ACA General

What Is The ACA Qualification? Why the ACA? How to Become An ICAEW ACA Qualified Chartered Accountant? ACA Apprenticeship Route

level 7 ACA apprenticeship route

What is the ACA? The ACA, different to ACCA, stands for Associate Chartered Accountant (ACA). It is a professional qualification (similar to a masters), which for me came as part of my graduate scheme in audit. However, this qualification is also part of many other graduate schemes within the financial sector. The ACA covers a range of topics. The international professional body for chartered accountants which runs the ACA (including Level 7 ACA apprenticeship route) is the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW). There are entry requirements for the ACA qualification. If you are able to secure the graduate scheme with the ACA available, you have probably already met the requirements.

Check out my YouTube video if you would prefer watching to reading!

My Why

Personally, I wanted to become ACA qualified for several reasons. Firstly, I had been teaching Maths at a secondary school for a year after graduating. It was at this point I realised I still wanted to learn. I touch more on this later on. The ACA qualification is also globally recognised and has a great reputation. With an interest in the finance sector, I noticed financial managers and finance directors usually need to be ACA qualified or hold another professional qualification. 18 of the current FTSE 100 CEOs have an accountancy qualification highlighting the endless possibilities if I went down this route. I wanted to broaden my knowledge and the ACA seemed to be the best option for me.

ACA qualification

I started my ACA journey in September 2018 as mentioned in my ‘about‘ section.

ACA Outline

As above, ICAEW run the ACA and there are many employers that are authorised to provide this training; there are about 5,000 employers around the world according to the ICAEW website. My graduate scheme duration is three years. This is the expected amount of time it will take to complete the qualification. However, there are other schemes offering the ACA qualification which may take longer. The employer may feel the student (yes, you are eligible for student discounts!) will perform better over a longer duration. An example is apprenticeship students who have only just finished sixth form/college and started working instead of going to University. Either way, the likely duration is between three to five years.

Most people, including myself, initially tend to think the ACA qualification is purely exam based. This is not the case. Indeed there are 15 examinations but there is more to the ACA than only the exams, such as six monthly reviews with your employer. Before you read on and potentially feel overwhelmed or put off by the amount of hoops there are, remember this is to be achieved over at least three years. Many of the stages outlined will come through working anyway and I can say that I have not found it too bad overall!

ACA stages

It is worth mentioning I am doing the Level 7 Apprenticeship route into the ACA with ICAEW. The ‘traditional’ ACA training route will include all the training file aspects mentioned below. However, the Level 7 programme has some additional requirements that I will also explain after. It seems the Level 7 route is becoming the preferred route with employers.

Below is a screenshot of the key aspects as shown in my ICAEW ACA training file.

Key Aspects of the ACA

Practical work experience

The practical work experience aspect is arguably one of the most important steps in achieving the ACA qualification. It really does put theory into practice! As per the ICAEW website, this work experience can only be gained with one of their authorised training employers. The required working days to become qualified is 450 (seven hour days) which explains why most graduate schemes are at least three years. This may sound like a lot but over at least three years the days start to stack up.

The practical work experience must relate to one of the six categories: accounting, audit and assurance, tax, financial management, insolvency and information technology. As mentioned, my training is in audit and assurance. All working days recorded in the training file must be approved by a reviewer, usually a manager at your place of employment. I will write an upcoming blog on logging time.

Ethics and professional scepticism

Additionally, there is an ethics and professional scepticism segment. The training file describes this as how the student will demonstrate ethical competence by completion of the Ethics Learning Programme and by practising ethical and professional scepticism in the workplace. This is based on the ICAEW Code of Ethics and ensures that all students understand the ICAEW ethical framework and are able to identify ethical principles relating to a scenario and advise on appropriate ways of addressing an ethical threat.

ICAEW ACA Ethics

There are six modules and a one hour devolved assessment comprising of 30 multiple choice questions. The pass score is 70% and unlimited attempts permitted by ICAEW but this may depend on your employer too. Ethics is tested throughout each ACA exam so much of this is already engraved into our minds. There are online modules to provide further support too. This section is also where the six monthly reviews come in.

Examinations

Finally, the 15 exams. There are three different exam levels: Certificate (six exams), Professional (six exams) and Advanced (three exams). Click the links to find out more details. If you would like to see how I ranked these exams in terms of ACA difficulty from hardest ACA exam to easiest, click here. Reading the ACA difficulty post really helps you understand how hard ACA exams are, even on a relative basis. I will also write an upcoming blog to share my thoughts on how I found studying and working.

Professional development

Other students may have a ‘Professional development’ tab in their training file. Here the student must demonstrate how they have achieved satisfactory levels of competence in ICAEW’s key areas of professional development. I have been informed that this tab of the training file is not required for Big Four employees. As this was not a requirement for me I will not be able to provide much information on this.

