AFCI are req'd in different rooms than GFCI are req'd. Generally speaking, if there's the possibility of "wet" conditions, i.e. kitchen, bathroom, garage, outside outlets, you need GFCI. When AFCI was first introduced, they were only req'd in bedrooms. That has later been expanded to most interior areas in homes, except where GFCI are.and AFCI
put in GFCI outlets on front and back of house.. both are GFCI.. and if the back one trips the front one will turn off.. which would be ok except its also a GFCI outlet.
That took a min to figure out after the 25w of christmas lights tripped it.
Our house is similar. We have an outlet on the front porch and one on the patio that are wired on the same circuit along with (1) basement outlet and the garage. If the panels were properly and fully labeled, it wouldn't be a big deal but yeah, it was confusing until I figured it out ! I have a nice Google Docs spreadsheet keeping track of things. Our downstairs bathroom is on circuit/breaker # 6 and nothing else downstairs is on that same circuit. I haven't traced the upstairs outlets yet but I'm guessing the kid's bathroom and the master bathroom will be on # 6 as well. The panel is labeled "Bathroom GFCI" (by the original electrician).All my garage outlets were not GFI, but they were daisy chained from a GFI plug on the outside of the house. Took me a while to figure out when it tripped because it was at completely the opposite side of the house.