CFE exam section scores — how does the 75% requirement actually break down?
Passed my CFE last month and I want to share how the scoring actually works because I found conflicting info online when I was prepping. You need a 75% in each of the four sections — Financial Transactions, Fraud Prevention and Deterrence, Legal Elements, and Investigation — independently. You can't average across sections. If you get 90% in three sections and 74% in one, you fail.
I found out the hard way on a practice exam that I was mentally treating it as an overall average. When I actually broke down my mock scores by section I was sitting around 68% in Legal Elements. Spent the next three weeks almost exclusively on that section — statutes, standards of evidence, interview admissibility rules. Got it up to 79% by test day.
The CFE practice test resources were useful for Legal Elements specifically because that section has a lot of jurisdiction-specific nuances that you just have to memorize. Financial Transactions was actually the most straightforward for me — maybe because I came in with a CPA background — but I know that trips up people who come from law enforcement without the accounting side.
Total study time was around 140 hours over about four months. I used the ACFE prep materials as the primary source and layered in practice questions from a couple of other sources. The ACFE's own practice exams are closer to the real thing in terms of question style than most third-party stuff I tried.
140 hours over four months sounds about right based on what I've heard. I'm at about 90 hours currently with six weeks left and feeling okay on three sections but shaky on Investigation techniques. Did you have a lot of questions about specific interviewing methods or more about documentation and evidence handling?
The CPA background helping on Financial Transactions makes total sense. I came from an IT audit role so the financial side was rougher for me. Once I started treating the financial statement fraud questions almost like ratio analysis rather than trying to memorize indicators, my scores jumped from around 71% to 82% in about two weeks.
The per-section requirement is something a lot of people miss and it's brutal when you find out mid-study that your weakest area is actually below the threshold. I had the opposite problem — Legal Elements was my strongest and I was bombing Fraud Prevention. Something about the prevention and deterrence frameworks just didn't click for me until I found a few case study write-ups from the ACFE journal.
Great discussion. One thing nobody mentions: sleep the night before matters more than one more study session. Went in fully rested for my CFE and felt sharper than expected.
I'll be honest, I almost rage-quit after my first attempt when I failed Legal Elements by two points while acing everything else. It felt pointless that one section could tank the whole thing. But once I actually drilled down on the weak spots instead of just reviewing everything equally, it clicked. The cfe/questions/forensic accounting financial fraud investigation practice questions were where things finally started making sense for the Financial Transactions section specifically.
Don't let the 75% number fool you into thinking it's easy just because it's not a higher bar. Four independent hurdles is a different beast than one combined score. I've seen people pass three sections comfortably and still fail the exam overall, which is brutal but it's how it works. Keep your prep section-by-section and you'll be fine.
Congrats to everyone still grinding through this. One thing that genuinely helped me was treating each section as its own separate exam mentally. I'd been studying everything together and didn't realize I was neglecting Legal Elements until pretty late. That section felt weirdly specific and I wasn't ready for how granular it got on the actual test.
The thing that made the difference for me was doing timed section-by-section practice runs in the final two weeks instead of mixed question sets. It showed me exactly where I was under 75% and I could fix it before exam day. You can have a great overall average and still fail if one section drags, so don't let yourself get comfortable just because you're hitting 80% on full practice tests.