The ACA Law exam is a unique exam within the ACA syllabus because unlike other certificate level papers, it doesn’t lead on to further modules. In the most recent exam season, the pass rate for the Law exam was 91.1% which suggests that this is one of the easier exams within the curriculum. Despite that, many candidates find the Law exam to be stressful due to the high volume of material, uniqueness of the content and the novelty of dealing with legal information.

To pass the ICAEW ACA Law exam, candidates need to be disciplined in sticking to predetermined timings on exam day and prioritise repetitive question bank practice during the revision phase. For this exam, a careful reading of the question to prevent avoidable errors will be especially important.

As a fully qualified ACA Accountant, I look back at the Law exam as a bit of an anomaly within the wider syllabus. This might be because it is the only exam that isn’t Accounting focused to at least some degree or it may be because this certificate level exam doesn’t lead to more difficult advanced papers as some of the others do. Regardless, I found Law relatively interesting to study and fairly easy to pass. Have a read-through of the below guide to ensure you pass this certificate level exam comfortably too.

Please note, some sections of the below guide have been duplicated from my guides on other exam modules where the advice is applicable across both exams.

How to pass the ACA Law exam

Unlike the Accounting exam, the Law exam is less technical and will rely less on a genuine understanding of the material.

As with any exam, passing will be down to a combination of pre-exam preparation and exam day performance.

Strong exam day performance will simply be a case of managing exam day nerves, being diligent with exam day practicalities and being sufficiently well rested to be in a position to give your best performance.

More so than perhaps any other exam, diligent reading of the questions will be crucially important. Candidates should be conscious that many who fail this exam will do so by dropping marks through answering the question they thought they saw, rather than what was actually asked. Don’t let this be you.

Prior to sitting down to take the exam, students should have a clear exam strategy in mind focused on the 55% pass mark, the number of questions and the total time. More on this later.

As with most other certificate level exams, the key to success is repetitive, active question bank practice. This is not a glamorous process but if candidates can get past the fatigue of repetitive question practice, they are highly likely to be successful with this exam.

To be very confident of passing – answer every question in the question bank at least twice and attempt a few full-length mock exams. This volume of practice and learning from mistakes will serve you very well when it comes to exam day.

ACA Law exam – key information

All of the key information regarding the ACA Law exam is summarised below:

FactorResultNotes
Exam length1.5 hours
Pass-mark55%
Pass-rate91.1%At the most recent sitting, 91.1% of candidates passed the exam.
LevelCertificateThe exams are in 3 levels; Certificate, Professional or Advanced. See the image below.
Structure50 multiple choice questions (100%)50 multiple choice style questions worth 2 marks each.
LocationAny ICAEW-approved test centre
CPLYesIt is possible to get a ‘Credit for Prior Learning’ (exemption) for this exam.
Open book?NoYou can’t take notes into this exam. You can take an approved calculator & blank paper / a whiteboard depending on if taking the exam in-centre or at home.
Precursor to:NoneThe law exam is not a direct precursor to any other exam in the ACA syllabus.

How the exam is structured

The ACA Law exam falls within the certificate level as shown below and doesn’t directly lead to any of the following professional or advanced level exams. However, the knowledge gained during the Law module is tangentially relevant across the board so it is well worth making sure you understand the content.

ACA Law Exam

The exam is made up of 50 multiple-choice / multiple-response / multi-part multiple-choice style questions worth a total of 100% of the exam.

As the exam is 90 minutes long, this suggests you have 1 minute 48 seconds per question (90 minutes divided by 50 questions = 1.8 minutes = 1 minute 48 seconds).

To simplify, candidates should give themself 1.5 minutes per question. In total, this would take up 75 minutes (1 minute 30 * 50 questions) which would leave 15 minutes spare at the end of the exam to review answers or go back to any specific questions which were left unanswered.

This is an important point – if any single question is taking you longer than one and a half minutes to answer, move on! Most people who fail this exam will do so because they mess up their timings.

An advisable exam technique is to scan over a question and immediately assess whether you can answer it within 1 minute 30. If not, mark it and come back to the question at the end.

As with all certificate level exams, the pass mark is 55%. This means we only need to get 28 questions correct out of 50. Let’s get the 28 easiest one’s first and then go back to the more tricky ones after and pick up whatever marks we can. The last thing we want is to take 5+ minutes on one of the first few questions and feel time-pressured and stressed for the rest of the exam.

What is the difference between multiple choice and multiple response questions?

