 |  |  | | ChFC® Curriculum |  | The ChFC® (Chartered Financial Consultant) designation can be earned by completing 6 required courses HS 300, HS 311, HS 321, HS 326, HS 328, and HS 330, and 2 elective courses from the following group: HS 322, HS 334, and HS 352. | Required Courses Click on a course for more details. | | HS 300 — | Financial Planning: Process and Environment* | HS 300 Financial Planning: Process and Environment Provides an overview of the financial planning process, including communication techniques, ethics, risk tolerance, time-value-of-money concepts, financial planning applications, regulatory issues, and the legal and economic environment for financial planning. Offers an understanding of the role and responsibilities of a financial planner along with some analytical skills to aid in financial decision-making. Close | | HS 311 — | Fundamentals of Insurance Planning | HS 311 Fundamentals of Insurance Planning Focuses on the role of planning for insurance needs. Covers basic concepts in risk management and insurance, insurance industry operations, legal principles pertaining to the industry, and regulation of insurers. Examines social insurance, life insurance and annuities, medical and disability income insurance, long-term care insurance, and personal property and liability insurance. Concludes with an overview of commercial property and liability insurance and a case study. Close | HS 321 Income Taxation Examines the federal income tax system with particular reference to the taxation of individuals. Covers such items as items of gross income, exclusions from gross income, deductions, tax credits, capital gains and losses, taxation of life insurance and annuities, income taxation of partners, partnerships, corporations, and shareholders. Close | | HS 326 — | Planning for Retirement Needs | HS 326 Planning for Retirement Needs Focuses on retirement planning for the business, the business owner, and the individual. Covers qualified plans, non qualified plans, and IRAs and deals with retirement needs for individual clients. Emphasizes the practical knowledge needed for choosing the best retirement plan and designing a plan that will meet a client’s needs. Discusses personal retirement planning and retirement distribution planning. Close | HS 328 Investments Covers various aspects of the principles of investments and their application to financial planning. Discusses risk analysis and risk and return computations. Looks at stocks, bonds, investment companies, options, and futures contracts. Includes an extended discussion of tax issues in investing, as well as of issues in the practice of portfolio management, including strategic and tactical asset allocation. Provides many examples of ethical and practical issues in managing a client’s portfolio. Close | | HS 330 — | Fundamentals of Estate Planning | HS 330 Fundamentals of Estate Planning Covers various aspects of estate and gift tax planning, including the nature, valuation, transfer, administration, and taxation of property. Provides a basic understanding of the estate and gift tax system, including strategies of estate planning. Discusses gratuitous transfers of property outright or with trusts, wills, and powers of appointment; use of the marital deduction; valuation of assets; and buy-sell agreements. Covers the client interview, fact-finding, ethical standards, and development of personal estate plans. Close | | Elective Courses (Choose Two) | | HS 322 — | The Financial System in the Economy | HS 332 Financial Planning Applications Presents an overview of the global financial system and its influence on the financial services industry. Examines financial markets, their principal institutions, and their economic functions, products, and services. Examines the rapidly changing regulatory and competitive environment and major trends that shape the industry. Close | | HS 334 — | Estate Planning Applications | HS 334 Estate Planning Applications Covers estate and gift tax principles with emphasis on life insurance planning applications. Discusses forecasting the gross estate, life insurance trusts, valuation principles, the use of charitable contributions as an estate planning technique, planning opportunities stemming from the marital relationship, the taxation of trusts, implications of employee benefits, and estate freezes. Includes a case study reflecting procedural aspects of estate planning. Close | | HS 352 — | Financial Decisions for Retirement | HS 352 Financial Decisions for Retirement Focuses on financial decisions clients face as they approach, reach, and pass retirement age and on the tools and techniques financial advisers may employ to assist their clients with these decisions. The course covers source of income, retirement calculations, investment considerations, annuities, housing decisions, insurance needs of the older client, and estate planning concerns. Especially valuable for practitioners who advise retirees in decisions on rolling over lump-sum pension distributions to IRAs. Provides extensive perspectives on dealing with aging and retired clients and their families. Close | | * Students who have already taken HS 318 may not take HS 300 or HS 311 for credit toward the ChFC® designation, and must take three electives. | |  |  |  |  | | Tuition and Fees |  | Admission Fee: $125.00 (one-time, non-refundable fee for new enrollees at The College) Course Tuition: $550.00 (per course) (includes all textbooks and online study support) Shipping and Handling: $15.00 (per course) | |  |  | |  |  |  | | Earn the ChFC® Your Way |  | Complete each course as quickly as you like at your own pace or enroll in our monthly pay Accelerated Success program.
Accelerated Success offers: - Easy, low monthly payments: $123/month, 3-year track,
8 courses. - Materials for each course will automatically be shipped to you when you finish the previous one.
- Testing on Your Schedule: For each course you will have five months to prepare and test at the Pearson VUE testing center of your choice (over 4000 centers available). The cost for this test is included in your low monthly fee.
Additional Study Support: Blackboard offers extensive online study aids at no additional charge, including: - Supplemental Readings
- Online Discussion with Course Professors
- Sample Questions
- Practice Exams
Keir Study tools: Summarizes the key information found within each American College course followed by a set of practice questions with answers for immediate reinforcement of the ideas being tested. Click here to learn more.
Horizons DVD: Lectures presented by the experts who write the course textbooks. Click here to learn more. | |  |  |  |  | Series 65 exams waived for ChFC® designees. | |  |  |  |  | Did you know that you are eligible to sit for your CFP® examination after completing your 6 core ChFC® courses without any additional work?
Click here to learn more about ChFC®Advanced Financial Planning. | |  |  | |  |