Is ACCA Worth It? An Honest Look at the Cost, Time, and Return
It's the right question to ask before committing several years of your life and thousands of pounds to a professional qualification. Is ACCA actually worth it? For most people who complete it: yes, clearly. But "worth it" means different things depending on where you are in your career, how you study, and what you're hoping to get out of it. This guide gives you the honest picture — costs, time, salary uplift, career outcomes, and who it makes the most sense for.
What does ACCA actually cost?ACCA registration and subscription
- Initial registration fee: approximately £89
- Annual subscription: approximately £134 per year
- Over a 4–5 year journey: approximately £500–£700
Exam fees
For all 13 papers at standard entry: roughly £1,500–£2,500 depending on booking habits.
Tuition and study materials
- Self-study with textbooks only: £500–£1,000
- Online tuition provider (e.g. Learnsignal): £800–£2,000
- In-person classroom tuition: £3,000–£6,000+
Resit fees: Budget for 2–3 resits across the qualification: approximately £300–£600.
Total estimated cost: £3,000–£8,000 depending on study method and resit count.
Always check ACCA's website for current fee schedules.
How long does ACCA take?Most working professionals complete ACCA in 3–5 years, studying 2–3 papers per year alongside full-time work. ACCA's flexibility means there's no time pressure — passes don't expire. For a full breakdown: How Long Does ACCA Take?
What is the salary uplift from ACCA?Career stage
Typical UK salary
Part-qualified (studying)
£25,000–£38,000
Newly qualified (0–2 years PQE)
£38,000–£50,000
3–5 years post-qualified
£50,000–£65,000
Senior / management level
£65,000–£85,000
Finance Director / CFO level
£90,000–£150,000+
The salary jump on qualification is typically 15–25% above pre-qualification level. If ACCA costs you £5,000 in total and the salary uplift is £8,000 per year, you recover the full cost within your first year post-qualification.
What career doors does ACCA open?ACCA is recognised in over 180 countries across every sector:
- Practice: audit firms, advisory firms, tax practices
- Industry: financial accountant, management accountant, finance business partner, Financial Controller, Finance Director
- Financial services: banking, insurance, investment management
- Public sector: government finance, NHS, local authorities
- International: Middle East, Africa, Asia-Pacific, and beyond
Who is ACCA most worth it for?ACCA is clearly worth it if:
- You're working in finance and want a globally recognised credential
- You're self-funding — no employer sponsorship or training contract required
- You're based in Ireland, the UK, or planning an international career
- You want flexibility to study at your own pace around a full-time job
ACCA may not be the right fit if:
- Your career is set on UK audit at a Big Four firm — ICAEW (ACA) is often preferred there and is typically employer-funded
- You want to specialise in management accounting — CIMA is more directly aligned
- You're not prepared to commit to sustained study over several years
Is ACCA worth it compared to other qualifications?ACCA vs ICAEW: ACCA is more flexible and globally recognised; ICAEW has more prestige in UK practice. See our full ACCA vs ICAEW comparison.
ACCA vs CIMA: ACCA is broader; CIMA is more focused on management accounting. See our CIMA vs ACCA comparison.
ACCA vs no qualification: The data is clear — ACCA-qualified accountants consistently earn more, progress faster, and access a wider range of roles.
What makes ACCA achievable?• Modular progression — one paper at a time
- Flexible sitting — Applied Knowledge on-demand; other levels four times per year
- Passes don't expire — career interruptions don't erase progress
- Good tuition makes a measurable difference — structured online tuition reduces resits and shortens the path
FAQ Section (Add FAQPage JSON-LD schema)Q: Is ACCA worth the time and money?
A: For most people who complete it, yes. Total cost typically runs to £3,000–£8,000. The salary uplift on qualification — often £5,000–£15,000 per year above an unqualified peer — means most people recoup the cost within 1–2 years of qualifying.
Q: Is ACCA respected by employers?
A: Yes — ACCA is one of the most widely recognised professional accounting qualifications in the world, accepted by employers across every sector in over 180 countries.
Q: Is ACCA hard to complete?
A: ACCA is a genuine professional qualification requiring sustained effort over several years. Pass rates at Strategic Professional level average around 40–45%. Well-prepared students with structured tuition significantly improve their pass rates. See: How Hard is ACCA?
Q: Can I do ACCA while working full time?
A: Yes — the majority of ACCA students study alongside full-time work. ACCA's flexible exam structure is specifically designed for working professionals. Most students study 8–12 hours per week per paper.
Q: How much does ACCA increase your salary?
A: Newly qualified ACCA members typically see a 15–25% salary increase versus their pre-qualification level. UK salaries for newly qualified ACCA members range from £38,000–£50,000, rising to £65,000–£85,000 at senior level and £90,000–£150,000+ at Director/CFO level.
Q: Is ACCA better than a degree?
A: ACCA and a degree serve different purposes. A degree provides broad academic education; ACCA provides a professional accounting qualification specifically recognised for finance roles. Degree holders may be eligible for ACCA exemptions from some papers.
CTA BlockHeading: Ready to find out for yourself?
Body: The best way to know if ACCA is worth it is to start. Learnsignal's flexible ACCA courses are built for working professionals — study at your own pace, around your career, with expert tuition for every one of the 13 papers.
Button: Explore ACCA courses → /acca/online-course/
Full spec: MKB-1369-is-acca-worth-it-blog-post.md (saved to Documents)
This page was last updated:
Johnny Meagher
Expert Tutor at Learnsignal
Qualified professional with years of experience in teaching and helping students achieve their accounting qualifications.
View all posts by Johnny Meagher