CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ Certification Education Program
The Northwestern University CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ Certification Education Program offers multiple CFP-Board-approved classes to fit your work/lifestyle. We have designed each program to meet your needs, whether you are a career changer or longtime planning professional. Participants who pass all required courses will receive a certificate of completion from Northwestern University, one of the world’s top universities, which they can proudly display on their wall and share with their clients.
Hear from CFP® professionals about their career paths and the rewards of being a Certified Financial Planner™ practitioner.
On-Campus Program: Weeknight
The weeknight program offers a skills-based approach, with assessments designed to simulate the daily life of a successful planner. Our instructors worked closely with the CFP Board to design this new curriculum.
Frequency and Location Once a week on our Chicago campus (Wieboldt Hall, 339 E Chicago Avenue), plus some online assignments.
Time to Completion As little as 14 months when students take concurrent classes. (Due to the course workload of this program, taking more than two courses per term is not recommended.)
Courses are held according to the posted schedule, but may be subject to change.
*NOTE: The Financial Plan Development and Presentation (Capstone) course is only offered during the Spring and Fall terms. Please plan your schedule with this in mind.
Best option for:
Career changers
Students who like meeting their instructor and peers in person
Professionals of all levels who want a more traditional learning experience
Online Programs: Instructor Led and Self-Paced
Frequency and Location "Live" courses meet twice weekly; self-paced are on your own time. All courses are online.
Time to Completion Approximately nine months
Required Courses
Introduction to Financial Planning and Insurance Planning
Professionals who have worked as a financial advisor or planner
Students who want the option to take classes from anywhere "on the go"
People comfortable with technology and those that are highly self-motivated
CFP® Exam Review
Northwestern University School of Professional Studies has selected The Dalton Review® as the exclusive review for our CFP® certification education programs. The Dalton Review provides students with a high quality curriculum and is led by outstanding faculty. To learn more, visit our CFP® Exam Review page.
Instructors for this program have a range of expertise, specializations and work experience. Read about their qualifications on our CFP® Certification Education Program Faculty page.
CFP® Certification in the News
News Release
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PROFESSIONAL STUDIES MAINTAINS CFP BOARD-REGISTERED PROGRAM STATUS CERTIFICATE PROGRAM IN FINANCIAL PLANNING
Chicago, December 18, 2017 – Northwestern University School of Professional Studies in Chicago has maintained registration with Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. (CFP Board) to provide a financial planning certificate program. An independent certifying organization, CFP Board owns the CFP® and Certified Financial Planner™ certification marks, which it awards to individuals who meet its education, examination, experience, ethics and other requirements. Students completing the financial planning program at Northwestern University School of Professional Studies will have met the Education requirement for CFP® Certification Examination administered by CFP Board.
Certified Financial Planner ™ and federally registered CFP® (with flame logo) are certification marks owned by Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, Inc. Northwestern University does not certify individuals to use the CFP®, Certified Financial Planner™; and marks. CFP® certification is granted solely by Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. to individuals who, in addition to completing an educational requirement such as this CFP Board-Registered Program, have met ethics, experience and examination requirements.
CFP® Certification Education Program Tuition and Financial Aid
Find out more about Northwestern's CFP® Certification Education Program
Contact SPS Enrollment Advisers
SPS Enrollment Advisers at Northwestern University School of Professional Studies can be a resource to you for inquiries regarding our certificate programs.
CFP® Certification Education Program Core Courses
Core Courses:
Course Detail
Intro to Financial Planning <> FN_EXTND 300-0
This course will introduce you to the profession of Financial
Planning and the personal Financial Planning Process. This is the
first course in the series of classes which will qualify you to sit
for the CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ exam. Through assigned
readings, lectures, class discussions, problem sets, and an
experiential learning project, you will gain an overview of the
financial planning profession and obtain the knowledge necessary to
define the scope of the financial planner/client relationship,
identify and gather client financial data and goals, and begin to
analyze and evaluate the client’s financial needs. You will expand
your understanding of the role of the financial planner, including
the fiduciary nature of the advisor/client relationship. Emphasis
will be placed on the regulatory agencies that govern our
profession, ethical standards, budgeting, case study, various
special situations, financial statement creation, importance of
client relationships, and the time value of money. This
course is offered during the spring and fall terms.
Registered students can access their online course site
here. An
activated NetID and password is required for login. *Please note:
It may take up to 24-hours for registered students to be added to
the online course platform.
This course will help students to identify the types of risk
client’s face, and to evaluate various methods of mitigating that
risk. Contingency planning is an important element of the financial
planning process. We will discuss how to make recommendations to
manage ongoing risk when planning for the future. Students will
also learn to analyze clients’ insurance needs and determine the
type and amount of insurance best suited to each client's
situation. Students will understand what is necessary for clients
regarding life, property, liability, homeowner's and personal-auto
insurance. Students will also learn the relevant issues related to
different types of insurance, including, life, property and
casualty, medical, disability, and long-term care insurance.
This course is offered during the winter and summer
terms.
Registered students can access their online course site
here. An activated NetID and password is required for
login. *Please note: It may take up to 24-hours for registered
students to be added to the online course platform.
