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CSI Financial Planning II Practice Test

Prepare for CSI Financial Planning II (FP II) with free sample questions, a 60-question full-length mock exam, topic drills, timed practice, retirement, tax, insurance, business, family-law, and estate scenarios, and detailed explanations in Securities Prep.

FP II rewards candidates who can integrate multiple planning domains and still choose the most defensible recommendation when retirement, tax, insurance, business, family-law, and estate issues collide. If you are searching for FP II sample questions, a practice test, mock exam, or simulator, this is the main Securities Prep page to start on web and continue on iOS or Android with the same Securities Prep account. This page includes 32 sample questions with detailed explanations so you can try the exam style before opening the full practice route.

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Free diagnostic: Try the 60-question FP II full-length practice exam before subscribing. Use it as one advanced planning baseline, then return to Securities Prep for timed mocks, topic drills, explanations, and the full FP II question bank.

What this FP II practice page gives you

  • a direct route into Securities Prep practice for CSI Financial Planning II
  • 32 sample questions with detailed explanations across the main FP II integration buckets
  • targeted practice around retirement, tax planning, insurance, small business, family law, and estate decisions
  • detailed explanations that show why the strongest integrated recommendation beats the narrow domain answer
  • a clear free-preview path before you subscribe
  • the same Securities Prep subscription across web and mobile

FP II exam snapshot

  • Provider: CSI
  • Exam: Financial Planning II (FP II)
  • Format: 60 multiple-choice questions in 3 hours
  • Passing target: 60%
  • Pacing target: about 180 seconds per question

Topic coverage for FP II practice

  • Financial Planning Practice (10%): process quality, recommendation defensibility, and implementation discipline
  • Savings Planning & Debt Management (10%): liquidity, debt structure, savings priorities, and household tradeoffs
  • Investment and Tax Planning (10%): after-tax investing, account structure, and integrated recommendation logic
  • Retirement Planning (20%): income design, sequencing, pension choices, and retirement implementation tradeoffs
  • Insurance Planning (10%): coverage design, ownership choices, and risk-transfer fit
  • Financial Planning for Small Business (15%): shareholder, succession, compensation, and business-owner planning issues
  • Family Law (15%): separation, support, property, and planning implications for clients and dependants
  • Estate Planning (10%): control, transfer, beneficiary, and estate-structure decisions

What FP II is really testing

  • integrating retirement, tax, insurance, business, family-law, and estate issues instead of solving them in isolation
  • identifying the client constraint that dominates when several planning domains point in different directions
  • choosing the strongest implementation path when timing, ownership, legal structure, or succession matters
  • knowing when the right answer is planning coordination or referral rather than an immediate product move
  • using Canadian planning logic precisely enough to avoid the technically plausible but weaker answer

Common question styles

  • Which integrated recommendation is strongest?: retirement drawdown, tax-aware investing, insurance restructuring, or succession decisions
  • What matters most now?: family-law exposure, shareholder structure, estate-control issue, or retirement cash-flow constraint
  • What should happen first?: clarify facts, coordinate legal/tax input, adjust funding strategy, or change the implementation order
  • Which planning tradeoff dominates?: tax cost versus liquidity, control versus simplicity, income timing versus deferral, or family fairness versus efficiency
  • Which answer is too narrow?: product-first or tax-only answers that ignore the broader planning context

High-yield pitfalls

  • treating retirement, tax, and estate decisions as separate silos when the question is integrated
  • solving a small-business issue without checking personal cash-flow or succession consequences
  • missing family-law effects on property division, support, ownership, or beneficiary planning
  • focusing on tax reduction while ignoring liquidity, control, or insurance gaps
  • jumping to implementation before clarifying who owns what, who depends on whom, and what timeline matters

How FP II differs from similar routes

If you are choosing between…Main distinction
FP II vs FP IFP II is more integrated and advanced; FP I is the earlier household-planning foundation.
FP II vs AFP Exam 1FP II is still part of the CSI course-sequence stage; AFP Exam 1 is the later competency-based planning exam.
FP II vs AFP Exam 2FP II is still a standard multiple-choice course exam; AFP Exam 2 is the later case-based planning exam in the CSI PFP sequence.
FP II vs QAFPFP II sits inside the CSI planning lane; QAFP is the FP Canada applied-planning route.

How to use the FP II simulator efficiently

  1. Start with retirement, tax, and family-law drills so integrated planning judgment becomes faster.
  2. Review every miss until you can explain which cross-domain constraint actually controlled the recommendation.
  3. Move into mixed sets once you can switch between business, estate, insurance, and retirement scenarios without narrowing the problem too early.
  4. Finish with timed runs so the 60-question pace feels controlled.

FP II decision filters

  • Advanced constraint: identify whether the issue is tax, retirement, estate, business, insurance, investment, or family planning before selecting the tactic.
  • Trade-off effect: check how the recommendation changes liquidity, after-tax income, estate transfer, risk protection, and client flexibility.
  • Sequencing: decide whether the next step is more fact-finding, specialist coordination, implementation, monitoring, or plan revision.
  • Client-fit test: avoid technically correct strategies that are too costly, complex, illiquid, or poorly matched to the client objective.

When FP II practice is enough

If several unseen mixed attempts are above roughly 75% and you can explain the advanced planning constraint, trade-off, and next-step logic behind each answer, you are likely ready. More practice should improve recommendation judgment, not memorized strategy labels.

Free preview vs premium

  • Free preview: 32 public sample questions on this page plus the web app entry so you can validate the question style and explanation depth.
  • Premium: the full FP II practice bank, focused drills, mixed sets, timed mock exams, detailed explanations, and progress tracking across web and mobile.

Focused sample questions

Use these child pages when you want focused Securities Prep practice before returning to mixed sets and timed mocks.

Free review resources

Use these free SecuritiesMastery.com resources for concept review, then return to this page when you are ready to practice in Securities Prep.

Free samples and full practice

  • Live now: this practice route is available in Securities Prep on web, iOS, and Android.
  • On-page sample set: this page includes 32 public sample questions for this route.
  • Full practice: open the Securities Prep web app or mobile app for mixed sets, topic drills, and timed mocks.

Good next pages after FP II

  • AFP Exam 1 if you are moving from the CSI course stage into the later planning-competency exams
  • AFP Exam 2 if you are comparing FP II against the later case-based planning stage
  • FP I if you need to reinforce the earlier planning-foundation course
  • QAFP if you are comparing the CSI planning lane against the FP Canada route

32 FP II sample questions with detailed explanations

These are original Securities Prep practice questions aligned to FP II retirement, business-owner planning, family law, estate, insurance, tax integration, savings, debt, and recommendation-quality decisions. They are not CSI exam questions and are not copied from any exam sponsor. The expanded 32-question set gives you a broader first pass before you continue in Securities Prep with mixed sets, topic drills, and timed mocks.

