ethical and communication standards for private placements

The Finalis Perspective

The Series 82 exam is more than a regulatory requirement.  It says you’re ready to operate in the private capital markets with professionalism, compliance discipline, and market insight.

For dealmakers who raise capital beyond the public markets, this license is a foundational requirement for professionals seeking to participate in private placement activities within the U.S. securities regulatory framework.