Registered for the CTP exam about a week ago with a test date 16 weeks from now and I'm trying to figure out how to structure my prep. I've been in corporate treasury for 3 years — mostly cash management and banking relationships — but my exposure to risk management, financial reporting, and short-term investing is limited because our team is pretty specialized.
The exam blueprint is broad. Cash and liquidity management I feel good about. Working capital, also fine. But the risk sections — interest rate risk, FX exposure, commodity risk — are areas I've read about but never managed operationally. Same with the financial reporting and analysis sections. My day-to-day doesn't require that level of accounting interpretation.
I'm thinking about 10 hours a week for the first 10 weeks on content and then ramping up to 15–18 hours in the final 6 weeks for intensive practice. That gets me to roughly 160–200 hours total. Does that seem calibrated correctly or am I over-preparing given my 3 years of direct experience?
The AFP study guide is obviously the anchor — but is there consensus on whether the practice questions in the official materials are representative of actual exam difficulty? I've heard mixed things and I don't want to walk in thinking I'm ready based on questions that are easier than the real thing.
Your estimate sounds reasonable, maybe even slightly conservative for someone with 3 years of direct experience. The risk sections are legitimately hard if you haven't worked in them — it's not just terminology, it's applying hedging logic and exposure calculations under exam conditions. I'd front-load time on FX and interest rate risk specifically.
The AFP official practice questions are easier than the real exam — that's the consistent feedback I've heard and it matched my experience. They're good for concept reinforcement but don't use your scores on those as a readiness benchmark. Third-party question banks tend to be closer to actual exam difficulty.
Passed at 78% after about 180 hours of prep over 18 weeks. My background was also mostly cash management. The financial reporting section surprised me because it's more than just understanding financial statements — it's about interpreting them in a treasury decision-making context, which is a different framing than most treasury folks are used to.
16 weeks is a comfortable runway. Don't spend the first few weeks on easy material just to feel productive. Identify your gaps early — yours sound like risk and financial reporting — and start there. You'll have time to shore up the rest once those aren't scary anymore.
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