Within the ACA Law exam, the questions will fall into three similar but different structures.

  1. Multiple-choice – candidates will be asked a question and have to select one answer out of a list of possible answers.
  2. Multiple-response – candidates will be asked a question and have to select a number of correct answers from the list.
  3. Multi-part multiple-choice – candidates will be asked a series of interrelated multiple-choice style questions wrapped up into one exam question.

Multiple-choice questions are fairly self-explanatory and are the easiest of the three question types laid out above. The difficulty with this exam is that the answers aren’t always black and white, often a number of the possible answers will be valid and the question will ask for the ‘best’ answer.

Multiple-response questions are slightly more difficult in that there is a bit more variability. In a multiple-choice question, a candidate has a 25% of getting the answer correct with a guess when there are four possible answers. For multiple-response questions, this percentage drops because there could be one, two, three or four correct answers so there are more possible permutations and therefore lower odds of correctly guessing the answer.

Multi-part multiple-choice questions are the most difficult of the three question types as they will involve correctly answering two separate parts of a question on a common topic. Following on from above, if a candidate were to guess both parts of the question this would be odds of 25% for part a and 25% for part b (1 out of 4 chance of getting the correct answer in each stage).

The odds of correctly guessing both parts is therefore lower. This does of course assume both parts have 4 possible answers to choose from and that the candidate is unable to eliminate any possibilities.

By their nature, multi-part questions will take longer to complete than the other two question types as there is more to read and more to think about. Candidates may consider skipping these questions on the first pass through and first taking care of the easier multiple-choice and multiple response style questions.

ACA Law exam – revision strategy

With the exception of self-taught students, most of your revision time will be determined by your tuition provider.

As alluded to above, the vast majority of revision time for this module should be spent drilling questions. Unlike the Assurance exam where knowledge seems to automatically compound as you go through questions, the Law exam preparation will need to be a bit more deliberate.

By this I mean that students should continue to practice questions but at the same time review particular laws or topics within the course notes as they go. Unlike Assurance which can be passed with pure memorisation, Law requires some deeper understanding of the content itself.

Luckily, by practising the volume of questions I have suggested above, this understanding will gradually come through trial and error, particularly as you review any wrong answers with reference to the course notes.

My technique for question practice was to open the question bank and work through each chapter in turn. At the end of each chapter, I would mark my answers and note my percentage score in an Excel document.

Once I had completed the entire question bank, I would review my scores and look for any topics I was scoring less than 60% on (giving myself a 5% buffer for lucky answers). On these topics, I would return to the course notes to refresh my understanding and answer the end of chapter questions.

Once this process was complete, I would start again but this time do each chapter to time. For example, if there was a chapter of 20 questions, I would give myself 30 minutes assuming 1.5 minutes per question as discussed above. This is great practice for exam conditions and will help to train candidates to answer questions accurately in a timely manner.

As you go through this process, many of the sections will begin to feel much more comfortable. For those with recurring issues, it’s critical that you are effective at learning from your mistakes. See the next chapter on the ‘notepad method’ for more.

Some students suggest that the tuition provider (BPP, Kaplan etc) question banks are not always representative of the types of questions actually asked by ICAEW. For this reason, candidates should include full-length timed mock exams as part of their preparation spread across the revision period. Over time, you should see your scores gradually tick up.

On the Law exam, the examiners do seem to try and trip candidates up with the wording of questions. A common example is slightly rewording a commonly asked question in the question bank and giving the answer to that question as one of the multiple-choice options.

To prepare for this, students should build up the technique of actively reading questions and understanding specifically what is being asked for via taking sufficient time and highlighting/noting down key words or information.

To maximise productivity whilst studying consider implementing the Pomodoro technique (which is explained briefly in this Youtube video). This will help avoid burnout when it comes to the long nights with the question bank.

I found joining a study group with a couple of other students immensely helpful. For this exam, it’s unlikely different members of the study group will be at different levels of understanding to start with, it will really depend on who has practised and revised most effectively. Being in a study group is great for keeping yourself accountable and staying on track with your revision plan.

How to learn from your mistakes effectively

To make the most of your revision sessions, you need to be diligent in learning from your mistakes and making sure you don’t make the same errors repeatedly.

I’ve found using the ‘notepad method‘ particularly effective for this.

Here’s how it works – buy a nice new notepad and write ‘ACA Law exam – mistakes’ on the front cover. Any time you make an error in mock exams, the question bank or the end of chapter questions within the course notes, write a note in your notepad explaining what the error was, why you made it, what the correct answer should be and a reminder to yourself about how this error can be avoided in the future.

