CRPC PRACTICE EXAM 2026/2027 | Actual
Exam Simulation | 150 Questions | Detailed
Verified Solutions | A+ Grade Assured | Pass
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Domain 1: Retirement Cash Flow & Needs Analysis (Q1-20)
Q1. A 58-year-old client plans to retire at age 65. Current annual expenses are $72,000.
The client expects to eliminate the mortgage ($14,000/year) and work-related costs
($6,000/year) in retirement but will add $8,000/year for travel and $12,000/year for
healthcare. Using a 3% annual inflation rate, what is the estimated first-year retirement
expense in today's dollars? A. $58,000 B. $62,000 C. $72,000 [CORRECT] D. $86,000
Rationale: Base expenses ($72,000) minus eliminated costs ($14,000 + $6,000 =
$20,000) = $52,000. Add new expenses ($8,000 + $12,000 = $20,000). Net first-year
expense = $52,000 + $20,000 = $72,000. The question asks for today's dollars (not
inflated to age 65), so inflation is not applied yet. The $86,000 option incorrectly adds
inflation.
Correct Answer: C
Q2. A client needs $65,000 in annual retirement income. Social Security will provide
$28,000, and a pension will provide $12,000. The portfolio must generate the remaining
income using a 4% safe withdrawal rate. What portfolio balance is required? A.
$312,500 B. $625,000 [CORRECT] C. $1,000,000 D. $1,625,000
Rationale: Income gap = $65,000 - $28,000 - $12,000 = $25,000. Portfolio required =
$25,000 ÷ 0.04 = $625,000. The 4% rule divides the annual need by 0.04 to determine
the required nest egg.
Correct Answer: B
Q3. A 62-year-old client has $850,000 in retirement savings and plans to withdraw 4%
annually. Using the 4% rule with annual inflation adjustments, what is the first-year
withdrawal amount? A. $25,500 B. $34,000 [CORRECT] C. $42,500 D. $51,000
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Rationale: First-year withdrawal = $850,000 × 0.04 = $34,000. Subsequent years adjust
this initial amount for inflation, not 4% of the remaining balance. The 5% option
($42,500) and 6% option ($51,000) exceed safe withdrawal parameters.
Correct Answer: B
Q4. A client estimates retirement expenses at $80,000 annually. Healthcare costs are
projected at $15,000 annually with 6% inflation, while other expenses inflate at 3%.
What weighted average inflation rate should be used for long-term planning? A. 3.0% B.
3.6% [CORRECT] C. 4.5% D. 6.0%
Rationale: Weighted average = [($65,000 × 0.03) + ($15,000 × 0.06)] ÷ $80,000 =
($1,950 + $900) ÷ $80,000 = $2,850 ÷ $80,000 = 3.56%, rounded to 3.6%. Healthcare's
higher inflation rate pulls the overall rate above the base 3%.
Correct Answer: B
Q5. A client plans to retire in 10 years with a current annual income of $100,000. Using
the 80% replacement ratio rule of thumb, what annual retirement income is needed? A.
$70,000 B. $80,000 [CORRECT] C. $90,000 D. $100,000
Rationale: The 80% replacement ratio suggests retirees need approximately 80% of
pre-retirement income due to eliminated work expenses, lower taxes, and reduced
savings needs. $100,000 × 0.80 = $80,000. Individual needs vary based on debt,
healthcare, and lifestyle.
Correct Answer: B
Q6. A 55-year-old client has a life expectancy of 85 years and plans to retire at 67. Using
a 30-year retirement horizon and 3% inflation, what is the inflation-adjusted multiplier
for expenses in the final year versus the first year? A. 1.43 B. 1.56 C. 1.80 D. 2.43
[CORRECT]
Rationale: Inflation multiplier = (1.03)^30 = 2.427, or approximately 2.43. This means
expenses in year 30 will be 2.43 times the first-year amount. The calculation
demonstrates why inflation protection is critical in retirement planning.
Correct Answer: D
Q7. A client has $500,000 in taxable accounts, $300,000 in traditional IRAs, and
$200,000 in Roth IRAs. What is the client's tax-deferred asset allocation percentage? A.
