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Investing With Brandon review — is Brandon Arnett a former stock broker and fraud?

Investing With Brandon Review: Is Brandon Arnett a Liar? (2026)

Is "Investing With Brandon" legit? If you've seen Brandon Arnett's online posts indicating he "retired at 31" as a "Former Stock Broker," you're right to ask questions before spending money on his course and membership group. I did the research — using his own government filings and public information — and the picture he paints doesn't match the public record.

I'm David Jaffee, a former Wall Street investment banker and full-time options trader with verified, real-money results. I have no financial relationship with Investing with Brandon / Brandon Arnett. This review is based entirely on public records — his FINRA filing, county records, Bloomberg, and his own posts — and on my professional opinion of the strategy he teaches.

Quick Verdict

  • Is it a scam? Not in the criminal sense — he sells a real course / membership and some students are satisfied. But in my opinion the public image is built on misrepresented credentials, and the core strategy is one I believe is virtually guaranteed to lose money.
  • The credentials problem: his bio says "Former Stock Broker," but his FINRA record shows his entire broker registration lasted 22 days (September 15 – October 6, 2025) — and, per the same filing, his course / membership brand launched in June 2024, more than a year before he first held any license.
  • The "retired at 31" problem: his own FINRA filing shows he was employed full-time at a Las Vegas hospital until August 2025 (age 32), and his most recent FINRA filing lists a MassMutual insurance-agent role beginning that same month.
  • The strategy problem (the big one): he teaches aggressive put-selling as a primary income strategy. In my opinion that's one of the fastest ways to eventually blow up an account — and it's a technique you can learn for free.
  • Bottom line: buyer beware. There's a smarter, defined-risk way to sell option premium, and I'll show you what it is.

Who Is Brandon Arnett?

The person behind the @Invest_Brandon brand is Brandon Carl Arnett, born June 1993, based in Las Vegas, Nevada. This isn't speculation — he listed "InvestingWithBrandon, LLC — President & Owner" on his own FINRA Form U4, the official document securities professionals file with regulators.

His FINRA BrokerCheck report (CRD# 8152336) contains his complete, self-reported employment history — and it tells a very different story than his marketing.

Brandon Arnett FINRA BrokerCheck record showing he is not currently registered

Source: brokercheck.finra.org

What His Own FINRA Filing Shows

DatesEmployer / Role
07/2015 – 08/2025Sunrise Hospital & Medical Center — Cardiac Cath Lab Technologist
04/2022 – 05/2024Nevada Track LLC — President & Owner (railroad-track contracting)
06/2024 – 09/2025InvestingWithBrandon, LLC — President & Owner
08/2025 – (listed as current on his most recent filing)MassMutual — Insurance Agent
09/15/2025 – 10/06/2025MML Investors Services — Registered Representative (one month)


He passed the Series 7 exam on September 13, 2025, and his broker registration ended about three weeks later. Per FINRA, he is not currently registered with any state or SRO. Everything below follows from this record — you can see it yourself on FINRA BrokerCheck.

The "Former Stock Broker" Claim

Brandon's X/Twitter bio — the first thing his 35,000+ followers see — describes him as a "Self Made Multi Millionaire • Former Stock Broker." Here's what the public record shows next to that claim:

Investing With Brandon X bio claiming Self Made Multi Millionaire and Former Stock Broker

Source: x.com/Invest_Brandon

The claimWhat his FINRA record shows
"Former Stock Broker"Registered as a broker for 22 days (Sept 15 – Oct 6, 2025)
Implies experience preceded the sales funnelSeries 7 passed Sept 13, 2025 — his course / membership brand launched June 2024, over a year earlier


So here is the sequence, entirely from his own records: his FINRA filing shows the broker registration lasted from September 15 to October 6, 2025 — 22 days. The same filing shows his brand, InvestingWithBrandon LLC, launched in June 2024, more than a year earlier. Course / membership first; license later; and a license that lasted three weeks.

And while calling himself a "Former Stock Broker" is technically accurate, readers can judge for themselves whether "Former Stock Broker" is a fair description of a 22-day registration that came after the course / membership model was already built and selling.

The "Retired at 31" Claim

Several of Brandon's videos carry titles like "How I Retired at 31 With Stock Options," and his sales profile describes a "32-year-old investor who's built a net worth of over $3 million."