Question 1

Topic: Retirement Planning

Alina, 60, is leaving her employer. She can either leave her defined benefit pension in the plan and start it later with a joint-and-60%-survivor pension, or transfer the commuted value to a locked-in account and invest it herself. Her spouse, Marc, has little retirement income of his own, and Alina’s top priority is predictable income for Marc if she dies first. Which consideration should be most decision-critical?

  • A. The plan’s survivor pension terms for Marc
  • B. The portability of the commuted value
  • C. The chance of leaving more to the estate
  • D. The investment flexibility of the locked-in account

Best answer: A

Explanation: Because Alina’s priority is secure income for Marc after her death, the quality of the survivor pension is the key differentiator. Portability, investment choice, and possible estate upside matter less than whether Marc receives dependable ongoing income.

In this comparison, the deciding issue is survivor protection, not portability or control. A defined benefit pension can provide a joint-and-survivor form that continues a specified income stream to the surviving spouse after the member dies. By contrast, transferring the commuted value to a locked-in account may offer more investment choice and possible estate residue, but it shifts market, longevity, and withdrawal risk to the couple and does not automatically replicate a guaranteed survivor pension.

When a spouse has limited independent retirement resources and the member’s main concern is income continuity after death, survivor provisions become decision-critical. Portability and flexibility are important only after that core protection need is satisfied.


Question 2

Topic: Insurance Planning

Jenna, 60, will retire in four months and lose her employer’s extended health and dental plan. She assumes her provincial medical plan will cover most future healthcare costs. Her current claims average $3,600 a year for prescription drugs, dental work, and vision care. During the insurance review, what is the best next step for her planner?

  • A. Replace the employer plan now with the richest private package.
  • B. Review provincial limits and likely gaps, then assess supplemental coverage.
  • C. Wait until retirement expenses appear before reviewing health coverage.
  • D. Assume provincial coverage is adequate and redirect premiums to savings.

Best answer: B

Explanation: The planner should start with a gap analysis, not a product recommendation. Provincial medical coverage is the base layer, but it may not replace employer benefits for drugs, dental, vision, and similar expenses, so the client’s likely uncovered costs must be reviewed first.

In Canada, provincial medical coverage is the foundation of health protection, but it generally focuses on medically necessary physician and hospital services. It does not automatically replace workplace extended health benefits. Because Jenna is about to lose coverage for expenses that are often outside basic provincial coverage, the proper next step is to confirm what her province will cover, estimate her likely ongoing out-of-pocket costs, and only then decide whether private supplemental insurance is appropriate.

  • Confirm the provincial plan’s scope for her situation.
  • Identify expected recurring costs after retirement.
  • Compare those costs with available supplemental coverage.

A recommendation to buy or skip coverage before doing that review would be premature.


Question 3

Topic: Retirement Planning

Leila expects taxable income of $82,000 this year and $145,000 next year because of a deferred compensation payment. Her marginal tax rate is 31% this year and is expected to be 43% next year. She has $18,000 available to invest now, already has enough RRSP contribution room, and has no short-term liquidity needs. To maximize the value of her RRSP accumulation strategy, which approach is best?

  • A. Contribute to the RRSP now and claim the deduction this year.
  • B. Wait until next year to contribute and deduct next year.
  • C. Contribute to the RRSP now and claim the deduction next year.
  • D. Invest in a non-registered account now and revisit next year.

Best answer: C

Explanation: RRSP contribution timing and RRSP deduction timing do not have to be the same. Because Leila already has room, contributing now starts tax-sheltered growth immediately, and delaying the deduction to next year lets her use it against income taxed at the higher marginal rate.

The core concept is that an RRSP contribution can be made in one year while the deduction is claimed in a later year. Since Leila already has available RRSP room, she can contribute $18,000 now without overcontributing and get the benefit of tax-sheltered growth right away. Because her expected marginal tax rate rises from 31% to 43% next year, the deduction is more valuable if claimed next year rather than this year.

  • Available room now supports an immediate contribution.
  • A higher future marginal tax rate increases the value of the deduction.
  • Delaying the contribution itself gives up a year of sheltered growth.

The key takeaway is that when room already exists, contributing now and carrying forward the deduction can outperform waiting or deducting at a lower tax rate.


Question 4

Topic: Retirement Planning

All amounts are in CAD. Lina, 41, has $20,000 of unused RRSP contribution room. Her taxable income will be $95,000 this year, placing her at a 30% marginal tax rate, and she expects $155,000 next year at a 43% marginal tax rate after becoming a partner. She received a $35,000 after-tax bonus for long-term savings, but she must keep at least $10,000 available for a roof replacement next spring. Which recommendation best aligns with sound financial planning?

  • A. Wait until next year to make any RRSP contribution.
  • B. Contribute $20,000 now, keep $10,000 liquid, and claim the deduction this year.
  • C. Contribute the full $35,000 to her RRSP now.
  • D. Contribute $20,000 now, keep $10,000 liquid, and defer the deduction to next year.

Best answer: D

Explanation: The best recommendation separates the contribution decision from the deduction decision. Lina can use her current RRSP room now to start tax-sheltered growth, keep the roof money accessible, and likely get more value by claiming the deduction when her marginal tax rate is higher next year.

RRSP planning has two separate decisions: when to contribute and when to deduct. Because Lina already has $20,000 of room and the money is intended for long-term savings, contributing that amount now starts tax-deferred growth immediately. But the RRSP deduction does not have to be claimed in the same year as the contribution. Since her marginal tax rate is expected to rise from 30% to 43% next year, the deduction is likely more valuable if it is deferred. Good planning also protects known short-term cash needs, so the $10,000 for the roof should stay liquid rather than be contributed and then withdrawn. The advisor should document the income assumption and confirm Lina understands the cash-flow trade-off. Simply waiting to contribute gives up a year of sheltered growth.


Question 5

Topic: Family Law

After separating, Aisha and Marc agree their two children will stay in the former family home for 18 months before it is sold. Marc’s income includes a large variable bonus, and Aisha expects to return to full-time work when the youngest starts school next year. They want a separation agreement that settles parenting and property now but schedules a reconsideration of support when those expected events occur. Which agreement feature best matches that goal?

  • A. A review clause
  • B. A non-variation clause
  • C. A release clause
  • D. An indexing clause

Best answer: A

Explanation: A review clause is designed for situations where future change is expected, not merely possible. It lets the parties settle current issues now while planning a scheduled reassessment of support when known events, such as return to work or changing income, occur.

In family-law planning, different separation-agreement clauses serve different functions. When the parties already expect a future change that could affect support, a review clause is usually the best fit because it builds in a planned reassessment at a stated date or trigger event. That works well here because the children’s housing plan, the delayed home sale, Aisha’s expected return to work, and Marc’s variable bonus all create foreseeable support changes.

A review clause allows parenting and property terms to be settled now while recognizing that child or spousal support may need to be revisited later. By contrast, clauses that waive future claims, try to freeze future changes, or simply adjust amounts by inflation do not match this broader planning need. The key distinction is scheduled reconsideration versus automatic adjustment or restriction.


Question 6

Topic: Savings Planning & Debt Management

Which statement best describes how an advisor should estimate a client’s savings capacity for planning purposes?

