CSA exam day — what do you actually need to bring?

by FirstTimeTaker 555 views4 replies
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FirstTimeTakerOP
April 25, 2026

Scheduling my CSA - Certified System Architect exam this week and trying to figure out what to actually bring vs what I'll be given.

Questions I have:
1. Do they provide scratch paper or is it on-screen only?
2. Are you allowed any breaks? The exam is 3 hours and I'm a slow reader
3. How strict is check-in? How early should I arrive?
4. Is a calculator provided or allowed?

I've been focused on studying "CSA" content but I realize I don't actually know what the test day experience is like. The official website is vague.

For those who took it recently — any surprises on exam day that you wish someone had warned you about? And did the difficulty feel similar to the practice tests or completely different?

Worth mentioning: the free csa application design development covers exactly the areas people tend to struggle with most.

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PracticeQueen
May 23, 2026

Great discussion here. One thing I'd add that hasn't come up: sleep the night before is genuinely more important than one more study session. I went in fully rested for my CSA and felt sharper on the exam prep questions than I expected. Don't underestimate recovery time.

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ExamReady_K
May 23, 2026

Great discussion here. One thing I'd add that hasn't come up: sleep the night before is genuinely more important than one more study session. I went in fully rested for my CSA and felt sharper on the practice test questions than I expected. Don't underestimate recovery time.

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BoothcampGrad_R
June 3, 2026

For anyone finding this later: CSA is passable with consistent effort even working full time. I studied 63 minutes a day for 11 weeks. The free csa user interface user experience kept me honest about my actual gaps.

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ExamAce_T
June 9, 2026

I took mine last month so hopefully this helps. They gave me a physical notepad and pen at check-in, not on-screen scratch, and I actually used it a ton for diagramming flows when I got confused. Check-in was pretty thorough — ID, pockets emptied, palm vein scan at my center — so budget an extra 10-15 minutes before your scheduled start. You can request breaks but the clock doesn't stop, which stings on a 3-hour exam, so I'd plan around that.

The study advice I'd give is don't just memorize the right answer. When I was prepping I forced myself to figure out why each wrong choice was wrong, like what scenario would make it fail. That shift changed everything for me. It's slower going in but the exam throws enough curveballs that pure memorization will leave you guessing. Good luck, you've got this.

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