His own FINRA filing shows something different:

The claimWhat his FINRA record shows
"Retired at 31"Employed at Sunrise Hospital until August 2025 (age 32)
Implies no current employmentHis most recent FINRA filing lists a MassMutual insurance-agent role as current


According to his filing, he ran the InvestingWithBrandon brand while employed full-time at the hospital, then moved into an insurance-sales job — not a picture most people would describe as "retired." Notably, an April 2025 Bloomberg article (which he features as an "As Seen In Bloomberg" badge) reported that he left his job in the medical field in 2023 — while his FINRA filing lists hospital employment through August 2025.

Those two official statements can't both be right since they're contradictory.

His Actual Career (and the "As Seen in Bloomberg" Badge)

The career Brandon reported to FINRA is a decade as a Cardiac Cath Lab Technologist at a Las Vegas hospital (2015–2025) — a medical technician, not a trader.

Before that he ran Ohio Lawnworks LLC, a small lawn-care and trucking business in Salem, Ohio, and later managed Nevada Track LLC, a railroad-track contracting company.

He makes no secret of this part himself: his own course page features a "Before/After" photo of him in surgical scrubs — the "before" of the transformation he's selling.

It's a legitimate, respectable, hard-working career path — lawn care to railroads to hospital technician — but at no point in it was he a stock broker or professional trader, until the 22-day registration in late 2025.

The "As Seen In Bloomberg" badge deserves a note, too. It refers to an April 15, 2025 Bloomberg article that featured him as one example of retail investors (along with others) buying the dip during a selloff — reportorial coverage, not an endorsement of his course. 

Using it as a credibility badge is, in my opinion, misleading.

Abandoning Paying Members During a Market Pullback / Selloff?

There's a timing issue worth noting. A paying customer left a one-star Trustpilot review in March 2025, complaining that Brandon "abandoned discord during peak bearish market." Brandon replied publicly in late April, explaining that he and his wife had their first baby in February 2025 and that he took a month off.

That's entirely understandable — but ten days before that reply, on April 15, 2025, Bloomberg published an article presenting Brandon as an active full-time trader in the thick of the market selloff, quoting him buying into the S&P 500, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Broadcom, and Amazon.

The image Brandon projected to Bloomberg — hands-on, full-time, buying the dip — is difficult to reconcile with the reality his paying Discord members experienced during the same period: an absent mentor during the most volatile stretch of the year.

Image Brandon projected to Bloomberg (text taken directly from Bloomberg article)

Investing with Brandon Bloomberg article April 2025

Claims that Brandon abandoned paying members during a similar time (Source: Trustpilot)

Investing with Brandon abandoned Discord in early 2025

The "Self-Made Multi-Millionaire" Question

Brandon claims a net worth "over $3 million," built from "the stock and real estate markets," and says he made "$439,571.90 last year." His trading claims cannot be independently verified. Here's what is a matter of public record:

Clark County, Nevada assessor records show he co-owns two Las Vegas properties: a home purchased in May 2024 for roughly $468,000 and a rental purchased in 2018 for roughly $310,000 — about $850,000 in real estate combined.

And on the public real-estate forum BiggerPockets, under his own name, he posted in June 2024 asking for advice about a rental that wasn't cash-flowing — debating whether to put an extra $100,000 into it to make the numbers work.

Investing with Brandon June 2024 asking about a rental that loses money

That's a fair thing for any real-estate investor to ask. But it's hard to square "asking strangers online how to rescue a rental that's losing money" with "self-made multi-millionaire who retired at 31."

In my professional opinion — and this is opinion, not a statement of fact — if Brandon's actual brokerage statements were ever made public, I would be surprised if they showed consistent trading profitability.

I say that because the strategy he teaches, explained below, makes consistent profitability very difficult.

And, in my opinion, I don't think he had much, if any, money invested in the stock market prior to 2024 - as it seems that he was focused on real estate.

As he calls himself a "Real estate investor" below:

Investing with Brandon / Brandon Arnett Bigger Pockets profile

Third-party reviews point at the same gap.

A January 2025 Trustpilot reviewer wrote that Brandon "says 2 million worth but never showed to anyone" — and that only about $900,000 had ever been shown on his YouTube.

Notably, Brandon replied to that review publicly: he disputed the reviewer's course completion ("you only did 17% of the course"), but not the $900,000 figure.

Trustpilot review stating Brandon claims 2 million but has only shown 900k

Source: Trustpilot review claiming that Invest with Brandon's course is "very generic" and "Not worth" & questions net worth

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The Real Problem: The Strategy He Teaches

Set the credentials aside for a moment, because this is what actually matters for your money. Brandon teaches selling puts — specifically, aggressive put-selling — as a primary way to generate income. In my professional opinion, that's dangerous, and here's the precise mechanism why.