  • A. The amount available after essential spending, while treating irregular costs as separate from savings planning.
  • B. The amount left from net income after essential spending, expected irregular costs, and needed emergency reserve funding.
  • C. The amount of discretionary cash flow after debt payments, assuming emergency savings can be addressed later.
  • D. The amount left from gross income after fixed monthly bills are paid.

Best answer: B

Explanation: Savings capacity is not just whatever seems left over each month. A sound estimate starts with net income and then subtracts essential spending, expected irregular costs, and amounts needed to build or maintain an emergency reserve.

The core concept is realistic cash-flow surplus. In planning, savings capacity should reflect what a client can consistently save without relying on wishful assumptions. That means starting with net income, then subtracting essential ongoing expenses, adding allowance for irregular but predictable costs such as annual insurance or home repairs, and recognizing any need to fund or replenish an emergency reserve.

If irregular costs or emergency needs are ignored, the estimated surplus will be overstated and the plan may fail in practice. Using gross income also overstates capacity because taxes and payroll deductions reduce what the client can actually direct to savings. The closest distractors confuse savings capacity with a rough monthly leftover rather than a durable planning estimate.


Question 7

Topic: Financial Planning for Small Business

Which statement best describes succession planning for a small-business owner?

  • A. A tax strategy that shifts future share growth to the next generation while the owner retains current value.
  • B. A continuity plan that names interim management and operating steps if the owner dies or becomes disabled.
  • C. A coordinated transfer plan aligning ownership, control, continuity, retirement, estate, and family goals.
  • D. A retirement strategy that estimates how much sale proceeds the owner will need after leaving the business.

Best answer: C

Explanation: Succession planning is broader than any single tax, legal, or retirement strategy. It coordinates the transfer of ownership and control with business continuity, the owner’s retirement needs, estate intentions, and family objectives.

Succession planning is an integrated planning process for an owner-manager, not just one document or one tax technique. It links who will own the business, who will manage it, when and how the transition will occur, and how the plan will support the owner’s retirement income, estate wishes, and family goals. That family dimension can include fairness between active and inactive children, protection of a spouse or partner, and clarity about decision-making if death or disability occurs.

It commonly brings together:

  • continuity planning for operations
  • ownership-transfer arrangements
  • estate and tax planning tools
  • retirement-income planning for the departing owner

The key point is integration: succession planning connects these pieces into one coordinated transition strategy.


Question 8

Topic: Financial Planning Practice

Nadia, 40, and Lucas, 42, have two children. Their monthly surplus is only $400, they owe $18,000 on a 9% line of credit, have no emergency fund, only basic group life insurance and no disability coverage, and no wills or powers of attorney. Nadia has a workplace RRSP with a 50% employer match up to 4% of salary, and they still want retirement on track for age 65. Which first-year recommendation best fits a comprehensive plan when affordability is the deciding factor?

  • A. Send all surplus to the LOC and stop retirement saving until it is repaid, leaving insurance and estate planning for a later year.
  • B. Maximize RRSP contributions for the deduction, make minimum LOC payments, and postpone insurance and estate documents until cash flow improves.
  • C. Fund RESPs and permanent insurance first, because long-term growth and estate value should take priority over current cash-flow pressure.
  • D. Trim spending, keep only matched RRSP deposits, add term life and disability coverage, complete wills and powers of attorney, and use tax refunds to build a small emergency fund before extra LOC payments.

Best answer: D

Explanation: A comprehensive plan must be implementable, not just theoretically optimal. The best approach reduces cash-flow strain, preserves high-value matched retirement savings, closes major insurance and estate gaps, and uses tax benefits in a practical sequence.

The key issue is sequencing. With only $400 of monthly surplus, Nadia and Lucas cannot aggressively fund every goal at once, so the strongest recommendation is the one that remains affordable while still covering all major planning areas. Trimming spending addresses budgeting, keeping only the employer-matched RRSP contribution supports retirement and tax efficiency, adding term life and disability coverage addresses immediate protection needs, and completing wills and powers of attorney closes basic estate gaps. Building a small emergency fund first also reduces the chance that unexpected expenses will send them back to high-interest debt. A plan focused only on tax deductions, only on debt repayment, or only on long-term accumulation is less balanced and less workable.


Question 9

Topic: Insurance Planning

All amounts are in CAD. Sonia, 39, and her spouse have two children ages 5 and 8 and a mortgage with 17 years remaining. She wants life insurance mainly to replace income and help retire the mortgage if she dies before the children are financially independent. Her maximum new premium budget is $175 per month, she has unused RRSP and TFSA room, and she wants the option to keep coverage later if her health worsens. Which recommendation best aligns with her planning objective and cash flow?

  • A. Individual 20-year level term, renewable and convertible
  • B. Universal life with minimum funding
  • C. Participating whole life with lifelong cash value
  • D. Creditor mortgage insurance through the lender

Best answer: A

Explanation: A 20-year level term policy best matches a temporary income-replacement and mortgage-protection need. It is typically the most affordable way to secure a meaningful death benefit, and renewable or convertible features help preserve future insurability if Sonia later wants longer coverage.

The core planning task is to match the policy structure to the duration of the need and the client’s cash flow. Sonia’s main need is temporary family protection while the children are still dependent and the mortgage remains significant, not estate creation or extra tax-sheltered accumulation. A 20-year level term policy fits that time horizon, provides predictable premiums that are more likely to stay within budget, and the renewable/convertible features preserve flexibility if her health changes or a permanent need later develops.

  • Temporary income-replacement needs usually point to term insurance.
  • A capped premium budget favours level term over permanent coverage.
  • Unused RRSP and TFSA room weakens the case for using permanent insurance mainly as a tax-sheltered savings tool.

The closer alternatives either cost more for features she does not currently need or protect only the lender rather than the family.


Question 10

Topic: Estate Planning

During an estate-planning review, Priya, an Ontario resident, tells her advisor that she wants her sister to manage her estate and wants 60% of her estate to go to her spouse and 40% to her adult son from a prior marriage. She has no valid will and says, “My family knows what I want.” Most of her assets are in her sole name. What is the best next step?

  • A. Begin probate-minimization planning using joint ownership strategies.
  • B. Explain the intestacy risk and refer her to a lawyer to prepare a will.
  • C. Prepare a letter of wishes naming her sister and desired estate shares.
  • D. Document her wishes in the file and continue the estate review.

Best answer: B

Explanation: Priya’s verbal instructions do not control her estate. Without a valid will, she would die intestate, so provincial law would govern who inherits estate assets and who can administer them; the advisor should identify that gap and refer her for legal drafting.

The key distinction is between a testate estate and an intestate estate. A testate outcome requires a valid will, which can set out intended beneficiaries and nominate the person to administer the estate. An intestate outcome does not follow the client’s verbal wishes; instead, provincial succession rules determine who receives estate assets, and the court process determines who may administer them.