This course surveys the wide variety of investment vehicles that
can be included in a client's investment portfolio, introducing
risk-return criteria as a means of evaluating alternatives. The
broad spectrum of investments is explored, ranging from guaranteed-
and fixed-income products to derivatives and private placements. An
emphasis on the client is the overriding theme for the course,
beginning with the client needs assessment as it relates to risk
tolerance, return requirements and liquidity needs. Techniques for
selection, timing, measurement and diversification of investments
are studied in detail. Different strategies and valuation models
are used to understand fundamental investment principles. Modern
portfolio theory, risk management, market strategies, efficient
market theory, and asset allocation and diversification are
introduced. Retirement planning and employee benefits will be
discussed, as will relevant ethical considerations. Students
analyze expected return characteristics individually and in
combination within a hypothetical portfolio. Specific investment
types discussed include stocks and bonds, mutual funds,
insurance-based investments, options and futures contracts, foreign
investments, real estate, tangible assets, and other debt and
equity securities. Other topics include tax considerations,
economic factors, the portfolio construction and management
process, portfolio performance evaluation methods, market analysis,
hedging and option strategies, and formula investing. The course
also discusses government regulation of securities and markets.
This course is offered during the winter and summer
terms.
Registered students can access their online
course site here. An activated NetID and
password is required for login. *Please note: It may take up to
24-hours for registered students to be added to the online course
platform.
This course provides an overview of the federal income tax
system, examining the income taxation of individuals, sole
proprietorships, partnerships, LLCs and corporations. Students will
begin with taxation terminology and then learn about the concepts
of gross income and deductions for profit-making activities,
personal deductions and tax planning for the family, tax benefits
of home ownership, planning for the acquisition and deposition of
other real estate, and how the choice of business entity affects
the taxes of owners and employees. The course will focus on how
financial planners advise clients about the most effective methods
of maximizing wealth by reducing their tax burden through an
examination of a variety of tax issues-including tax law,
accounting methods, tax planning related to employee compensation,
research and practitioner concerns, cost-recovery methods,
consequences of like-kind exchanges and tax-advantage investments.
Alternative minimum tax (AMT), self-employment tax, ethical
considerations, potential traps and pitfalls, and the consequences
and effects of IRS audits and enforcement activities also will be
discussed. This course is offered during the fall and
spring terms.
Registered students can access their online course site
here. An
activated NetID and password is required for login. *Please note:
It may take up to 24-hours for registered students to be added to
the online course platform.
Retirement Planning and Employee Benefits <> FN_EXTND 314-0
This course covers all aspects of retirement planning and
employee benefits, beginning with the presentation of tax-deferred
retirement program options and the framework used to conduct a
needs analysis for achieving retirement income goals. Key features
of qualified retirement plan design are discussed, emphasizing the
advantages and disadvantages of specific types of plans for the
owners of small- to medium-sized businesses. Assumptions and
projections of lifestyle, inflation, returns and life expectancy
are critical when considering retirement needs. An understanding of
cash flow, income sources, medical expenses and benefits must go
into the calculations. Employee compensation has changed
significantly in recent years, so it is essential that financial
planners grasp how to coordinate employer-sponsored benefits within
a plan. All of these issues are addressed in detail, as are how to
avoid inappropriate investments and how to present recommended
courses of action to clients. Additional relevant topics
highlighted in this course include commonly provided non-pension
employee benefits, such as disability, healthcare and group life
insurance. Students will discuss the uses of life and disability
insurance in planning for closely held businesses, as well as for
the family. Childcare, Medicare and other dependent-care benefits
are considered. Federal social security, cafeteria plans, stock
options and stock purchase plans, transportation issues, and forms
of non-qualified deferred compensation are included, as well.
This course is offered during the winter and summer
terms.
Registered students can access their online
course site here. An activated NetID and
password is required for login. *Please note: It may take up to
24-hours for registered students to be added to the online course
platform.
Planning and managing federal estate and gift taxation is one of
the most overlooked yet critical elements of a financial plan. Part
of this process involves understanding the perspectives of the many
parties involved and their related concerns; that is, the
perspectives of descendants, fiduciaries, estates, trust
beneficiaries, donors and recipients. This course examines the
important estate-planning issues from all of these perspectives.
Beginning with the fundamentals of federal estate and gift
taxation, the process of developing an estate plan is presented
through a discussion of a variety of mechanisms - such as
incapacity planning, qualified interest trusts, generation
skipping, estate planning weaknesses, property ownership forms,
intestacy and will substitutes, how to satisfy liquidity needs, and
specific exclusion and valuation techniques that reduce the size of
the gross estate. There are many facets to proper estate planning,
and this course will touch on all of the essential elements
necessary for consideration by the financial planner. Charitable,
intrafamilial, postmortem and business-transfer planning techniques
that play an important part in estate planning are addressed, and
additional focus is placed on the implications of gifts and
bequests, including lifetime gifting and coordination of the
unified credit with marital deduction. Other issues include tax
consequences of estate planning techniques, revocable and
irrevocable trusts (including bypass and marital deduction trusts),
life insurance, federal estate tax, probate and more. This
course is offered during the fall and spring terms.
Registered students can access their online
course site here. An activated NetID and
password is required for login. *Please note: It may take up to
24-hours for registered students to be added to the online course
platform.
Financial Plan Development and Presentation FN_EXTND 320-0
This course will lead you through the steps in developing a
complete financial plan. You will learn what goes into a financial
plan, participate in mock client interviews to learn proper
interview techniques, read and analyze case studies of other plans,
and develop and present your own financial plan to the class and a
panel of experts. This course may only be completed as the final
course in the program. This course is offered during the
fall and spring terms.
Registered students can access their online
course site here. An activated NetID and
password is required for login. *Please note: It may take up to
24-hours for registered students to be added to the online course
platform.