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By Stephan Kulik · Editor-in-Chief, CertSelect

Zuletzt aktualisiert: 2026-05-07

Hinweis: Affiliate-Links enthalten.

CPA vs ACCA: US vs Global Accounting Credential Compared (2026)

Last updated: May 7, 2026

TL;DR. The CPA is the US-licensed credential authorized to sign audit and attest opinions under federal securities law; the ACCA is the UK-based globally portable qualification recognized in 170+ jurisdictions. They are not direct substitutes. The CPA wins for US-anchored careers — Big-4 US partner track, US public accounting, US tax practice. The ACCA wins for non-US international careers — UK/EU/MENA/SEA/Africa Big-4 and multinational corporate roles. For US candidates targeting international assignments or working at multinational corporates, holding both is increasingly common. ACCA’s pass rates on Strategic Professional papers (~35–50%) make it a long, attritional path.

This guide is for candidates evaluating both credentials — typically internationally mobile accountants, candidates at multinational corporates with global reporting, or US accountants weighing whether ACCA is a substitute for a CPA on the US side (it is not, for licensed activities). CertSelect is an independent comparison site funded in part by affiliate links — see our methodology for the conflict-of-interest policy. We do not earn referral revenue from AICPA or ACCA.

If you want broader context on the 15 credentials US accountants actually compare, see best accounting certifications 2026.


The Headline Comparison

DimensionCPA (US)ACCA (UK-based, global)
Issuing bodyAICPA + 55 US state boardsAssociation of Chartered Certified Accountants (London)
Year founded18961904
Number of exams4 sections (3 Core + 1 Discipline) under CPA Evolution post-Jan 202413 papers across 3 levels
Total cash cost (US, 2025)$4,000–$7,000 (review + 4 sections + application + ethics + initial license)$3,000–$4,500 USD equivalent (registration + exam fees + subscription)
Add-on review coursesBecker $2,900–$3,700; UWorld Roger $2,300–$3,500; Gleim $1,800–$2,700; Surgent $1,700–$2,700Kaplan, BPP $2,000–$6,000+ (varies by exam package)
Time to complete (exam phase)12–18 months3–4 years (full-time); 4–6 years (working professionals)
Education prerequisite150 college credit hours (most states) + bachelor’sHigh school + 2 years post-secondary (UK A Levels equivalent); bachelor’s typical for US applicants
Work experience1–2 years supervised (audit/attest in most states)36 months relevant + 9 Performance Objectives
Pass rate (recent)AUD ~47%, FAR ~41%, REG ~58%, BAR ~42%, ISC ~58%, TCP ~80%Varies 30–90% by exam; ~35–50% on Strategic Professional papers
RenewalAnnual state license + 40 CPE hours/yearAnnual ACCA membership £260 (~$325) post-qualified
Audit/attest authorityYES (US) — exclusiveNO (US); YES in most ACCA-recognized jurisdictions
Members worldwide~670,000 active US CPAs~250,000+ global
MarketsUS (with MRA partial recognition: AUS, CA, NZ, HK, IE, MX, Scotland, ZA)UK, EU, Asia, Africa, Middle East — 170+ jurisdictions

The structural difference: CPA is a US state-issued license with a regulatory monopoly on audit/attest opinions. ACCA is a UK-issued professional qualification with broad international recognition but no US licensed authority.


What the CPA Covers

The CPA exam under CPA Evolution (post-January 2024) is structured as three Core sections plus one Discipline section.

Core sections (all candidates take):

Discipline section (choose one):

Each section is 4 hours, blending MCQ and task-based simulations. Passing score 75 on a 0–99 scale. Continuous testing — 4 testing windows per year with most jurisdictions allowing year-round scheduling.

The CPA curriculum is heavily US-specific: US GAAP, IRC tax code, PCAOB audit standards, US securities law. International topics appear briefly but are not the focus.


What the ACCA Covers

The ACCA qualification is structured in three levels totaling 13 papers.

Applied Knowledge (3 exams, on-demand CBT):

Applied Skills (6 exams, quarterly testing windows):

Strategic Professional (4 exams, quarterly):

Plus the Ethics & Professional Skills module (online), 36 months of relevant practical experience, and 9 Performance Objectives.

The ACCA curriculum is IFRS-aligned and internationally portable. UK tax is the default for the Taxation paper, but ACCA offers jurisdiction-specific variants for Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, India, Pakistan, and others. US tax is not a standard ACCA option — candidates who need US tax must learn it separately.


