Prepare for the LLQP Ethics and Professional Practice Civil Code / Québec module with free sample questions, a 20-question full-length mock exam, topic drills, timed practice, Quebec duty, disclosure, consent, privacy, conflict, and documentation scenarios, and detailed explanations in Securities Prep.
LLQP Ethics and Professional Practice Civil Code focuses on Quebec-specific legal and ethical judgment across fact-finding, disclosure, privacy, documentation, conflicts, and prohibited conduct. If you are searching for LLQP Ethics and Professional Practice Civil Code 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.
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Free diagnostic: Try the 20-question LLQP Ethics Civil Code / Québec full-length practice exam before subscribing. Use it as one ethics-module baseline, then return to Securities Prep for timed mocks, topic drills, explanations, and the full Québec ethics question bank.
These questions usually reward the option that applies the right next-step compliance logic under the Quebec civil-law framework, with disclosure, consent, and documentation handled correctly.
| Competency area | Weight | What that means in practice |
|---|---|---|
| Integrate into practice the legal aspects of insurance and annuity contracts (Civil Code / Québec) | 60% | disclosure, consent, documentation, contract-law issues, and Québec civil-code legal duties |
| Integrate into practice the rules governing the activities of representatives (Civil Code / Québec) | 40% | conduct rules, conflicts, prohibited practices, privacy, professional duties, and defensible next-step judgment |
If several unseen mixed attempts are above roughly 75% and you can explain the Québec duty, consent, documentation, or escalation logic behind each answer, you are likely ready. More practice should improve ethics judgment, not repeated-rule recognition.
Use the full-length page as a timed diagnostic, then open the focused module pages below for the competency area that caused the most misses. Return to the main Securities Prep route when you are ready for mixed practice and progress tracking.
Use these free SecuritiesMastery.com resources for concept review, then return to this page when you are ready to practice in Securities Prep.
Try these 12 original sample questions for LLQP Ethics Civil Code. They are designed for self-assessment and are not official exam questions.
What this tests: client interest
A client wants a product that pays a higher commission but does not fit the documented need. What should the representative do?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Ethical insurance practice starts with suitability and client interest. Compensation cannot justify an unsuitable recommendation.
What this tests: licensed authority
A Quebec representative is asked for advice outside permitted insurance authority. What is the best response?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Representatives must act within authority and competence. Referrals protect clients and reduce regulatory risk.
What this tests: privacy
A client provides medical information for underwriting. What duty applies?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Insurance work involves sensitive personal information. Consent, confidentiality, secure handling, and purpose limitation are core obligations.
What this tests: replacement conduct
A representative encourages replacement but compares only lower premium and omits lost guarantees. What is wrong?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Replacement analysis must be balanced. Clients need to understand benefits lost, new underwriting, costs, values, and suitability before deciding.
What this tests: documentation
A client chooses less coverage than recommended because of budget. What should be documented?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Documentation protects the client and representative by showing advice, disclosure, and informed decision-making.
What this tests: vulnerable client
An elderly client appears confused and is pressured by a relative to change beneficiary. What is the best response?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Ethical conduct requires attention to vulnerability, undue influence, and informed consent. The representative should use firm procedures and escalation.
What this tests: misrepresentation
A client asks whether omitting a health fact will lower premiums. What should the representative say?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Insurance contracts depend on accurate disclosure. Misrepresentation can lead to denial, rescission, or other serious consequences.
What this tests: complaints
A client complains about advice given during a sale. What should happen?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Complaint handling must be fair and documented. It is part of professional accountability and consumer protection.
What this tests: needs-based selling
A client asks for the highest coverage available but cannot explain the need or afford premiums. What should happen?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Needs-based selling links coverage to objectives and ability to pay. More insurance is not automatically better.
What this tests: referral
A client needs a will updated because of beneficiary planning. What is appropriate?
Best answer: A
Explanation: Insurance recommendations can interact with legal documents. The representative should recognize boundaries and refer legal questions.
What this tests: fair treatment
A client does not understand exclusions in a policy. What should the representative do?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Fair treatment requires clear explanation of material limitations, not only benefits. Understanding exclusions is part of informed consent.
What this tests: ongoing service
A client has a major life change after buying coverage. What should be recommended?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Ongoing service helps maintain suitability. Life events can change needs, beneficiary intent, ownership, and affordability.