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The 6-Week CPA AUD Study Plan (Using Only Free Tools)

By Burak Genc · June 2026 · 8 min read

AUD covers four blueprint areas and a lot of judgment-heavy material, but it's very plannable: the topics build on each other in a natural order, and six focused weeks is a realistic timeline for most candidates studying 1.5–2.5 hours a day. This plan maps every week to specific topics in our free AUD study guide — 18 lessons, 180+ practice MCQs, mocks, and spaced repetition, all free.

The Daily Structure (Repeat Every Day)

Why this order matters: reviewing first ensures yesterday's misses get re-tested before new content buries them, and ending with mixed questions stops the “I only know it in chapter order” problem that surprises so many candidates on exam day.

The Week-by-Week Plan

Week 1 — Ethics & General Principles (Area I)

Work through topics A1–A4: engagement types and assurance levels, professional standards (SAS vs. PCAOB vs. SSARS), ethics and independence, and engagement terms. Independence rules are pure point-scoring — the rules are testable exactly as written. Finish each lesson by drilling its MCQs until you clear 80%.

Section 1 topics

Week 2 — Risk Assessment & Planning (Area II)

Topics A5–A8: understanding the entity, the audit risk model and materiality, planning the audit strategy, and evidence/documentation basics. This is the heaviest-weighted area of the exam and the conceptual core of everything that follows — give it your best hours, not your leftover ones.

Section 2 topics

Week 3 — Procedures & Evidence (Area III)

Topics A9–A13: substantive procedures by account, estimates/related parties/going concern, sampling and analytical procedures, using the work of others, and IT/CAATs. Focus on the evidence reliability hierarchy and on matching each assertion to the procedure that tests it — that pairing is the most repeated question pattern in this area.

Section 3 topics

Week 4 — Conclusions & Reporting (Area IV)

Topics A14–A18: evaluating evidence and forming the opinion, audit reports, other reporting situations, SSARS engagements (reviews, compilations, preparations), and government auditing. Learn the opinion decision tree cold — it converts directly into correct answers.

Section 4 topics

Week 5 — Integration and First Mocks

No new content. Take a full timed mock at the start of the week, drill every weak topic it exposes, then take a second mock at the end. Mixed practice is the point: the real exam never tells you which topic a question comes from, so your brain has to learn to recognize the topic from the question itself.

AUD mock exam

Week 6 — Sharpen and Taper

Daily review queue, one last pass over your five weakest topics, and a final mock no later than mid-week. Then taper: light review only for the last two days, and protect your sleep. Walking in rested is worth more than walking in with three extra hours of cramming.

Review queue

Milestones That Tell You You're on Track

A note on those percentages: the real exam's 75 is a scaled score, not 75% of questions — but consistently scoring 75%+ on substantive mixed practice is a reasonable readiness signal. If you're behind a milestone, don't compress the taper week. Extend the calendar instead — a one-week slip is cheaper than a retake.

If You're Retaking AUD

Use the same six weeks, but reorder: start with your two weakest areas from the score report rather than Area I, and double the daily question volume from week one. The full retake methodology — including how to read your score report and what to change about your study method — is in How to Pass CPA AUD After Failing.

Everything This Plan Needs Is Free

All 18 AUD lessons, 180+ MCQs with full explanations, the trainer, mocks, and spaced repetition — no signup, no paywall.

Start Week 1 →
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CPA Exam Lab is an independent study resource published by Arc & Ledger LLC. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the AICPA® or NASBA. “CPA” is a registered trademark of the AICPA. This article is educational content, not professional advice — always verify exam logistics with NASBA and your state board of accountancy.