Career Destinations: Where Each Credential Actually Lands You

The clearest way to choose is to look at where graduates of each path actually work.

CPA holders typically go to:

ACCA holders typically go to:

A US CPA candidate cannot use ACCA to qualify for US audit/attest sign-off. An ACCA holder cannot use CPA to qualify for UK statutory audit sign-off (which requires UK-specific audit qualifications under FRC oversight). The credentials are not interchangeable at the licensed-activity level.


Geographic Mobility

This is where the comparison gets concrete.

CPA portability is governed by the Uniform Accountancy Act’s Substantial Equivalency model — most US jurisdictions recognize CPAs licensed in other states with minimal additional requirements. Internationally, AICPA has Mutual Recognition Agreements with Australia (CA ANZ), Canada (CPA Canada), New Zealand (CA ANZ), Hong Kong (HKICPA), Ireland (Chartered Accountants Ireland), Mexico (IMCP), Scotland (ICAS), and South Africa (SAICA). US CPAs can convert to those countries’ credentials with reduced exam requirements. The UK is not in the MRA framework, though some specific bridging exists.

ACCA portability is built into the credential itself — ACCA membership is recognized in 170+ jurisdictions. ACCA holders can practice in the UK, EU, MENA, SEA, Africa, the Caribbean, and most Commonwealth countries with minimal additional requirements. ACCA is the global passport credential. In the US specifically, however, ACCA does not grant licensure — US-specific audit/attest work requires the CPA license under state board jurisdiction.

The summary: CPA is broader US, modest international. ACCA is narrow US, broad international. For globally mobile careers — particularly accountants who expect to live in 2–3 countries over a career — ACCA is the more efficient starting credential.


Cost: The Real Math

CPA cash cost (US, 2025):

Line itemCost
Exam fee × 4 sections$1,400
Application fee (per jurisdiction)$100–$300
Ethics exam (state-dependent)$150–$250
Initial license fee$100–$500
Review course$1,700–$3,700
Total typical path$4,000–$7,000

Plus annual state license renewal ($100–$500) and 40 CPE hours per year.

ACCA cash cost (US-resident candidate, 2025):

Line itemCost (GBP)Cost (USD ~1.25/£1)
Initial registration£38$48
Annual subscription × 3 years£402$503
Applied Knowledge × 3 (£100 each)£300$375
Applied Skills × 6 (£175 each)£1,050$1,313
Strategic Professional × 4 (£270 each)£1,080$1,350
Subtotal (no prep)£2,870~$3,588
Review courses (Kaplan, BPP)£2,000–£6,000$2,500–$7,500
Total typical path$6,000–$11,000

Annual ACCA membership post-qualified: £260 (~$325).

At cash level, CPA and ACCA without prep courses are roughly comparable ($4,000–$7,000 vs $3,000–$4,500). With prep courses, ACCA can run higher because of the 13-exam vs 4-section difference — more individual exam-fee and prep cycles.

Where the numbers diverge sharply is in study time. CPA averages 300–400 hours per section (~1,200–1,600 hours total) over 12–18 months. ACCA averages 200–300 hours per paper (~2,600–3,900 hours total) over 3–6 years. At a $50/hour shadow rate, CPA opportunity cost runs $60,000–$80,000; ACCA opportunity cost runs $130,000–$195,000. The full economic cost of ACCA is roughly 2x the CPA path despite comparable cash cost.


Pass Rate Risk

CPA pass rates per the 2024 cumulative reporting:

SectionPass rate
AUD47%
FAR41%
REG58%
BAR42%
ISC58%
TCP80%

ACCA pass rates vary widely across the 13 papers. Applied Knowledge typically runs 60–90%; Applied Skills 40–60%; Strategic Professional 35–50%. Strategic Professional papers (SBL, SBR, AFM, APM, ATX, AAA) are the high-attrition stage — many candidates clear Applied Knowledge and Skills in 1–2 years, then take 2–3 additional years to complete Strategic Professional papers.

For a working US candidate weighing whether to take on ACCA without a clear non-US career destination, the Strategic Professional attrition rate is the single most important warning. The credential is achievable, but the back end is harder than the front end suggests.


