What Does GLBA Compliance Actually Cost?
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) requires financial institutions to protect consumer financial information. The updated Safeguards Rule significantly expanded requirements in recent years. Here is a realistic breakdown for 2026:
| Approach | Estimated Cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Full DIY (internal team only) | $12,000 – $35,000 | 3 – 8 months |
| Automation platform + assessment | $6,000 – $20,000 | 2 – 4 months |
| Consultant + assessment (traditional) | $25,000 – $60,000 | 4 – 8 months |
The biggest line items are the information security program development ($5,000 – $15,000), risk assessment ($3,000 – $10,000), and Qualified Individual designation and oversight.
Budget Tier Recommendations
Small financial institution (under $12,000): If you maintain customer information for fewer than 5,000 consumers, you may qualify for the simplified Safeguards Rule. Use an automation platform to implement the core requirements and designate a Qualified Individual.
Mid-size institution ($12,000 – $25,000): Full Safeguards Rule compliance with automation platform. Budget for penetration testing and vulnerability assessments as required by the updated rule.
Large institution ($25,000+): Comprehensive information security program with dedicated CISO as Qualified Individual, ongoing monitoring, and board-level reporting.
Our Recommendation
For the cheapest path, we recommend LowerPlane — starting at $4,000/year, it automates evidence collection against Safeguards Rule requirements, manages your risk assessment process, tracks vendor oversight obligations, and generates board-ready compliance reports. Customers typically eliminate the need for a separate GRC tool and risk assessment consultant.
Where to Cut Costs
- Check the simplified threshold. Institutions with fewer than 5,000 consumer records have lighter requirements. Confirm your classification.
- Automate risk assessments. The Safeguards Rule requires periodic risk assessments. Platform-guided assessments cost a fraction of consultant-led ones.
- Designate an internal Qualified Individual. Training an existing employee as QI is cheaper than outsourcing the role.
- Bundle security testing. Annual penetration testing can be combined with tests required by other regulations.
Where Not to Cut Costs
- The risk assessment. The Safeguards Rule specifically requires a written risk assessment. Make it thorough.
- Encryption. Customer financial data must be encrypted in transit and at rest. Implement proper encryption.
- Incident response plan. The updated rule requires a written incident response plan. Invest in a tested plan.
- Vendor management. You must oversee service providers who access customer information.
Get Started
Try LowerPlane → and see how much you can save on your GLBA compliance journey.