Here, Priya wants both distribution control and control over who manages the estate, but most assets are in her sole name, so they would generally fall into the estate. The advisor’s best next step is to explain that this is a will gap and refer her to a lawyer to prepare one. Only after that foundation is in place should the advisor move to secondary strategies such as beneficiary designations or probate planning.

The closest distractors use helpful estate-planning tools, but none replaces a valid will for overall estate control.


Question 11

Topic: Financial Planning Practice

After completing retirement and estate projections for Claire and Denis, an advisor presents two viable decumulation strategies: start CPP now and preserve registered assets longer, or defer CPP to age 70 and draw more from the RRSP first. The clients say the trade-offs feel complicated and ask, “What do you recommend?” What is the advisor’s best next step?

  • A. Highlight one option’s downside until they agree with the other.
  • B. Restate both options and leave the choice entirely to them.
  • C. Explain trade-offs, confirm priorities, then recommend the best-fit strategy.
  • D. Proceed to implementation because the analysis has already been done.

Best answer: C

Explanation: When clients ask for guidance on a complex planning choice, the advisor should first make sure the trade-offs are understood and that the clients’ priorities are still accurate. The advisor can then recommend the strategy that best fits those priorities without pressuring the clients.

In recommendation delivery, education, recommendation, and persuasion serve different purposes. Education means explaining the relevant trade-offs, assumptions, risks, and planning consequences in plain language. Recommendation means applying the clients’ confirmed goals and constraints to identify the strategy that best fits. Persuasion is different: it tries to push the clients toward an outcome through pressure, fear, or one-sided framing.

Here, the analysis is complete and the clients are explicitly asking for advice. The proper next step is to explain the two decumulation approaches clearly, confirm that their priorities and comfort level still support the underlying assumptions, and then recommend the stronger-fit strategy. Staying purely neutral avoids the advisor’s role, while moving straight to implementation skips informed client agreement.


Question 12

Topic: Family Law

Which property-settlement option is best described as letting one spouse keep a major indivisible asset, achieving fairness through a compensating payment to the other spouse, but increasing the retaining spouse’s liquidity pressure and long-term concentration risk?

  • A. An immediate sale and division of proceeds
  • B. An in-kind split of available family assets
  • C. A deferred sale with temporary co-ownership
  • D. A buyout funded by a cash equalization payment

Best answer: D

Explanation: A buyout funded by a compensating payment usually gives one spouse sole control of the asset while still supporting a fair settlement. Its main tradeoff is weaker liquidity for the spouse keeping the asset, along with more long-term exposure to that one asset.

The key comparison is between control and liquidity. A buyout is commonly used when an asset is hard to divide or strategically important, such as a private company or cottage. One spouse keeps ownership and control, and the other receives a cash payment or equivalent value so the settlement remains fair. The downside is that the retaining spouse may need to refinance, use savings, or accept a payment schedule, which can tighten cash flow and leave more of their net worth concentrated in one asset. By contrast, selling the asset improves liquidity but gives up control, while in-kind division or temporary co-ownership usually reduces the need for a large cash payout. Maximum control often comes with the greatest liquidity strain.


Question 13

Topic: Financial Planning for Small Business

Amir and Chloé each own 50% of an Ontario consulting corporation. They want death and disability buyout funding, but their current plan is only a verbal understanding that the remaining owner will buy the other’s shares at “fair market value.” No valuation formula, trigger definitions, or signed agreement exists. If their advisor’s main concern is implementation risk, which recommendation best fits?

  • A. Put a signed buy-sell agreement in place first.
  • B. Buy equal insurance now and settle the wording later.
  • C. Record the understanding in board minutes and update wills.
  • D. Use email confirmations as temporary evidence of the deal.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The best choice is to formalize the shareholders’ obligations before arranging funding. For a small-business succession plan, insurance supports the agreement, but it does not replace clear, enforceable contract terms.

Contract-based planning for owner-managers works only if the key obligations are likely enforceable. Here, the owners show intent, but the material terms are still uncertain: what events trigger the sale, how the shares will be valued, and who must buy. A verbal understanding to transact at “fair market value” leaves too much room for dispute.

Insurance can fund a buyout, but it does not create a binding buy-sell obligation by itself. The advisor should therefore sequence the advice so legal documentation is completed first, usually through a written agreement prepared by counsel and signed by the parties. Useful terms include trigger events, a valuation formula or process, the purchase obligation, and the funding method.

The key takeaway is that informal evidence of intent may support discussions, but it is weaker than a properly executed contract when implementation risk is the deciding factor.


Question 14

Topic: Family Law

Priya and Daniel live in British Columbia, have lived together for 18 months, and have a child. They are separating and ask their planner whether they are “common-law spouses for everything” so they can divide assets and update their tax filings. Which action best aligns with sound financial-planning practice?

  • A. Treat them as spouses under every rule because they have a child.
  • B. Document province and relationship facts, explain both rule sets, and refer for legal advice.
  • C. Use only B.C. family-law rules to guide all planning advice.
  • D. Use only federal common-law tax rules to guide all planning advice.

Best answer: B

Explanation: The best practice is to avoid assuming one universal definition of spouse or common-law partner. In a separation, provincial family-law rights and federal tax rules can both affect the plan, so the planner should document the facts, explain the limits of the advice, and coordinate a legal referral.

There is no single Canadian definition of relationship status that controls every planning issue. In a family-law case, provincial law usually governs matters such as property and support rights, and those rules can differ by province. Federal rules can separately affect tax filing status, benefits, and the tax treatment of certain transfers or support arrangements.

A sound planner should therefore:

  • confirm the clients’ province of residence
  • document cohabitation length, children, ownership, and agreements
  • explain that legal status may differ by rule set
  • refer the clients to a family-law lawyer before finalizing assumptions

The key mistake is treating either the provincial or federal regime as the only one that matters.


Question 15

Topic: Retirement Planning

All amounts are in CAD. Erin, 67, needs 78,000 after tax each year. Her guaranteed income from CPP, OAS, and a pension is 42,000. She also has a RRIF worth 520,000, a TFSA worth 160,000, a non-registered account worth 120,000 with large unrealized gains, and cash of 12,000. She wants 25,000 available for home repairs within two years and says she sold equity funds during the last market decline. Which advisor action BEST aligns with sound decumulation planning?

  • A. Use TFSA and cash first to defer RRIF tax as long as possible.
  • B. Withdraw only from the RRIF because it is retirement income.
  • C. Document a blended withdrawal plan, hold near-term cash, and review annually.
  • D. Annuitize the entire RRIF immediately to remove investment stress.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The best action is a written, blended withdrawal strategy rather than relying on one account or one product. That approach can balance tax efficiency over time, keep planned short-term spending liquid, and reduce the risk that Erin makes emotional decisions in a downturn.

Good decumulation planning is about more than minimizing current tax. The advisor should integrate withdrawal sequencing, liquidity for known short-term needs, and behavioural safeguards so the client can stick with the plan.