Who Should Pick Which

The decision rule, stripped to one paragraph each:

Pick the CPA if your target career is US-anchored. US Big-4 partner track, US public accounting, US tax practice, US corporate controller or CFO seats, US government accounting. The CPA’s regulatory monopoly on audit/attest opinions under federal securities law makes it non-substitutable for these activities. International mobility from a CPA base works through the AICPA MRA framework (8 partner bodies) or through US-multinational employer-sponsored international assignments.

Pick the ACCA if your target career is non-US international. UK or EU Big-4, Middle East corporate finance, Southeast Asia multinational accounting, African Big-4, or global mobility across multiple non-US jurisdictions over a career. ACCA’s 170+ jurisdiction recognition is the broadest of any single accountancy credential.

Pick both if you are at a US-headquartered multinational with regular international rotations (Procter & Gamble, Caterpillar, GE, IBM, Microsoft, Apple international finance roles), or at a Big-4 firm with both US and international ambitions. The combination is increasingly common at senior corporate-finance levels.

Default for unsure candidates targeting the US. Get CPA first. It is faster, more concentrated, and opens the broadest set of US doors. Add ACCA later if international roles emerge.

Default for unsure candidates outside the US or targeting non-US careers. Get ACCA. It is the broader international passport. Add CPA later if a US assignment or US-anchored career emerges.


US Big-4 Recognition: The Honest Read

ACCA holders are routinely hired at US Big-4 firms (Deloitte, PwC, EY, KPMG US) — typically into international tax, transfer pricing, IFRS-conversion, and multinational corporate audit teams. The credential is taken seriously and treated as a legitimate professional accountancy qualification.

However, US partner and senior-manager track at Big-4 US firms typically requires the CPA license. ACCA-only senior hires are common in specialty practices (international tax, IFRS conversion) but rare in the core audit partner track. Most ACCA holders progressing to manager at US Big-4 will be encouraged to pursue the CPA on the US side — either to clear specific state board requirements or to access the partner pipeline.

This is not a soft signal — it is a regulatory consequence. Under PCAOB and SEC rules, the partner signing a US public-company audit opinion must be a CPA licensed in the engagement state. ACCA does not grant that authority. The CPA’s regulatory monopoly is what makes it irreplaceable in US public accounting partnership economics.

For US-anchored Big-4 careers: get the CPA. Add ACCA only if your specialty requires it.


What Each Credential Does Not Solve


Frequently Asked Questions

Is ACCA recognized in the US?

ACCA is acknowledged by US employers as a foreign accountancy qualification but does not substitute for the CPA license for any US audit, attest, or tax practice. Big-4 US offices will hire ACCA holders for international assignments, transfer pricing, IFRS-conversion projects, and multinational corporate accounting roles — typically with an expectation that the candidate will pursue the CPA on the US side to progress toward manager and partner levels. The Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA) framework between AICPA and selected foreign bodies (Australia, Canada, NZ, Hong Kong, Ireland, Mexico, Scotland, South Africa) does not include ACCA directly, though some country-specific bridging exists. For a US-anchored career, plan to add CPA. For a non-US career, ACCA is the more portable starting credential.

Can I do both the CPA and ACCA?

Yes, and it is increasingly common among accountants targeting global mobility. The two qualifications overlap significantly at the foundational level (financial accounting, audit principles, business knowledge), so candidates who hold one typically need 30–50% fewer hours to clear the other. ACCA’s exam-exemption framework explicitly grants partial exemptions for US CPAs who join ACCA — typically up to 9 of the 13 papers can be waived, leaving the 4 Strategic Professional papers. CPA candidates who hold ACCA do not receive equivalent CPA-section exemptions; they still sit AUD, FAR, REG, and the Discipline section in full. Total combined cost runs $6,000–$10,000 plus 18–30 months of additional study. The combination is most useful for accountants at Big-4 international transfer programs or multinational corporate finance teams.

How long does ACCA take compared to CPA?

ACCA typically takes 3–4 years for full-time candidates and 4–6 years for working professionals studying part-time. The structure is 13 exams across 3 levels (Applied Knowledge, Applied Skills, Strategic Professional) plus 36 months of practical experience and 9 Performance Objectives. CPA typically takes 12–18 months of exam preparation once the 150-hour education prerequisite is satisfied, plus 1–2 years of supervised work experience. The total path-to-license is comparable — both run 4–6 years end-to-end when education is included — but the on-ramp is different: CPA frontloads education (150 hours), ACCA spreads it across the exam path (13 sittings). For working professionals managing exam-fatigue risk, CPA’s shorter exam window is the more concentrated commitment.


Sources and Further Reading