Level 7 ACA Apprenticeship Route

As mentioned, for the Level 7 Apprenticeship ACA route, there are a couple of additional requirements:

  1. The requirement to complete a Project Report. The Project Report is one part of the end-point assessment along with the final ACA Case Study exam (exam 15)
  2. Achieving 20% of your average working hours for off-the-job training
  3. Evidencing knowledge, skills and behaviours (KSBs)

For more details about the Project Report, join my journey.

join jags journey

Note: you will need a Level 2 in Maths and English (equivalent to GCSE grade C (4) or above) before attempting the end-point assessment.

The off-the-job training sounds like extra work but it is not actually anything extra beyond the training you would already be getting. This does include internal training, induction to the role, etc that you would get at work. It also includes training/studying for ACA courses which you will do a lot of. The longest part of this is keeping a record of it all in a training log so it is best to document this as you go along. There is also some knowledge, skills and behaviours to document too but again, this is more admin than anything else.

And that is it!

For those of you who are still reading to figure out what the ‘audit qualification’ tab shown above is: a) you are switched on; b) don’t worry if you didn’t notice; c) thank you for reading this far; and d) it is to log audit working time if your intention is to eventually sign UK audit reports. Therefore, it is thankfully not another requirement to become ACA qualified – so that really is it!

Disclaimer

This blog has been written predominantly based on my UK Level 7 Apprenticeship route through an authorised employer. There are many other routes factoring in different countries, ages and backgrounds which I have not touched upon. The ICAEW website provides much more detail, see here. This link is particularly helpful if you are changing careers or are a member of another body.

Thank you for reading – I would love to gather your feedback in the comments below!

(28) Comments

  1. Kiran says:

    This was extremely helpful! Please share more!!

    1. Many more to come – join my journey so you don’t miss out!

  2. Amazing article – very informative & provides a clear view of the ACA and requirements to become qualified!

    1. Thank you for reading Jay – I am grateful for your feedback as this is exactly what I was trying to achieve!

  3. Alice says:

    Love this so much Jag! As I’m doing to ACA too, it’s great to read about someone else on a similar journey!

    1. Thank you Alice and I couldn’t agree more. It always makes it better when you have someone else to go through it with!

  4. Anisha says:

    Really great to hear about your personal drivers as well as being very clear and informative – well done!

    1. Thank you for reading Anisha and especially for commenting, very appreciated!

  5. Very insightful and informative as I am just starting my ACA, looking forward to more content

    1. Hi Jake, thank you for reading and joining my journey – good luck with your ACA. Feel free to message if you have any questions along the way!

  6. […] mentioned in ‘What is the ACA? Why the ACA? And how do you become ACA qualified?’, there are 15 ACA exams. These 15 exams can be broken down as […]

  7. […] you are an ACA student, did you know you are eligible to student discounts? You should if you read my blog about the ACA! Do not miss out on these opportunities. I have used Student Beans and it has saved me at least […]

  8. […] I work in Audit, the 30-40% AA aspect of the exam was usually quite nice. However, as mentioned in ‘What is the ACA? …’ the ACA cover a range of roles so others may struggle. That being said, you can prepare for it in […]

  9. Xinggui says:

    Thank you for sharing such detailed and thoughtful articles! I have learned so much from them. All the best and stay safe 🙂

    1. Thank you so much for reading – many more to come!

  10. […] For example, are ACA exams harder than university exams/A-Levels? It is worth mentioning that in my first blog I did mention the Level 7 ACA Apprenticeship is equivalent to a Masters. Therefore naturally you […]

  11. […] practice it should be less daunting and you should be able to react better. Additionally, with the ACA exams especially they can be very time pressured. That is why it is important practice, practice and […]

  12. […] ICAEW ACA Ethics Learning Programme is a key requirement to becoming ACA qualified. Ethics is constantly drummed into you throughout your ACA studies. This is done through examining […]

  13. […] leave, join my journey. I will be writing a separate blog on this shortly. This will cover the ACA as a whole rather than only the three Professional Level exams. In the meantime, I hope this […]

  14. […] ACA qualification has much more to it than the 15 exams alone and there are in fact many different routes to becoming […]

  15. […] 2018 and I am due to finish in September 2021. As part of my graduate scheme, I have completed the ACA qualification and have learnt a LOT in the past few years. At the time I applied to the role, I had very little […]

  16. […] week will be exactly three years since I started my ACA journey with a Big Four employer. Within the first three months of starting my training contract, I […]

  17. Abdullah Hasan says:

    You are so great and it’s a proud journey 🌹🌹🌹

  18. […] why the role too.Note in my Big 4 interview, I was asked what I knew about the ACA. If you read this blog you will be more than ok for this […]

  19. […] I will continue this article on the basis that you are familiar with each of these pillars. If not, this article is for you. It also states the additional steps to qualify via the Level 7 Apprenticeship […]

  20. […] weekly blog content and much more whilst working full-time as an external auditor, becoming ACA qualified and maintaining my 5-day week gym life. To emphasise, I have posted a blog every single Thursday […]

  21. Hi Jags,

    Your journey was quite fabulous!

    How were you able to secure a grad position in the first attempt?

    Thank you

    1. Thank you so much – I made sure to really do my research and take time with my applications. This YouTube video should help: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5HAyS4j2J34

      All the best!

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