But here's where it gets interesting: your background, career goals, and even your learning style will determine which qualification feels more difficult. Let me walk you through what makes each one uniquely challenging.
The Core Structure: How Each Qualification Works
The ACA, administered by ICAEW (Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales), follows a rigid path. You need 5 years of practical experience under a training agreement, during which you complete 15 exams across three levels. The exams are notoriously technical—think advanced financial reporting, tax strategy, and audit methodology that would make most people's heads spin.
The ACCA, on the other hand, offers more breathing room. You can spread your 13 exams across multiple sittings, and the qualification is recognized in over 180 countries. But don't mistake flexibility for ease—the breadth of knowledge required is staggering. You're not just learning UK accounting standards; you're mastering international financial reporting standards (IFRS), global taxation systems, and cross-border audit procedures.
Exam Difficulty: Technical Depth vs. Global Breadth
If we're talking pure exam difficulty, the ACA wins hands down for technical complexity. The Case Study exams at Advanced Level are legendary for their difficulty. You're given a business scenario and expected to apply multiple technical areas simultaneously—tax planning, financial strategy, audit risk assessment—all while managing your time like a seasoned CFO.
The ACCA exams, while numerous, often feel more manageable individually. But here's the catch: you need to pass all of them. And the breadth means you're constantly switching contexts. One month you're deep in UK tax legislation, the next you're analyzing Nigerian corporate law, then suddenly you're dealing with US GAAP reconciliations. It's like being a generalist who has to think like a specialist every few weeks.
Practical Training: The Hidden Challenge
This is where most people underestimate the difficulty. The ACA requires 5 years of structured training with an ICAEW-approved employer. You can't just work anywhere—you need specific experiences mapped to competencies, regular reviews, and a training agreement that locks you in.
The ACCA is more flexible—you can complete your practical experience requirement (PER) while working anywhere, even outside the UK. But this flexibility creates its own challenge: without structured oversight, many candidates struggle to get the right experience or complete their PER documentation properly. I've seen people with multiple ACCA exam passes still unable to qualify because they never completed their practical experience.
Time Commitment: Marathon vs. Ultra-Marathon
The ACA typically takes 4-5 years total—3 years for exams plus 5 years practical training (they overlap). The exams are front-loaded, so you're often studying intensively for the first 2-3 years while working full-time.
The ACCA can take anywhere from 3 to 7 years, depending on your exam strategy. You can take exams at your own pace, but here's the brutal truth: the longer it takes, the harder it becomes to maintain momentum. I've watched candidates take 6 years to complete ACCA, and by the end, they're mentally exhausted from years of exam pressure.
Cost Comparison: The Financial Reality
ACA typically costs £10,000-£15,000 total, but your employer usually covers most of it. The catch? You're often tied to that employer for the full 5 years.
ACCA costs £2,500-£4,000 in fees, but you pay it yourself (though many employers offer study support). The flexibility comes at a price—literally. You're investing your own money, which creates different pressure.
Career Impact: Where Each Qualification Takes You
The ACA is gold standard in the UK, particularly for Big Four firms and corporate finance roles. If you want to work in London investment banking or UK corporate finance, ACA opens doors that ACCA simply cannot.
The ACCA is your passport to international careers. Want to work in Dubai, Singapore, or Johannesburg? ACCA is recognized globally. But in the UK, some employers still view it as slightly less prestigious than ACA for certain roles.
Which One Feels Harder? The Human Factor
Here's something most guides won't tell you: the hardest qualification is often the one that doesn't align with your circumstances.
If you're a 22-year-old with no commitments, living near London, and aiming for a Big Four career, the ACA's structure might actually feel easier because everything is mapped out for you. You know exactly what to do and when.
If you're a 35-year-old with a family, working in a small practice in Manchester, and dreaming of working abroad someday, the ACCA's flexibility might feel harder because you're juggling everything yourself—but it's also probably your only realistic option.
The Real Question: What Are You Trying to Achieve?
Instead of asking which is harder, ask yourself: What do I want to do with my career?
Want to be a UK-based corporate finance specialist? ACA is probably your best bet, despite being technically harder.
Want flexibility to work internationally or build your own practice? ACCA gives you that freedom, even if it requires more self-discipline.
Want to minimize costs while maximizing career options? ACCA's lower fees and global recognition might outweigh its challenges.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I switch from ACCA to ACA (or vice versa)?
Yes, but it's not straightforward. ACCA holders can get exemptions from some ACA exams, but you'd still need to complete the practical training requirements. ACA holders can often get exemptions from ACCA exams, but you'd need to check individual exemptions case by case. The process exists but requires careful planning.
Which qualification is better for entrepreneurship?
ACCA tends to be better for entrepreneurs because of its broader scope and international recognition. You'll understand more about different business environments and regulatory frameworks. But if you're building a UK-focused business, ACA's deeper technical knowledge can be invaluable for complex financial structuring.
How do employers view each qualification?
Big Four firms in the UK strongly prefer ACA, particularly for audit roles. However, ACCA is widely accepted and often required for international positions. Medium-sized firms and industry roles are generally agnostic—they care more about your experience than the letters after your name. The perception gap is real but narrowing, especially as ACCA's global reputation grows.
Is one qualification becoming obsolete?
Neither is going anywhere soon. The ACA remains the gold standard in UK professional services. The ACCA continues to grow globally as businesses become more international. Both are adapting to changes like automation and AI in accounting. The real risk is choosing based on outdated perceptions rather than current career goals.
The Bottom Line
ACA is technically harder with deeper specialization and stricter requirements. ACCA is broader and more flexible but requires more self-direction and covers more ground.
But here's the thing most people miss: the hardest path is often the one that doesn't fit your situation. A qualification that's "easier" on paper becomes brutally difficult if it doesn't align with your career goals, lifestyle, or learning style.
So instead of asking which is harder, ask which one will actually get you where you want to go. Because in the end, the qualification that feels easiest is the one that moves your career forward—regardless of how many people think it's "harder" or "easier" on paper.