Just registered for the CTA exam in September and trying to build a realistic study schedule. I've been doing tax prep for 3 years but mostly individual returns. The CTA covers business entity taxation, advanced planning, and estate work that I'm much less comfortable with, so I can't just coast on existing knowledge.
My current plan is 16 weeks at about 90 minutes per day on weeknights. I'm starting with business entity taxation since that's my biggest gap, then moving to estate and trust planning, and saving individual optimization strategies for last since I already know that material reasonably well. Pass rates I've seen quoted are around 55–65%, which seems low for a professional credential.
Would love to hear from anyone who's taken it recently — how closely does the actual exam match the official study guide content? And are the questions mostly scenario-based or more definitional? That'll affect how I structure my review sessions pretty significantly.
The estate and trust section tripped me up more than I expected. I'd been doing individual returns for years and thought I had a decent base, but the planning depth the CTA expects is a level above what you see in normal practice. Allocate more time there than you think you need.
Sat for the CTA last November and passed with a 74%. Studied about 14 weeks, 2 hours on weeknights. The scenario-based questions are definitely the majority — they give you a client situation and ask what the optimal planning strategy is, not just what a term means.
Business entity taxation was where most people I know picked up their points. If you're solid there you've got a real cushion going into the sections where you're shakier.
90 minutes a day for 16 weeks should be enough if you're already working in tax. The bigger trap is trying to memorize rules instead of understanding the planning logic behind them. The exam rewards reasoning over pure recall.