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For most candidates, the best order to take the CPA exams is FAR first, then your Discipline section, then REG, then AUD. Taking FAR first delays when the 30-month score clock starts, front-loads the hardest challenge while motivation is highest, and creates a momentum-building descent through progressively more manageable sections.
Each CPA exam section is 4 hours long. With four sections required to earn licensure, the total testing time is 16 hours. This guide breaks down the exact question counts, testlet structure, score validity rules, and everything else you need to plan your CPA exam timeline.
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For most candidates, the best order to take the CPA exams is FAR first, then your Discipline section, then REG, then AUD. Taking FAR first delays when the 30-month score clock starts, front-loads the hardest challenge while motivation is highest, and creates a momentum-building descent through progressively more manageable sections.
Each CPA exam section is 4 hours long. With four sections required to earn licensure, the total testing time is 16 hours. This guide breaks down the exact question counts, testlet structure, score validity rules, and everything else you need to plan your CPA exam timeline.
Struggling with basis rules or itemized deductions? Test your tax knowledge with our 10-question interactive REG quiz and expert video explanations.
Struggling with AUD concepts like segregation of duties and control risk? Practice with our 10-question interactive quiz and expert video explanations.
Struggling with FAR? Practice the most important exam topics like Cash Flows, Leases, and EPS with our 10-question interactive quiz and expert breakdown.
The audit opinion is the entire reason the audit exists. This guide covers subsequent events, the management representation letter, all four audit opinions, and the two-question decision framework that solves every opinion question on the CPA exam.
This is the fieldwork phase. We walk through the entire balance sheet account by account, covering the specific procedures auditors use for cash, AR, inventory, investments, fixed assets, AP, debt, and equity. Plus audit sampling and the legal inquiry letter.
The audit risk formula, materiality, and management assertions are the most conceptual topics on AUD and the ones where students lose the most points. This guide explains them in plain language with analogies, tables, and the one logical chain that connects every audit decision.