When you sell puts as your main strategy, you can't participate in a stock's upside — your maximum gain is the premium. So as the market grinds higher and volatility falls, put-sellers are pushed to do more and more just to keep their income up: selling a larger number of contracts, and selling more aggressive (closer-to-the-money) strikes. It feels great for months. Then the market drops 5–10% suddenly, the VIX spikes above 50, and all those aggressive short puts go deep in the money at once — triggering margin calls and forcing the trader to close positions at the worst possible time. That's how put-selling accounts blow up.

And this isn't my characterization of what he teaches — it's his own stated position. In a July 2026 post on X, Brandon wrote that hedging is "paying money to doubt yourself" and that "every leg you add to an options trade, you're usually betting AGAINST your own conviction." He dismissed spreads — the defined-risk structures that protect traders in a downturn — as strategies that "look great on paper" but "cap the exact wins that build fortunes." In a reply in the same thread, he confirmed his approach: "cash secured will underperform... Buffett didn't do cash. Cause it's terrible." His alternative is "portfolio secured" put-selling — selling puts backed by his invested portfolio rather than cash, which in practice means selling on margin.

Put those together and, in my opinion, you have the exact profile of the strategy that performs beautifully in a rising market and then destroys accounts in a volatility spike: margin-dependent, unhedged, and philosophically opposed to the very risk management that would protect his students when the market turns. He isn't hiding this — he's proudly stating it.

Investing With Brandon tweet calling hedging paying money to doubt yourself and dismissing spreads as capping wins
Investing With Brandon reply confirming he sells portfolio secured puts on margin and calling cash secured terrible

To be clear: selling puts is a genuinely useful technique. I do it myself. But it's one tool in the toolbox — not the entire toolbox. Teaching it as a standalone primary income strategy, to beginners, marketed as easy retirement income, is the problem. And it's a technique you can learn for free from countless sources; it isn't proprietary knowledge worth a premium course.

Additionally, in my opinion, the real reason why he was accused of "abandon discord", and his paying members, during "peak bearish market" is: he potentially suffered massive losses.

Selling premium is an easy strategy to package and sell, except it fails, spectacularly, during bear markets.

A Better Way: Defined-Risk Premium Selling

The approach I teach solves exactly this failure mode. It's called the Financed Bull: you buy a call debit spread and finance it by selling puts on high-quality companies — so you participate in the upside "for free" while defining your risk with hedges against the black-swan crashes that wipe out naked put-sellers. It's premium selling with a seatbelt.

My returns of approximately +78% and +67% over the past year are backed by real E*TRADE brokerage statements on my verified results page — not screenshots or backtests. You can see the full approach in my guide to making a living selling options and my options trading strategies hub.

For the Record: Regulators Are Watching This Industry

The trading-education industry has a documented history of federal regulatory action against exactly this kind of marketing — and the specifics matter. In its case against RagingBull.com, the FTC alleged the company pitched pricey subscriptions promising that customers could "double or triple" their accounts quickly and easily; it settled for $2.425 million. In its case against Warrior Trading, the FTC challenged claims that consumers could earn a full-time income with minimal capital — the company settled for $3 million. In a related action, the FTC noted that one RagingBull "guru" personally pocketed more than $13.6 million from the scheme while customers, per the agency, largely lost money.

The through-line in every one of those cases is the same: a charismatic "guru" marketing an easy, high-income trading lifestyle, selling access to a strategy — while the documented reality was that most customers didn't profit. That is precisely the shape of a "retired at 31, $30K/month selling puts" pitch. I'm not saying Brandon Arnett is Raging Bull; I'm saying the FTC has repeatedly found that this category of marketing misleads consumers, and you should evaluate any version of it — including his — with that track record firmly in mind.

Ironically, both Raging Bull and Warrior Trading sued me after I made a YouTube video exposing them - some believe that I had something to do with the FTC investigation and lawsuit. Unfortunately, I am unable to confirm or deny these claims.

Raging Bull FTC investigation

I've spent years publicly warning about deceptive trading-education marketing, and I break down cases like these in detail in my Abundantly Erica video (including the subpoena that was sent to Warrior Trading and the Federal Lawsuit I filed against Option Alpha).

Warrior Trading subpoena

Regulators are paying closer attention to earnings claims in this space than ever — and that context is exactly what a buyer should weigh before handing money to anyone selling a 'retired at 31' story.

None of this means Brandon Arnett has done anything illegal — there is no regulatory action against him that I'm aware of. It simply means the "easy money from a retired-at-31 guru" pitch is precisely the pattern regulators have repeatedly scrutinized, and buyers should apply that same scrutiny here.

