Where to find free financial planning |
| By Laura Bruce
Bankrate.com |
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If you'd like to inquire about financial planners who volunteer their services to better educate people about financial planning, these are some of the organizations that may be able to help you.
Public libraries: Thousands of libraries around the country offer seminars on a wide variety of topics. Ask yours to routinely add financial planning to their list.
The Financial
Planning Association, or FPA, has 100 chapters around the country.
Locate yours on its Web site and ask about its community outreach
programs.
The Certified
Financial Planner Board of Standards: In addition to annual
free clinics and providing volunteers to speak at high schools,
this board has a free
kit you can order that can introduce you to some of the things
you should know when consulting a planner. Additionally, there's
help sorting through the alphabet soup of certifications
and titles you'll find when considering financial planners.
The National
Association of Personal Financial Advisors, or NAPFA, is one
of the smallest associations for financial planners, but its members
are proactive in providing education. The association is in the
process of developing seminars that members will be able to present
in their communities.
The National
Endowment for Financial Education, or NEFE, works with schools
and organizations to promote financial literacy.
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