Here, Erin has a clear liquidity need for home repairs, limited cash on hand, and a history of selling during market stress. A documented plan that combines RRIF withdrawals with other account sources as appropriate, while reserving near-term cash, is the most durable approach because it:

  • avoids overreliance on any one account
  • can smooth taxable income over time
  • protects known short-term spending needs
  • gives Erin a process she is more likely to follow

Single-focus strategies that only defer tax, only use one account, or lock everything into an annuity miss part of the planning problem. The best answer is the one that balances tax, liquidity, flexibility, and behaviour together.


Question 16

Topic: Financial Planning for Small Business

Priya owns 40% of an incorporated landscaping company in Ontario. She wants to retire in 18 months, sell her shares to her daughter who already works in the business, and use the sale proceeds to fund retirement income. Her two co-owners say they support the plan, but the signed unanimous shareholder agreement contains a right of first refusal, a mandatory valuation formula well below Priya’s expected price, and a clause restricting transfers to family members without unanimous consent. One co-owner suggests they can “ignore the old agreement” and sign a short side letter later. What is the single best recommendation?

  • A. Proceed with the daughter’s purchase because the co-owners have expressed support.
  • B. Ask her accountant to review tax efficiency before any legal review.
  • C. Model retirement income using Priya’s expected sale price for now.
  • D. Refer Priya to a business lawyer to review the shareholder agreement before finalizing the succession plan.

Best answer: D

Explanation: This is a material contractual issue, not just a planning preference or tax question. A signed shareholder agreement may control who can buy the shares, at what price, and on what terms, so Priya needs specialized legal review before the retirement and succession plan is built around the sale.

The core concept is recognizing when a planner has identified a legal risk that is significant enough to require referral rather than informal interpretation. Here, the signed unanimous shareholder agreement directly affects transferability, valuation, and consent, all of which determine whether Priya can sell to her daughter and whether the expected proceeds will support retirement.

  • The agreement may block the proposed buyer.
  • The valuation formula may materially reduce retirement capital.
  • A verbal assurance or later side letter may not override the existing contract.

A planner can flag the issue and pause implementation, but should not treat the contract as optional or attempt to interpret enforceability. The closest distractors fail because they assume the intended transaction can proceed before the binding agreement is legally reviewed.


Question 17

Topic: Savings Planning & Debt Management

All amounts are in CAD. Priya and Marc, both age 40, want to buy a home in 6 months and need another $70,000 for the down payment. Priya could make a regular RRSP withdrawal; any amount withdrawn would be taxable at her 40% marginal rate. Marc asks whether his self-directed RRSP could hold part of their mortgage instead. They have only three months of emergency savings and no recent retirement projection. Which advisor action best aligns with sound financial-planning practice?

  • A. Document assumptions, compare after-tax, retirement, and liquidity effects, and obtain specialist review if the self-directed mortgage is still being considered.
  • B. Ask them to choose their preferred structure first, then update the plan after closing.
  • C. Recommend the self-directed RRSP mortgage to keep interest inside the plan.
  • D. Recommend the RRSP withdrawal because the home purchase should take priority over retirement assets.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The best step is an integrated comparison before endorsing either funding method. A taxable RRSP withdrawal reduces both net proceeds and retirement capital, while a self-directed RRSP mortgage can add concentration, liquidity, administrative, and legal complexity, so assumptions and any needed specialist input should be documented.

A home-purchase funding choice should be assessed within the client’s full plan, not treated as a quick cash-source decision. Here, a regular RRSP withdrawal creates an immediate tax cost and permanently removes tax-sheltered retirement assets. A self-directed RRSP mortgage may preserve registered capital, but it can also increase concentration in one property-related asset and add administration, pricing, liquidity, and legal/documentation issues. Because the clients also have a thin emergency reserve and no recent retirement projection, the advisor should test affordability and resilience before recommending either approach.

  • Calculate the net cash available from any taxable withdrawal.
  • Recheck emergency-fund adequacy and post-closing cash flow.
  • Compare retirement impact and loss of diversification.
  • Refer for legal, tax, or administration review if the self-directed structure remains under consideration.

The key planning standard is integrated analysis first, implementation second.


Question 18

Topic: Investment and Tax Planning

Amir runs a consulting practice as a sole proprietor. Net business income is $260,000 a year, and he currently needs about $210,000 from the business for family spending and mortgage payments. His spouse does not work in the business. Amir wants to keep control, may retain more profits later, and expects the business to help fund retirement in about 10 years. He asks whether he should incorporate now “to save tax.” Which action by his planner best aligns with sound financial-planning practice?

  • A. Prepare a current-year tax comparison only and recommend the lower-tax structure.
  • B. Document a sole proprietor versus corporation comparison using his cash needs and goals, review the trade-offs with Amir, and coordinate tax and legal input.
  • C. Recommend immediate incorporation because a longer time horizon usually justifies the change.
  • D. Recommend adding his spouse as a co-owner now to expand tax-planning options.

Best answer: B

Explanation: Changing business structure is an integrated planning decision, not a tax shortcut. Incorporation can create tax-deferral and compensation-planning opportunities, but only if they fit the client’s cash-flow needs, control preferences, and long-term objectives. The planner should document assumptions, explain trade-offs, and involve tax and legal specialists before implementation.

A move from sole proprietorship to a corporation can change tax-planning opportunities, but it also changes constraints. Corporate tax deferral is most valuable when profits can stay in the company; if Amir needs most of the cash personally, the benefit may be smaller than he expects. The recommendation therefore should not be based on tax alone.

A sound FP II process is to:

  • compare current personal cash needs with profits that could actually remain in the business;
  • assess how structure affects compensation flexibility, control, compliance, and future retirement or exit planning;
  • document the assumptions and review the trade-offs with the client;
  • coordinate implementation with the accountant and lawyer.

The weaker choices focus on one feature only, while good planning balances tax with liquidity, control, risk, and long-term goals.


Question 19

Topic: Family Law

Amira, 46, recently separated in Ontario. She has two children, a joint mortgage, RRSPs, a defined benefit pension, an RESP, and life insurance naming her spouse as beneficiary. She asks whether she should keep the home, reduce insurance, stop RESP contributions, and redesign retirement savings, but property division and support are still being negotiated and no separation agreement has been signed. What is the best next step for her advisor?

  • A. Pause RESP funding and redirect cash flow to the mortgage.
  • B. Immediately update beneficiaries and coverage on insurance and registered accounts.
  • C. Complete post-separation fact finding and coordinate legal/tax input before changing assets, insurance, retirement, estate, or RESP plans.
  • D. Rebuild retirement projections now using current assets and estimated support.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The best next step is an integrated post-separation review based on verified legal and financial facts. Divorce can simultaneously change net worth, tax and cash flow, insurance obligations, retirement assets, estate decisions, and education funding, so product-by-product advice is premature.

After a separation, the planner should first establish the new planning framework before recommending transactions. Equalization or property division can change net worth and ownership, support can change after-tax cash flow, insurance may be required to secure support or child-related obligations, pension and registered assets affect retirement capacity, and wills, beneficiary designations, and RESP commitments may all need review. A proper FP II workflow is to obtain the separation documents or confirm negotiation status, update the balance sheet and cash flow, confirm ownership and beneficiary details, and coordinate with family-law and tax professionals where needed before implementing changes.