23.1% B. 30.0% [CORRECT] C. 50.0% D. 60.0%
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Rationale: Tax-deferred assets = traditional IRAs = $300,000. Total assets = $500,000 +
$300,000 + $200,000 = $1,000,000. Tax-deferred percentage = $300,000 ÷ $1,000,000 =
30%. Taxable accounts are not tax-deferred, and Roth IRAs are tax-free.
Correct Answer: B
Q8. A client needs $50,000 annually from portfolio withdrawals. The portfolio is 60%
stocks (expected return 7%) and 40% bonds (expected return 3%). What is the
portfolio's weighted expected return? A. 4.8% B. 5.0% C. 5.4% [CORRECT] D. 6.0%
Rationale: Weighted return = (0.60 × 7%) + (0.40 × 3%) = 4.2% + 1.2% = 5.4%. This
expected return exceeds the 4% withdrawal rate, suggesting the portfolio may sustain
withdrawals with growth potential.
Correct Answer: C
Q9. A 60-year-old client plans to work part-time in retirement earning $15,000
annually. The client needs $60,000 total retirement income. How much must the
portfolio generate if Social Security provides $24,000? A. $15,000 B. $21,000
[CORRECT] C. $36,000 D. $45,000
Rationale: Portfolio need = Total income needed ($60,000) - Social Security ($24,000) -
Part-time income ($15,000) = $21,000. Part-time income reduces the portfolio
withdrawal burden and extends portfolio longevity.
Correct Answer: B
Q10. A client has annual discretionary expenses of $20,000 (travel, dining) and base
expenses of $50,000 (housing, food, utilities). Which strategy best addresses sequence-
of-returns risk? A. Maintain 100% equity allocation throughout retirement B. Segregate
2-3 years of base expenses in stable assets and fund discretionary spending from
growth assets [CORRECT] C. Withdraw 6% annually regardless of market conditions D.
Eliminate all discretionary spending
Rationale: Sequence-of-returns risk occurs when poor market returns early in
retirement force selling depreciated assets. The bucket strategy places 2-3 years of
essential expenses in stable investments (cash, short-term bonds) to avoid selling
equities during downturns, while discretionary spending can be reduced or funded
from growth assets.
Correct Answer: B
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Q11. A client's retirement expenses include $18,000 annually for property taxes and
insurance, which are expected to increase at 4% annually. All other expenses inflate at
2.5%. If total expenses are $75,000, what is the blended inflation rate? A. 2.5% B. 2.86%
[CORRECT] C. 3.25% D. 4.0%
Rationale: Blended rate = [($57,000 × 0.025) + ($18,000 × 0.04)] ÷ $75,000 = ($1,425 +
$720) ÷ $75,000 = $2,145 ÷ $75,000 = 2.86%. Property taxes and insurance often inflate
faster than general expenses.
Correct Answer: B
Q12. A client has a defined benefit pension paying $2,000 monthly with a 50% joint-
and-survivor option reducing the benefit to $1,700. What is the monthly income
reduction for the survivor benefit? A. $150 B. $300 [CORRECT] C. $400 D. $500
Rationale: Monthly reduction = $2,000 - $1,700 = $300. The 50% joint-and-survivor
option provides the surviving spouse with 50% of the original benefit ($1,000) after the
primary retiree's death, in exchange for a reduced monthly payment during both
lifetimes.
Correct Answer: B
Q13. A 64-year-old client has $1.2 million in retirement assets and needs $48,000
annually from the portfolio. Using the dynamic withdrawal strategy, what is the
maximum safe withdrawal rate if the portfolio declines 15% in year one? A. 3.0% B.
3.4% C. 4.0% D. 4.7% [CORRECT]
Rationale: Dynamic withdrawal strategies adjust spending based on portfolio
performance. With a 15% decline, the portfolio = $1,020,000. Maintaining $48,000
requires a 4.7% withdrawal rate ($48,000 ÷ $1,020,000). However, prudent dynamic
strategies would reduce spending to preserve capital. The question tests understanding
that declining portfolios increase effective withdrawal rates.
Correct Answer: D
Q14. A client has a guaranteed income floor of $40,000 from Social Security and
pension. Total retirement needs are $75,000. What percentage of needs are covered by
guaranteed income? A. 45.3% B. 53.3% [CORRECT] C. 60.0% D. 66.7%