CSI Financial Planning I study guide for powers of attorney for property, personal care, and living wills, with learning objectives, Canadian planning decision cues, and exam traps.
Powers of attorney for property, personal care, and living wills is part of the CSI Financial Planning I (FP I) wills and power of attorney topic area, which carries 15% of the exam emphasis. Treat this section as a Canadian planning-decision lesson: the exam is usually testing whether the advisor can identify the client issue, gather the right facts, and choose the next planning step before settling on a product or tactic.
| Concept | What to know for FP I |
|---|---|
| Planning issue | Explain the purpose of powers of attorney in incapacity planning and substitute decision-making |
| Client fact | Distinguish powers of attorney for property from powers of attorney for personal care |
| Advisor action | Identify when incapacity planning deserves priority even though the client is focused on death planning |
| Risk or constraint | Assess how trusted decision-maker selection affects the usefulness of a power of attorney |
| Documentation cue | Explain why incapacity planning should be coordinated with the client’s broader financial arrangements |
| Exam trap | Determine when a client misunderstanding about powers of attorney could create planning risk |
FP I scenarios often look like ordinary household advice conversations. A client may ask about debt, tax, investments, retirement, estate documents, or insurance, but the best answer depends on the wider planning context. Read for the client’s goal, the tightest constraint, the missing fact, and the reason one next step is more defensible than another.
A product or account answer can be attractive but still premature if the advisor has not confirmed affordability, time horizon, tax impact, liquidity need, family obligation, risk tolerance, or legal-document status. The stronger response usually improves the plan’s fact base and connects the recommendation to the client’s complete circumstances.
| If the stem shows… | Prefer an answer that… |
|---|---|
| facts are incomplete | gather the missing planning facts before recommending a product or strategy |
| the client has more than one goal | balance the goals instead of solving only the first visible issue |
| tax, liquidity, debt, estate, or insurance facts change the answer | connect the recommendation to the full household plan |
| the stem includes uncertainty or a specialist issue | define scope, document assumptions, and refer when the issue exceeds the advisor role |
Start by naming the planning problem in plain language. Then identify whether the advisor has enough information to solve it. If not, the next step is fact gathering, clarification, or referral. If the facts are complete, test each answer against the client’s goal, cash flow, debt position, tax setting, investment horizon, retirement objective, estate need, and risk exposure.
For FP I, many weak answers solve a narrow product question while ignoring the household plan. A recommendation should fit the client’s circumstances today and still make sense after related planning areas are considered.
After reviewing this section, reduce the lesson to three items: the client fact that matters most, the planning risk created by that fact, and the next step that protects the recommendation. This habit turns long FP I scenarios into manageable decision points.
When reviewing practice questions, mark the words that reveal sequence: before, after, missing, changed, urgent, already, and review. These words often decide whether the answer is a recommendation, a clarification step, or a review/update step.
Return to the FP I guide for the full topic map, or use the FP I Cheat Sheet for formulas, decision tables, and final review cues.