Advice that starts with one account, one policy, or one cash-flow tweak misses the integrated effect of divorce.


Question 20

Topic: Financial Planning Practice

A client says, “I want to put $50,000 into a TFSA right away.” Which follow-up question best clarifies the client’s real objective before discussing specific solutions?

  • A. Do you want to hold GICs, ETFs, or mutual funds in the account?
  • B. How much TFSA contribution room do you currently have available?
  • C. Would you be more comfortable with a conservative or balanced portfolio?
  • D. What are you hoping this money will accomplish, and when will you need it?

Best answer: D

Explanation: When a client starts with a solution, the planner should first uncover the goal behind it. Asking what the money is meant to accomplish and by when shifts the discussion from product selection to client objectives.

A solution-focused request often reflects a client’s idea of the answer, not necessarily the actual planning need. The best first follow-up is an open-ended question that uncovers the purpose of the money and the relevant time horizon. That information helps the advisor determine whether a TFSA is actually suitable, or whether another strategy would better fit the client’s needs.

Questions about contribution room, investment mix, or product type are important later, but they assume the TFSA is already the right solution. In good fact finding, objective first, then constraints, then implementation. The key takeaway is to move from “what product do you want?” to “what are you trying to achieve?”


Question 21

Topic: Financial Planning for Small Business

Priya, 58, owns all shares of an incorporated wholesale business worth about 2 million. Her son works in the business and is the likely successor; her daughter is not involved. Priya is insurable and has personal investments, but annual business free cash flow is modest, so she does not want a plan that relies on heavy buyout debt. She also wants to keep control for now and treat both children fairly over time. Which strategy best fits these priorities?

  • A. Keep control, plan for her son to receive the business, and equalize her daughter with life insurance or other non-business assets.
  • B. Transfer equal voting shares now to both children.
  • C. Sell the shares now to her son with a short vendor take-back note.
  • D. Redeem shares over time to fund equal cash gifts to both children.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The best fit is to have the active child receive the business while using life insurance or other non-business assets to balance the inactive child’s inheritance. That supports fairness without forcing the company or successor to finance a large buyout, and it lets Priya keep control until she is ready to transfer ownership.

When only one child is active in the business, fair treatment does not always mean equal ownership. A strong owner-manager strategy is to separate business succession from estate equalization: the active child receives the business interest, while the inactive child receives comparable value from life insurance or other non-business assets. In Priya’s case, that approach fits the stated constraint because business cash flow is modest, so debt-funded buyouts or ongoing redemptions would add more strain and implementation risk. It also preserves her control until she is ready to transfer ownership.

  • It supports business continuity.
  • It reduces reliance on future business cash flow.
  • It aligns the family outcome with each child’s actual role.

The closest alternative is a sale to her son, but that still creates repayment pressure on the business or successor.


Question 22

Topic: Retirement Planning

In Canada, which statement about employer and supplemental retirement arrangements is correct?

  • A. A SERP is a registered plan used when an employer wants benefits above registered limits.
  • B. An IPP is a registered defined benefit pension plan often set up for one owner-manager or key employee.
  • C. A defined contribution plan guarantees the pension amount based on earnings and service.
  • D. A DPSP can be funded by both employer and employee contributions.

Best answer: B

Explanation: An IPP is a registered defined benefit plan designed for one individual or a small group, often an owner-manager or key employee. Its key feature is that the retirement benefit is formula-based, unlike arrangements that merely fix contributions or provide non-registered supplemental benefits.

The key distinction is that an IPP is a registered defined benefit pension plan, usually established for one person or a very small group of connected employees, often in an incorporated owner-manager setting. Because it is defined benefit, the promised retirement benefit is based on a formula rather than being determined solely by investment results. This separates it from a defined contribution plan, where contributions are fixed, and from a DPSP, which is an employer-funded profit-sharing arrangement. It also differs from a SERP, which is generally non-registered and is used to supplement retirement benefits when registered plan limits would otherwise restrict them. When assessing retirement resources, planners should first identify whether the arrangement defines the benefit, defines the contribution, shares profits, or provides a top-up outside registered limits.


Question 23

Topic: Investment and Tax Planning

An advisor has completed discovery for Priya, age 57, who plans to retire in eight years. Priya says her portfolio must earn about 5% annually over the long term, but she would be uncomfortable if it fell by more than about 10% in a severe market year. Her RRSP and TFSA currently hold 70% Canadian dividend stocks and 30% cash. After confirming her liquidity reserve and time horizon, what is the best next step?

  • A. Pick top-performing funds first and let that determine the asset mix.
  • B. Raise equity exposure until projected return reaches 5%.
  • C. Design a strategic asset mix using imperfectly correlated asset classes, then select investments.
  • D. Delay changes until markets are more favourable for diversification.

Best answer: C

Explanation: The advisor should next build a strategic asset allocation that reflects Priya’s return target and risk limit. Modern portfolio theory focuses on combining asset classes with different correlation patterns before choosing specific funds or securities.

Modern portfolio theory says portfolio risk depends not just on the risk of each holding, but also on how holdings move relative to each other. Once the advisor has confirmed Priya’s required return, time horizon, liquidity needs, and tolerance for loss, the next step is to design a diversified strategic asset mix that seeks her target return with the lowest practical level of portfolio risk. Priya’s current mix is concentrated in one equity style and cash, so simply adding more equities or buying recent winners would not properly address concentration and correlation. Specific fund or ETF selection comes after the long-term asset mix is set. The key point is that diversification is about portfolio construction, not just owning more investments.


Question 24

Topic: Estate Planning

All amounts are in CAD. Marta, age 74, is widowed and wants her two independent adult children to receive equal inheritances. She plans to leave her cottage to Liam under her will and has named Ava as direct beneficiary of her RRIF because Ava “is better with money.” No rollover is available on death.

Estate snapshot

RRIF: $600,000 (Ava named beneficiary)
Cottage FMV: $650,000
Cottage ACB: $200,000
Cash in estate: $80,000
Life insurance: none

Which action by Marta’s advisor BEST aligns with sound financial-planning practice?

  • A. Recommend adding Liam as joint owner of the cottage now so the property will avoid tax at death.
  • B. Confirm the RRIF designation because passing outside the estate prevents both probate and tax.
  • C. Leave the current structure in place and rely on the executor to equalize the children later.
  • D. Estimate RRIF income tax and cottage capital-gains tax, assess estate liquidity, and coordinate any will or beneficiary changes with legal and tax advisors.

Best answer: D

Explanation: The key issue is that tax at death and asset flow can be mismatched. Marta’s RRIF may pass directly to Ava, while the RRIF income inclusion and the cottage’s accrued gain can still reduce the estate, potentially leaving Liam with a smaller net benefit unless liquidity and documents are coordinated.