How Investing With Brandon Compares


Investing with Brandon

BestStockStrategy.com

Verified results

Trading claims unverified

Core strategy

Aggressive put-selling

Financed Bull with hedging

Credentials

22 days as a registered broker

Ivy League graduate, former Wall Street investment banker

In fairness: Brandon isn't the worst of the trading-education crowd. His misrepresentations are, in my opinion, less egregious than some — but "not the worst" is a low bar, and it's not a reason to spend money on a strategy you can learn for free.

Related Reviews: Brandon isn't the only "retired young" trading guru I've reviewed — see my full reviews of Invest with Henry (Henry Moldavskiy), Abundantly Erica and Invest with Corey.

Alternatives to Investing With Brandon (2026)

If you like the idea of income from selling puts but not the unhedged, margin-dependent version documented above, you have better options.

1. Learn put-selling itself for free. As covered throughout this review, the core technique Brandon packages is, in my opinion, freely learnable — start with my selling put options guide at zero cost.

2. Premium selling with a seatbelt. The difference between an income strategy and a blow-up risk is hedging. I trade selling option premium with debit-spread hedging (Financed Bull), and my trailing-twelve-month results — +78% (~$700K) and +67% (~$2M) — are backed by real E*TRADE statements on my verified results page.

3. Hold every educator to the statements test. Unverified trading claims are the pattern in this entire space. Require real brokerage statements before paying anyone — mine are backed by E*TRADE statements on the results page above.

My free training (127+ five-star reviews) is the no-cost starting point for the hedged approach.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Is Investing With Brandon legit?

Brandon Arnett sells a real course, and some students report satisfaction, so it isn't a criminal scam. But his marketing misrepresents his credentials — his FINRA record shows his entire broker registration lasted 22 days, obtained more than a year after his course brand launched — and in my opinion the strategy he teaches is not a reliable path to consistent profits.

Was Brandon Arnett really a stock broker?

Per FINRA BrokerCheck (CRD# 8152336), he was a registered representative at MML Investors Services from September 15 to October 6, 2025 — 22 days — after passing the Series 7 on September 13, 2025. So technically, yes: he is a "former" stock broker today. Whether that label fairly describes a 22-day registration obtained after his course was already built and selling is for readers to judge. His primary career was as a hospital cardiac cath lab technologist from 2015 to 2025.

Did Brandon Arnett really retire at 31?

His own FINRA filing lists full-time hospital employment until August 2025 (age 32), followed immediately by a MassMutual insurance-agent role listed as current on his most recent filing. Based on those records, the "retired at 31" description is difficult to reconcile with his documented work history.

Is the Investing With Brandon course worth it?

In my opinion, no. He teaches aggressive put-selling as a primary strategy — a technique you can learn for free, and one that, taught this way, tends to produce eventual large losses when the market drops sharply. The credential misrepresentations are an additional reason for caution.

What is Brandon Arnett's real net worth?

He claims over $3 million. Public Clark County records show about $850,000 in Las Vegas real estate, and his 2024 BiggerPockets posts describe a rental that wasn't cash-flowing. His trading profits can't be independently verified.

Is selling put options a good strategy?

Selling puts is a useful tool, but not as your primary strategy. Because you can't capture upside, a rising market pushes you toward more contracts and more aggressive strikes — until a sharp pullback and a volatility spike trigger margin calls. Defined-risk premium selling (buying a call spread financed by selling puts) is the disciplined alternative.

How much does Investing With Brandon cost?

As of July 2026, his "Stock & Options Transformation" training + Discord membership is listed at $37 per month. The subscription itself is inexpensive — but in my opinion the real cost isn't the fee, it's the strategy: unhedged, margin-dependent, aggressive put-selling that can produce large losses when the market drops sharply. And the technique itself is widely available to learn for free.

What are the best alternatives to Investing With Brandon?

In my opinion: learn put-selling itself from free resources first, and hold any paid educator to one standard — verified results or real brokerage statements. My own approach, selling option premium with debit-spread hedging (Financed Bull), is documented with verified E*TRADE statements, and my free training covers the foundation before you spend a dollar with anyone.

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Last Updated on July 16, 2026 by David Jaffee

About the Author David Jaffee

David Jaffee is the founder of BestStockStrategy.com and creator of the "Financed Bull" Strategy. He graduated from an Ivy League university and worked at Wall Street's most successful investment banks before becoming a full-time options trader and educator. David has taught over 3,500 students in 70+ countries, and his strategy has achieved a win rate approaching 98%. He specializes in selling options for premium income and buying call spreads for long-term wealth building. Verified Trading Results | Student Reviews | Trading Course & Trade Alerts | Watch on YouTube | Personal Website

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