The Charles Schwab Corporation
CorpDigest
The Charles Schwab Corporation
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2025-07-15 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$18.8B
▲ 0% vs FY2023 ($18.8B)
Net Income: $5.1B
The Charles Schwab Corporation reported $18.8B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a growth of 0% compared to the 2023 figure of $18.8B.
That newsletter publisher was Charles R. Schwab, and the company that bears his name has since grown into one of the most consequential financial institutions in American history, overseeing roughly $9.9 trillion in client assets as of early 2025 — a figure that rivals the annual gross domestic product of Japan. Eliminating them cost the company roughly $90 million to $100 million in annual revenue but delivered millions of new account openings and deepened wallet share among existing clients. Then came the most audacious move in Schwab's modern history: the $26 billion acquisition of TD Ameritrade, completed in October 2020. By fiscal year 2024, the company had restored momentum: total net revenues reached approximately $18.8 billion, net income attributable to common stockholders came in at approximately $5.1 billion, and the company resumed meaningful share repurchases. The company that once advertised in the San Francisco Chronicle with hand-drawn ads promising investors they could 'own a piece of America' without paying Wall Street prices now serves more than 35 million active brokerage accounts, operates 380 branches across the United States, and manages a bank with over $300 billion in assets. From a Sacramento newsletter to a Westlake, Texas headquarters and a $130 billion market capitalization, the arc of Charles Schwab Corporation is the arc of American retail investing itself. The Charles Schwab Corporation is the largest publicly traded retail brokerage firm in the United States, managing approximately $9.9 trillion in client assets across more than 35 million active brokerage accounts as of early 2025. Over the following five decades, Schwab repeatedly reinvented its business model — launching online trading in 1996, acquiring U.S. Trust for wealth management in 2000, acquiring TD Ameritrade for $26 billion in 2020, and eliminating stock trading commissions in 2019. The company reported total net revenues of approximately $18.8 billion in fiscal year 2024, with net income of approximately $5.1 billion. In fiscal year 2024, net interest revenue represented approximately 48 to 51 percent of Schwab's total net revenues, depending on the quarter, generating roughly $9.0 to $9.5 billion on an annualized basis. Schwab's second major revenue pillar is asset management and administration fees, which accounted for approximately 33 to 36 percent of total net revenues in fiscal year 2024, generating roughly $5.9 to $6.2 billion annually. The company's lineup of Schwab-branded ETFs — including the Schwab U.S. Broad Market ETF (SCHB) and Schwab International Equity ETF (SCHF) — collectively held over $300 billion in assets under management in 2024. As of 2024, Schwab was the largest custodian for RIAs in the United States, custody approximately $4 trillion in assets on behalf of independent advisors. In fiscal year 2024, trading revenue — primarily driven by options contract fees (currently $0.65 per contract), payment for order flow from equity orders routed to market makers, and fixed-income transaction fees — represented approximately 7 to 9 percent of total net revenues, or roughly $1.4 to $1.7 billion annually. The $26 billion acquisition of TD Ameritrade, completed in October 2020, was not merely a consolidation play — it was a structural bet on the economics of scale in the brokerage business. The integration, which concluded in September 2023 with the migration of the final TD Ameritrade accounts onto Schwab's platform, generated approximately $2 billion in annualized cost operational efficiencies — below some initial analyst estimates but significant nonetheless. The Charles Schwab Corporation is a Financial Services / Brokerage & Wealth Management company with $18.8B in 2024 revenue and 36K employees worldwide. As of 2025, Schwab's operational footprint spans approximately 380 branch offices across the United States, a digital platform serving tens of millions of self-directed investors, an institutional custody operation serving over 14,000 independent RIA firms, and a federally chartered bank with over $300 billion in assets. Schwab's most direct and significant competitor is Fidelity Investments, the Boston-based privately held financial giant that manages approximately $12 trillion in total customer assets as of 2024. Morgan Stanley's $13 billion acquisition of E*TRADE in 2020 — announced just weeks before Schwab closed its TD Ameritrade deal — was a direct strategic response to Schwab's consolidation move. Vanguard, the Malvern, Pennsylvania-based mutual ownership firm managing approximately $9.3 trillion in global assets, competes with Schwab primarily in the asset management and ETF space rather than brokerage services. In fiscal year 2024, Schwab reported total net revenues of approximately $18.8 billion, recovering from the $18.8 billion reported in 2023 but still below the $20.8 billion peak achieved in fiscal year 2022, when rapidly rising interest rates temporarily inflated NII. Net income attributable to common stockholders came in at approximately $5.1 billion for full-year 2024, translating to diluted earnings per share of approximately $2.62. Client asset metrics provided the most compelling evidence of the franchise's underlying health: total client assets reached approximately $9.9 trillion in early 2025, with net new assets gathering at a pace of approximately $300 billion to $400 billion annually. At peak, Schwab carried over $40 billion in such supplemental borrowings, raising questions among some analysts and investors about the durability of the business model. A 2022 SEC settlement related to Schwab Intelligent Portfolios (see Legal Issues section) cost the company $187 million and highlighted the tension between Schwab's 'client first' brand positioning and certain monetization practices embedded in its product architecture. With approximately $9.9 trillion in total client assets as of early 2025, Schwab operates at a scale that generates compounding economic benefits. Schwab Advisor Services' custody of approximately $4 trillion in RIA assets represents one of the most defensible competitive positions in financial services. On interest rates, Schwab's management has communicated a framework under which each 25 basis point move in short-term rates affects annualized NII by roughly $75 million to $100 million in either direction, giving investors a clear sensitivity matrix for rate scenarios. On client asset growth, Schwab's positioning as the custodian of choice for the Great Wealth Transfer — the estimated $84 trillion in assets expected to pass between generations in the United States over the next two decades — represents a structural tailwind that is difficult to quantify but potentially enormous. The company needed capital, and in 1983, Charles Schwab made a fateful decision: he sold Charles Schwab & Co. To BankAmerica Corporation for $55 million. In 1987, just four years after the BankAmerica acquisition, Charles Schwab led a management buyout of the company for $280 million — five times what BankAmerica had paid — freeing the firm from its corporate parent and restoring independent strategic control.
| Year | Revenue | Net Income | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY2024 | $18.8B | $5.1B | +0.0% |
| FY2023 | $18.8B | — | -9.3% |
| FY2022 | $20.8B | — | +31.7% |
| FY2021 | $15.8B | — | +34.8% |
| FY2020 | $11.7B | — | — |
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.