CCIFP study plan — passed on first attempt, here's what worked

by mkayla_r 52 views4 replies
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mkayla_rOP
May 26, 2026

I passed the CCIFP exam last month after about 14 weeks of studying. I was working full-time as a controller for a mid-size GC, so I was squeezing in about 90 minutes on weekdays and 3 to 4 hours on Saturdays. Wanted to share what actually worked since I didn't find much detail online when I was prepping.

The exam has 175 questions over 3.5 hours, and the construction accounting sections are manageable if you have hands-on experience. Where I struggled was the legal and contract sections — I didn't have much exposure to AIA documents or surety bond mechanics, so I had to build that knowledge basically from scratch.

I used the CFMA study guide as my primary resource and supplemented with the Construction Accounting and Financial Management textbook. I'd estimate about 60% of the questions touched things I'd seen in practice, but the other 40% required specific technical knowledge you have to study for deliberately.

If you're sitting for this exam with less than 5 years of construction finance experience, plan for at least 16 to 18 weeks of study time. The breadth of content is wider than most CPA exam sections I've seen people describe.

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mkayla_r
May 26, 2026

CFMA's review course is worth the money in my opinion. The practice questions are much closer to the actual exam format than the standalone textbook exercises.

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marcus_t
May 26, 2026

The surety section got me on my first attempt. I didn't realize how much detail they expect on bonding types and contractor default procedures — that alone is worth a full week of dedicated study.

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chloe_g
May 27, 2026

How did you handle the job cost accounting questions? That section felt really broad on my exam and I wasn't sure how deep they wanted on WIP schedule adjustments.

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marcus_t
May 27, 2026

I passed after 16 weeks studying about 2 hours a day. The percentage of completion method questions were more nuanced than I expected — make sure you understand both the cost-to-cost and units of delivery approaches.

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