ABA Training Programs: Courses to Become an Accredited Business Accountant

ABA training programs and courses online for Accredited Business Accountant certification. See what to study, how to prepare, and what the exam covers.

ABA Training Programs: What You Actually Need to Prepare

The Accredited Business Accountant/Advisor (ABA) credential is issued by Accreditation Council for Accountancy and Taxation (ACAT). It's a professional certification designed for accounting professionals who serve small-to-medium businesses — tax preparation, bookkeeping, financial reporting, credit and collections management, and general business accounting.

If you're searching for ABA courses online, you're probably either preparing for the ABA examination or exploring whether the credential is right for your career. Either way, this guide covers what training programs exist, what the exam actually tests, and how to build an effective preparation strategy.

What the ABA Examination Covers

The ABA exam tests six primary content areas:

  • Financial Accounting and Reporting — GAAP fundamentals, financial statement preparation, balance sheet, income statement, cash flow statement, accounts receivable and payable management
  • Managerial and Cost Accounting — cost behavior, cost-volume-profit analysis, budgeting, variance analysis, job costing, activity-based costing
  • Tax Preparation and Compliance — individual income taxation, business entity taxation, deductions, credits, filing requirements
  • Business Law and Ethics — contract law, business entity structures, agency law, professional ethics
  • Credit and Collections Management — credit analysis, collection procedures, bankruptcy basics, credit reporting
  • Financial Reporting and Analysis — ratio analysis, financial statement analysis, business performance evaluation

The exam is typically 200 questions, multiple choice, administered through ACAT-approved testing centers. Passing score varies by module but is generally 70%+ correct.

Our practice tests cover all six content areas. Start with ABA Financial Accounting and Reporting and ABA Tax Preparation and Compliance — the two highest-weight areas that most candidates need the most preparation for.

ABA Courses Online: What's Available

Unlike CPA or CMA programs, the ABA doesn't have a single dominant training provider. Candidates typically assemble their preparation from multiple sources:

ACAT-approved study materials: ACAT publishes a candidate handbook and content outline that's free to download. While they don't publish an official study guide for purchase, the content outline is detailed enough to structure your own study plan. Many candidates use this as their primary roadmap.

Accounting textbooks: The ABA exam draws on standard accounting principles. Textbooks used in community college accounting programs cover most of the financial accounting, managerial accounting, and tax content. You don't need specialized ABA-specific books — standard college-level accounting texts work well.

Online accounting courses: Platforms like Coursera, edX, and LinkedIn Learning offer accounting fundamentals courses that align with ABA content areas. The Coursera Accounting Fundamentals series (from University of Illinois) covers financial and managerial accounting at the right depth for ABA preparation. Most of these courses are available free to audit.

Tax preparation training: The tax section is substantial. H&R Block and Jackson Hewitt both offer tax preparation training courses that are publicly available and cover the individual and business taxation content tested on the ABA. These courses were designed for tax preparers, not CPAs — which makes them appropriate for ABA-level content rather than CPA-depth tax coverage.

Community college coursework: If you need foundational coverage before tackling the exam, community college accounting courses (Accounting I, Accounting II, Federal Taxation) are the most thorough preparation available. They also provide academic credentials alongside exam preparation.

Credit and Collections Management: A Unique ABA Emphasis

One area that distinguishes the ABA from other accounting credentials is its focus on credit and collections management — a practical skill set that matters enormously for business accountants serving small businesses but rarely appears in CPA or CMA curricula.

The credit and collections content covers: extending credit to customers, credit analysis and credit scoring, accounts receivable management, collection procedures (letters, calls, third-party collectors), lien law basics, bankruptcy's effect on collection activity, and Fair Debt Collection Practices Act compliance.

For candidates without accounts receivable or collections experience, this is often the most unfamiliar content area. Our ABA Credit and Collections Management, Credit and Collections 2, and Credit and Collections 3 practice tests build familiarity with this content through exam-style questions.

Building an ABA Study Schedule

Most candidates without formal accounting education spend 2–4 months preparing for the ABA. Candidates with accounting backgrounds (but not necessarily the specific ABA content areas) often need 4–8 weeks.

A practical structure:

Week 1–2: Review the ACAT content outline and take a baseline practice exam across all content areas. Identify your strongest and weakest areas. This determines where to invest your remaining study time.

Weeks 3–6: Content-focused study by module. Start with your weakest areas — don't review what you already know well first. One module per week is a reasonable pace if you're studying 1–2 hours per day.

Weeks 7–8: Practice exam-heavy preparation. Full-length timed practice tests. Score by module, identify persistent weak spots, target those specifically.

Final week: Review flagged concepts, light practice, exam logistics preparation.

Why the ABA Credential Matters

The ABA targets a career niche that the CPA doesn't cover well: accounting professionals who serve small businesses directly — as employed accountants, bookkeepers with expanded scope, tax preparers who want formal credentials, or independent accounting practitioners who aren't CPAs.

CPA firms typically serve larger clients. Small business owners often work with accounting professionals who aren't CPAs but have solid practical knowledge and credentials to back it up. The ABA credential fills that gap — it demonstrates verified competency in exactly the accounting services small businesses need most.

For accounting professionals who want credentialed recognition without the CPA's extensive education and exam requirements, or who serve markets where CPA-level formality isn't what clients need, the ABA is a meaningful, achievable credential with genuine career value.

Our ABA Managerial and Cost Accounting and ABA Taxation and Compliance practice tests round out your preparation across all the exam's content domains.

Start Your ABA Exam Preparation Today

The most efficient preparation strategy combines content review with consistent practice test exposure. Reading accounting textbooks builds knowledge; practice questions build exam readiness. You need both.

Our free ABA practice tests cover all six content areas — financial accounting, managerial accounting, tax compliance, credit and collections, business law, and financial analysis. Start with a broad assessment across multiple areas to identify where your preparation gaps are, then drill those areas systematically using domain-specific practice tests.

The ABA credential is achievable for working accounting professionals in a realistic study timeline. Start your practice tests now and see exactly what level of preparation your current knowledge requires before exam day.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.