Frequently asked questions about LLQP Ethics & Professional Practice (Civil Code / Québec): module fit, exam structure references, and study tips.
Confirm current LLQP administration rules and provincial licensing steps with the official sources before you rely on any third-party summary.
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This page is for LLQP Ethics & Professional Practice (Civil Code / Quebec). Most other provinces and territories use the Common Law version instead.
No. The CSI LLQP Insurance Course uses CSI course assessments and credits. Provincial or harmonized licensing exams are separate modular exams administered under current regulator-approved processes.
The exact administration can depend on the regulator and exam provider. A commonly cited harmonized example is 75 minutes for the module, with 25 questions containing 20 scored items and 5 pilot items. Candidates should confirm the current official administration guide before relying on those figures.
It tests whether you can connect Quebec legal framework, contract-law issues, representative obligations, disclosure, documentation, and client protection into one safe professional response. Stronger answers usually identify the Quebec legal or conduct issue before jumping to the product or sales action.
The biggest trap is answering with a generic insurance instinct instead of a Quebec civil-code and representative-duty instinct. The right answer often turns on lawful process and client protection more than on product familiarity.
Treat it as a process module. Move through the scenario in this order: identify the Quebec legal issue, identify the representative-duty issue, identify the disclosure or documentation duty, and then choose the safest next action.
Usually yes. The Quebec legal framework changes how the rest of the module should be read, so it is safer to stabilize that context early instead of trying to add it later.
Open heavier mixed practice after you can already identify whether the scenario is mainly about Quebec legal framework, contract law, representative obligations, or a next-step process issue. If you start too early, every miss can look like random confusion when the real weakness is the missing Quebec frame.
The Civil Code version is built for Quebec and should be read through Quebec legal framing. The Common Law version is for the rest of the common-law jurisdictions. They sit inside the same broader LLQP family, but they are not interchangeable modules.