FINRA Arbitration

FINRA Arbitration vs. Court

Why investor disputes against brokerage firms are resolved in FINRA arbitration instead of the public court system — and what that means for you.

You almost certainly agreed to arbitrate

When you opened your brokerage account, the account agreement you signed almost certainly included a mandatory arbitration clause. That clause requires disputes with the firm to be resolved through FINRA's binding arbitration forum rather than in court. For most investors this is not a choice — it is the contractually required path.

Courts routinely enforce these clauses, so attempting to file a structured-products case in court usually results in it being sent to FINRA arbitration anyway.

How arbitration differs from a courtroom

FINRA arbitration is private rather than public, and it is heard by one or three neutral arbitrators instead of a judge and jury. The rules of evidence are relaxed, discovery is more limited, and the process is generally faster and less expensive than litigation.

An arbitration award is binding and final, with only very narrow grounds for appeal. That finality cuts both ways, which is why how your claim is framed and presented from the outset matters so much.

Is arbitration good or bad for investors?

Arbitration has real advantages for investors: speed, lower cost, and a forum built specifically for securities disputes, with arbitrators who understand the products. The streamlined process can get a defrauded investor to a recovery faster than years of litigation would.

The key is experienced representation. Because the process moves quickly and the award is final, working with attorneys who focus on FINRA arbitration is the single biggest factor in presenting your case effectively.

Talk to a structured products attorney — for free

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