At the start of each revision session, read through this notepad of mistakes and you’ll gradually stop making the same errors as you become more conscious of them.

As well as errors where you simply don’t know the answer, include errors where you misread the question. Having to go through the annoyance of getting out your notepad, writing the error and what you should have done will negatively reinforce making these errors in the future. It’s surprising how effective this is if you commit to it properly.

ACA Law exam – timing and strategy

As well as having a revision strategy, candidates should think about an exam strategy to maximize their chances of success. This strategy should be based on four core factors: answering easy questions first, being careful not to take too much time on any single question, reading questions carefully and ‘playing the game’ to get over 55%.

Working out how long to spend on each question and being disciplined in sticking to these timings is the single most important thing to do in this exam to increase your chances of success.

As a reminder, there are 90 minutes available to answer 50 questions. This works out at just over one and a half minutes per multiple-choice question. Skip any question that looks like it will take longer than this and pick up the easy marks first.

On your first pass-through of the exam, answer any questions that look like they are comfortably manageable within one and a half minutes and skip any difficult or multi-part questions for now. Once you have got to the end of the exam, maybe you have answered 30 out of 50 questions confidently which may already be enough to pass.

Assuming you stuck to the one and a half minute per question rule, you will have 45 minutes remaining to answer the outstanding 20 questions. This leaves you with 2 minutes, 15 seconds per question which allows for a little extra breathing room. On the second sweep of the exam, do the same thing again. Leave any very difficult questions and answer the moderately difficult ones previously left.

Have a go or at least an educated guess at the very difficult questions left at the end.

The goal here should be to pass the exam by getting a score above 55% not getting a score in the 90s. Passing is what’s important, what will help you qualify and what your employer ultimately cares about. All talk of achieving a high average score across the ACA is nonsense. If others want to go after a vanity metric, let them. Your focus should just be on passing each exam on the first attempt.

ACA Law exam

How to tackle concepts you keep getting wrong

As with any exam, a certain proportion of the content will be challenging. It may even feel at times like you can’t understand a particular item no matter how much you read the course notes and practice questions. This is particularly relevant to Law where specific parts of course are truly confusing.

If you find yourself in this situation and are beginning to get overwhelmed, here are my suggestions:

  1. Consider ignoring it. This is especially effective on the Law exam where the topics don’t tend to overlap too much. This is a question of expected value – what is likely to pay off in the long run – spending 2 hours studying a niche topic that will be worth a mark or two in the exam at most, or spending those 2 hours drilling another 80 questions?
  2. If the topic can’t be ignored – ask either your tutor or a classmate who does understand it for help. In my experience, both tutors and classmates are more than willing to explain a concept and sometimes a new perspective can help you understand something that was previously incomprehensible.
  3. Consider google-ing the topic. A lot of very specific Law style questions are explained online on blogs, forums or Youtube videos which may help unlock your understanding.

Common difficult concepts in the ACA Law exam

Unlike the Accounting exam, there isn’t anything specific within the Law exam that is particularly technical. In my experience, different students struggle with different topics within this module.

The Law exam is made up of the following areas:

  1. The impact of civil law on business and professional service (35%
  2. Company and insolvency law (40%)
  3. The impact of criminal law on business and professional services (10%)
  4. The impact of law on the professional context (15%)

Clearly, the focus should be on the first two sections worth a combined 75% of the exam. Some students may make the error of over-prioritising criminal law because it’s more interesting. This would be a mistake given it is only 10% of the exam content and easier than other areas in my experience.

Unlike other exams, there isn’t any single particular concept that is difficult within the Law exam. Different students find different areas challenging. If you identify an area of the course you are weak on – determine whether it is significant or not (i.e. likely relates to more than 2 questions in a 50 question exam) and if so, prioritise this section’s questions when you are most fresh and consider reviewing the course notes to improve your understanding.

Why does the ACA syllabus include a Law exam?

Some candidates may find themselves wondering why they are studying Law within an Accounting qualification. The short answer is because Law and Accountancy are directly linked in a practical setting and ACA qualified accountants will be expected, both in audit or industry, to understand the legal issues impacting a business and how these issues impact the financial statements.

An obvious example is if a company is being sued. Clearly, this is a legal matter in nature but it also directly impacts the financial statements through a provision on the balance sheet for a probable pay-out, legal expenses going through the profit and loss statement and a possible impact ongoing concern if the legal action is significant enough to impact the continued operation of the company.

