Learn client intent, legal documents, capacity, and family facts for FP Canada CFP, with learning objectives, key concepts, exam focus, planning application, and common traps.
Use this CFP article to study Client Intent, Legal Documents, Capacity, and Family Facts inside the Estate Planning and Law for Financial Planning chapter. CFP questions reward planning judgment: identify the client issue, separate relevant facts from noise, test cross-domain consequences, and choose the recommendation that can be defended in the client file.
| Concept | Why it matters on CFP |
|---|---|
| Identify estate-planning documents and family facts needed before | Identify estate-planning documents and family facts needed before making a recommendation. |
| Distinguish wills, powers of attorney, personal directives, mandates, | Distinguish wills, powers of attorney, personal directives, mandates, and beneficiary designations by function. |
| Recognize when capacity, undue influence, or family conflict | Recognize when capacity, undue influence, or family conflict should pause implementation. |
| Determine which executor, trustee, guardian, or attorney facts | Determine which executor, trustee, guardian, or attorney facts are relevant to the planning issue. |
| Assess whether client intent is clear enough to | Assess whether client intent is clear enough to support estate-planning analysis. |
For this section, read the fact pattern as a client file rather than as a product prompt. The stronger answer usually identifies the objective, the binding constraint, the planning tradeoff, and the follow-up needed to make the recommendation implementable.
Do not treat beneficiary or will wording as administrative detail. Ownership, tax, liquidity, incapacity, and family context can change the recommendation.
| If the case emphasizes… | First check… | Stronger answer usually does this |
|---|---|---|
| stated goal | whether it is affordable, realistic, and properly prioritized | separates goal from need and constraint |
| product or account | tax, liquidity, risk, beneficiary, and timing effects | explains why the structure fits the client |
| missing facts | whether the file supports advice yet | gathers or verifies before recommending |
| competing priorities | cash flow, family, tax, retirement, estate, and insurance impacts | phases the recommendation or ranks the issues |
Build each answer as family objective -> ownership and beneficiary structure -> liquidity and tax consequence -> legal follow-up. In review, rewrite missed questions as client fact -> planning issue -> recommendation -> tradeoff -> implementation or follow-up. That structure reveals whether the miss came from knowledge, prioritization, or incomplete client-file reasoning.
Use the CFP Study Plan for pacing, the CFP Cheat Sheet for quick recall, and CFP MCQ practice when you are ready for timed application.