At death, a RRIF is generally included in income unless a qualifying rollover applies, and capital property such as a cottage is generally treated as if it were disposed of at fair market value. That means taxes can reduce the estate even when some assets, like a RRIF with a named beneficiary, pass outside the estate.

Here, Ava may receive the RRIF directly, but the estate may still need cash to settle the RRIF tax and the cottage’s accrued gain. With only limited cash and no insurance, Liam could receive a cottage burdened by an estate liquidity problem, so the children may not receive equal net inheritances.

Sound FP II advice is to quantify the likely tax, test liquidity, explain the net result to Marta, document assumptions, and coordinate any changes with legal and tax professionals. Probate avoidance is not the same as tax avoidance.


Question 25

Topic: Savings Planning & Debt Management

During a savings and debt review, Priya and Daniel ask whether they should draw $150,000 from their HELOC to buy a non-registered income-producing portfolio instead of accelerating mortgage payments. The HELOC rate is variable, their monthly surplus is only $650, and Daniel’s bonus income is uncertain. They assume the interest will be deductible, but they have not yet confirmed how the borrowed funds would be traced. What is the best next step for their planner?

  • A. Confirm deductibility and tracing, then model after-tax borrowing cost and stressed cash flow.
  • B. Shift all surplus to mortgage prepayments, then revisit investing later.
  • C. Defer the strategy until rates decline, then reassess suitability.
  • D. Compare expected portfolio returns with the HELOC rate, then proceed.

Best answer: A

Explanation: Borrowing to invest should be tested on an after-tax, cash-flow-stressed basis, not just on expected return. Here, the planner first needs to confirm that the borrowed funds would likely support interest deductibility and can be clearly traced, then assess whether higher rates or lower income would strain the clients’ cash flow.

When clients want to borrow to invest, the planner’s next step is to validate the strategy mechanics before giving a recommendation. In this case, that means confirming whether the intended use of the borrowed funds could support interest deductibility and whether the loan can be cleanly traced, then comparing the strategy using after-tax borrowing cost rather than the headline rate alone. Because the HELOC is variable and the clients have a thin monthly surplus with uncertain bonus income, the planner also needs a cash-flow stress test to see whether higher rates or weaker income would make the strategy unsuitable.

  • Confirm intended investment use and tracing.
  • Estimate the after-tax cost of the debt.
  • Stress-test payments under higher rates and lower income.

A simple return-versus-rate comparison can make leveraged investing look attractive when it may not be sustainable.


Question 26

Topic: Investment and Tax Planning

During a discovery meeting, Maya and Olivier say they want to set aside 40,000 for their 7-year-old daughter. They want the money invested tax-efficiently, but they are unsure whether it should be used only for post-secondary education or be available later for any purpose. Maya’s parents may also contribute, and the couple want to decide who should control the assets until their daughter is older. What is the advisor’s best next step?

  • A. Gift the funds directly to the child because attribution usually will not apply.
  • B. Clarify the education goal, contributors, and desired control before choosing the account structure.
  • C. Use an in-trust account so future income will be taxed to the child.
  • D. Open an RESP now and address ownership and flexibility later.

Best answer: B

Explanation: The advisor should first pin down the objective, contributor sources, and control wishes. Those facts determine whether education funding should drive the recommendation, whether RESP features fit, and whether attribution concerns make a child’s taxable arrangement unsuitable.

For child-focused tax planning, the account recommendation comes after three key facts are confirmed: purpose, contributor, and control. If post-secondary education is the main goal, an RESP often deserves priority because it is designed for education funding and can provide tax-deferred growth and access to education incentives. If the money may be used for any purpose, or if the family wants different ownership or control, a non-registered structure may also need to be considered. Attribution also cannot be assessed properly until the advisor knows who will contribute, because investment income on property transferred to a minor may be taxed back to the contributor rather than the child. The right process is to clarify the goal, expected contributors, and ownership/control before recommending a structure.


Question 27

Topic: Retirement Planning

In FP II, a retirement income needs analysis is BEST described as which of the following?

  • A. A calculation of retirement income based mainly on a fixed pre-retirement income replacement ratio.
  • B. A review of portfolio returns to confirm the assets can beat an appropriate benchmark.
  • C. A projection of client-specific retirement spending using lifestyle, inflation, longevity, housing, and healthcare assumptions.
  • D. An estimate of current household expenses carried forward until retirement without later-life cost changes.

Best answer: C

Explanation: A sound retirement income needs analysis is spending-based and client-specific. It should reflect how the client expects to live in retirement and test major assumptions such as inflation, longevity, housing changes, and healthcare costs.

The core concept is that retirement planning begins with future spending needs, not with a generic income percentage or an investment benchmark. A proper retirement income needs analysis estimates how much income the client will need by translating expected lifestyle into cash-flow assumptions and then adjusting those assumptions for inflation, how long income may be needed, likely housing changes such as mortgage payoff or downsizing, and rising healthcare or support costs later in life.

This matters because retirement spending is usually uneven across time. Early retirement may include travel or leisure spending, while later years may bring higher medical, home-care, or accessibility costs. A fixed income replacement ratio can be a rough starting point, but it is not a complete needs analysis. The best approach is a client-specific projection of retirement expenses over time.


Question 28

Topic: Retirement Planning

Nadia, 62, plans to leave her salaried job within six months. Her advisor projects a retirement funding gap of $12,000 per year from age 62 to 65; at 65, CPP, OAS, and a small employer pension will eliminate the gap. Nadia says her current role has become too stressful and she does not want to keep working full-time, but a former employer has offered consulting work for up to two days a week that would pay about $15,000 annually. She and her spouse are debt-free, want to keep their cottage and planned travel spending, and are uncomfortable taking more investment risk this close to retirement. What is the single best recommendation?

  • A. Retire now and permanently cut annual spending by $12,000.
  • B. Delay retirement and keep working full-time until age 65.
  • C. Retire now and raise portfolio risk to seek higher returns.
  • D. Use phased retirement and part-time consulting until age 65.

Best answer: D

Explanation: The gap is temporary, and Nadia is willing to earn part-time income but not stay in full-time employment. Phased retirement is the best fit because it bridges the shortfall until age 65 without forcing major lifestyle cuts or extra investment risk.

When comparing phased retirement, delayed retirement, and reduced spending, the best response depends on the size and duration of the gap and on the client’s flexibility. Here, the shortfall is temporary, ending when CPP, OAS, and pension income begin at 65. Nadia also has a clear non-financial constraint: she wants to leave a stressful full-time role now, but she is open to limited consulting work. That makes phased retirement the strongest choice because it preserves her preferred lifestyle, uses available earned income, and avoids taking more market risk near retirement.

Delayed retirement is more suitable when a client is willing to keep working in the same way, and spending cuts are more suitable when the client can comfortably give up discretionary goals. For a temporary gap with available part-time earnings, phased retirement is the best match.