Having said all of this, the Law exam sits alone within the ACA curriculum and isn’t a direct precursor to any other exam within the ACA syllabus. So whilst it is worth understanding the topics for any tangential links to other exams, most of the minutiae will be pretty quickly forgotten after students leave the exam centre.

Tips for exam day

I often use the metaphor of a boxer preparing for a fight for how candidates should prepare for the ACA exams. Both the pre-fight preparation and the fight-day itself are equally important. If you don’t prepare properly, you won’t be successful. Similarly, if you prepare well, but perform poorly on the day, you won’t be successful.

With this in mind, I’ve laid out a few tips to help optimise your exam day performance that worked consistently for me during my exam days.

Needless to say, being well prepared is crucial. It doesn’t matter how well you sleep the night before the exam or how dialled in your pre-exam ritual is if you don’t know the content. There is nothing that will help calm exam nerves to the extent that being over-prepared will.

As well as being well prepared on the exam content, it also pays off to be well prepared practically speaking. Things go wrong in exams so have contingencies planned. If you’re doing your exam from home as many are at the moment, have a backup plan if your wifi cuts out e.g. a mobile phone hotspot connection. Take an earlier train into the exam centre in case there are signal failures (which there seem to be most days).

My next tip may sound a bit like something your Grandmother would say but with age comes wisdom. Get a good night’s sleep for the week leading up to the exam. One good sleep does not make up for poor sleep every other night. Get your 7-8 hours per night. Believe me, this will have a bigger impact than another hour of revision late at night. The research is very clear that good sleep is crucial for memory retention which is a big part of all of the ACA exams, particularly the multiple-choice focused certificate level.

Next up is the all-important exam routine. Obviously, this will vary by whether you’re taking exams in person or at home online. Regardless, develop a routine, stick to it for each exam and it will serve you well. Here are the highlights from mine:

  1. 8 hours sleep each night for the week leading up to the exam
  2. The night before the exam – I write down timings going backwards from the start time of the exam. E.g. 9.00 am start the exam, 8.00 am arrive at the exam centre, 7.15 am leave the house, 6.30 am wake up. Assume your commute will be delayed and plan accordingly. Don’t let your hard work go to waste by poor time management.
  3. Arrive at the exam centre at least an hour before the exam is due to start. This may mean an early start and going to sleep earlier than you normally would but it’s only 15 times you’ll need to do this.
  4. Sign in and know exactly where you’ll be sitting the exam.
  5. Find a quiet place and relax until 10 minutes before the exam starts. Flick over your notes if helpful, but nothing too strenuous.
  6. Take your seat & speak up if any obvious issues with technology or exam materials.

This was my routine but we all work differently and something less regimented may be better suited to some individuals. If you’re the type of person who’s often late, make a plan to ensure you’re not late for the exam. Nothing will make you lose faith in yourself faster than messing up an exam you prepared hard for because you lack time management skills.

Finally, a quick point on when is the right time to stop revising. My advice is to stop revising a few hours before you sleep on the night before the exam and relax for a few hours. Trying to cram material late on the night before the exam will probably not help and almost certainly make it more difficult to sleep.

Should you take your ACA exam exemption?

Some students will be exempt from certain exams due to the credit for prior learning (CPL) system. For students who have studied Accounting at university or have done similar qualifications in the past, certain ICAEW ACA modules will be a duplication of content. Rather than repeating an exam already passed, students can apply for a credit for prior learning and become exempt from the exam.

More information on ACA exam exemptions can be found here.

Whether students apply for and take exam exemptions is up to them but it’s worth noting the below advantage and disadvantage of doing so.

The big advantage is clear – students can save themselves significant study time and exam stress by taking an exemption and use that saved time for other exams they are not exempt from taking.

Law is a great module to take an exemption in as the material covered isn’t a pre-requisite for future exams so it makes sense to save yourself the time and energy.


As always, please remember I am an Accountant, but not your Accountant. In this post (and all of my others) I share information and oftentimes give anecdotes about what has worked well for me. However, I do not know your personal financial situation and so do not offer individual financial advice. If you are unsure of a particular financial subject, please hire a qualified financial advisor to guide you.

This article has been written by Luke Girling, ACA – a qualified Accountant and personal finance enthusiast in the UK. Please visit my About page for more information. To verify my ACA credentials – please search for my name at the ICAEW member finder. To get in touch with questions or ideas for future posts, please comment below or contact me here.