SIE vs Series 7: Key Differences & Which to Take First

The SIE and Series 7 are both FINRA exams, but they sit at different levels. The SIE is an entry-level exam anyone can take; the Series 7 is a representative-level qualification that requires a sponsoring firm and lets you sell a broad range of securities. Most people take the SIE first, then the Series 7.

SIE vs Series 7 at a glance

SIESeries 7
LevelEntry-level (foundational)Representative qualification
SponsorshipNone — anyone 18+Must be sponsored by a FINRA member firm
Scored questions75125
Time1 hr 45 min3 hr 45 min
Passing score70%72%
First-attempt pass rate~74%~65–72%
Cost$80$300

Which should you take first?

The SIE first, in almost every case. To register as a General Securities Representative you need both the SIE and the Series 7 — the SIE is effectively a co-requisite. Because the SIE has no sponsorship requirement, many candidates pass it before or while job-hunting, then complete the Series 7 once a firm sponsors them.

How much harder is the Series 7?

Noticeably harder. It is longer, has a higher passing score, and goes far deeper into options, municipal securities, suitability, and the math behind them — topics the SIE only introduces. See Series 7 pass rate and is the SIE hard? for detail on each.

Start with a free SIE practice test, then prepare with the SIE course and the Series 7 course — each with explained question banks, full-length timed exams, and a live readiness score.

Pass-rate figures are industry estimates and vary period to period.