Question 29

Topic: Insurance Planning

During a comprehensive review, Leah and Jon, both 56, tell their advisor they want to retire at 62 and redirect $30,000 a year from cash reserves to investments. They own a home, cottage, and rental duplex. Leah says their insurer has not updated replacement-cost estimates in nine years, and their policies provide only $1 million of personal liability coverage. A major uncovered loss would force them to delay retirement. What is the advisor’s best next step?

  • A. Document the exposure and arrange an immediate P&C coverage review.
  • B. Keep the plan unchanged unless the insurer raises a concern.
  • C. Finish the retirement recommendations and revisit coverage next year.
  • D. Redirect the $30,000 to mortgage prepayments as self-insurance.

Best answer: A

Explanation: The possible property and liability shortfall is material because a large loss or lawsuit could consume assets earmarked for retirement. The proper sequence is to document the issue and obtain a prompt property and casualty review before finalizing recommendations that assume those assets are protected.

When a possible property or liability coverage gap could materially change retirement timing, net worth, or cash flow, it becomes a priority planning risk. In this case, outdated replacement-cost estimates, multiple properties, and limited liability coverage create a realistic chance that an uninsured loss or claim could force asset liquidation or delayed retirement. The advisor should flag the issue, explain its impact on the plan, and refer Leah and Jon for an immediate review with their property and casualty insurer or broker before confirming how much cash can safely be redirected to investments.

This is the right sequence: protect the balance sheet first, then optimize savings or debt decisions. Delaying the review, assuming current coverage is fine, or trying to “self-insure” through mortgage reduction does not adequately address a risk that could invalidate the plan’s core assumptions.


Question 30

Topic: Financial Planning for Small Business

Amira owns a specialty packaging company and wants help generating sales in another province. Her main concern is minimizing the risk that the person could legally bind the company to pricing or delivery terms. She does not need fixed hours, exclusivity, or daily supervision. Which arrangement best fits this concern?

  • A. An employee salesperson who signs standard orders
  • B. An independent contractor who only refers qualified leads
  • C. An independent contractor who negotiates prices and accepts orders
  • D. A commission agent who binds the company on delivery terms

Best answer: B

Explanation: The best fit is the referral-only independent contractor. The decisive factor is authority: if the person only introduces prospects and cannot quote, negotiate, or accept orders, Amira reduces agency risk while keeping the flexible structure she wants.

The core concept is that employment status and agency authority are different issues. A person may be an employee or an independent contractor, but agency risk arises when the business gives that person authority, or appears to give authority, to affect the business’s legal relationships with customers. Here, Amira does not need control over hours or methods, which supports a contractor arrangement. More importantly, the referral-only role avoids authority to set terms or accept orders, so it best reduces the chance that the company will be bound by that person’s commitments. The key takeaway is that calling someone a contractor does not remove legal exposure if that person is still acting as the company’s agent.


Question 31

Topic: Family Law

In Ontario, Leila and Dan are separating. Neither can afford the family home alone. Their other major property is Dan’s defined benefit pension, Leila’s shares in her incorporated business, and an inheritance Leila kept in a separate account with records. They want the settlement approach with the most liquidity and lowest implementation risk. Which approach best fits?

  • A. Swap the business for the pension using statement estimates.
  • B. Use the inheritance to offset other property without tracing it.
  • C. Sell the home and obtain formal valuations before equalization.
  • D. Let Dan keep the home and settle when pension starts.

Best answer: C

Explanation: Selling the unaffordable home improves liquidity, and formal valuation of the pension and business plus tracing of the inheritance reduces the chance of an unfair settlement. Complex property should generally be measured before spouses trade assets against each other.

When a separating couple has a family home, a pension, a private business interest, and a possible inheritance exclusion, property analysis becomes more complicated than simply comparing account balances. If neither spouse can carry the home, selling it converts equity into liquid value and avoids forcing an impractical retention decision. A defined benefit pension and private-company shares commonly require formal valuation, and inherited property may need tracing to support exclusion treatment.

  • turn the home into liquid proceeds if it is not affordable to keep
  • obtain a proper pension valuation
  • obtain a business valuation
  • confirm inheritance tracing before calculating offsets

This best matches the stated need for liquidity and low implementation risk, unlike approaches that rely on rough estimates or defer settlement.


Question 32

Topic: Estate Planning

An Ontario client, age 72, was recently diagnosed with early dementia but can still explain her wishes clearly. Her current will is basic but still acceptable to her if she dies before further updates. The advisor also learns she has no powers of attorney, an outdated RRIF beneficiary designation, and no plan for the tax on her cottage at death. Which estate-planning issue should be addressed first?

  • A. Address registered-plan distribution by changing the RRIF beneficiary.
  • B. Address estate distribution by rewriting the will in detail.
  • C. Address tax liquidity by estimating the cottage’s terminal tax.
  • D. Address incapacity planning with an immediate powers-of-attorney referral.

Best answer: D

Explanation: When capacity risk is present, incapacity planning moves to the front of the estate-planning sequence. Putting powers of attorney in place first protects the client if her condition worsens and preserves the ability to manage property and personal decisions while other estate refinements are completed.

The key planning concept is sequencing by urgency and by the client’s ability to act. A progressive cognitive condition creates an immediate risk that the client may soon be unable to sign legal documents. Because she currently has no powers of attorney, the first estate issue is incapacity planning through a prompt legal referral.

Once that safeguard is in place, the advisor can continue with the next layer of estate work, such as updating beneficiary designations, refining the will, and planning for tax on the cottage. Those items remain important, but they are secondary here because the stem says the existing will is still acceptable as a fallback. The closest distractor is rewriting the will, but the more urgent gap is the absence of incapacity documents.

FP II integrated planning map

Use this map after the sample questions to connect individual items to integrated Canadian planning cases, prioritization, recommendation conflicts, implementation, and client communication decisions these Securities Prep samples test.

    flowchart LR
	  S1["Integrated client case"] --> S2
	  S2["Identify competing objectives and constraints"] --> S3
	  S3["Model planning impact and trade-offs"] --> S4
	  S4["Prioritize sequence of recommendations"] --> S5
	  S5["Explain rationale risk and alternatives"] --> S6
	  S6["Set implementation and review plan"]

Quick Cheat Sheet

CueWhat to remember
IntegrationThe best answer usually balances tax, cash flow, investment, insurance, retirement, and estate effects.
PrioritizationUrgent risk gaps, legal deadlines, liquidity needs, and tax traps can outrank attractive investments.
AssumptionsWhen facts are incomplete, state assumptions and avoid overconfident precision.
Client communicationTranslate technical planning into clear client actions and trade-offs.
MonitoringLife events, law changes, markets, and family changes can require a plan update.

Mini Glossary

  • Tax integration: Coordinating account type, income, gains, deductions, and timing in planning.
  • Estate planning: Planning for transfer of assets, wills, beneficiaries, trusts, and liquidity needs.
  • Asset allocation: Portfolio split across asset classes, regions, sectors, or strategies.
  • Insurance need: Gap between financial exposure and available resources after an adverse event.
  • Debt-service ratio: Measure comparing debt payments with income to assess borrowing capacity.

In this section

Revised on Wednesday, May 13, 2026