Study Strategy
How to Attack CPA Exam MCQs: A 4-Step Framework
By Burak Genc · June 2026 · 7 min read
Two candidates with identical knowledge can score ten points apart on MCQs on technique alone. The exam is written by people who know exactly how tired brains cut corners, every question includes answers built for the candidate who reads top to bottom and grabs the first plausible option. Here's the four-step pattern that defends against that, and it works on FAR, AUD, REG, and BAR alike.
Step 1: read the call of the question first
The “call” is the actual ask, the final sentence that ends in the question mark. Read it before the fact pattern, for two reasons. First, it tells you what to look for, so you read the scenario once with purpose instead of twice in confusion. Second, it surfaces the qualifier words that decide everything: most likely, best, least, first, primary, except, not. On a judgment exam like AUD, several answers are often true, only one is “most” or “first.” Candidates who miss the word except answer the exact opposite of what was asked, with full confidence.
Step 2: answer before you look
After reading the scenario, decide on your answer before you read the options. This is the single highest-value habit in MCQ technique: wrong answers are written to sound right to an undecided mind. If you arrive with a prediction, you're just matching against it, and the distractors lose their main weapon. If you arrive empty, all four options get a vote.
For computational questions, that means doing the math first and then looking for your number. The wrong options on FAR calculations aren't random, each one is the result of a specific, predictable mistake (forgetting to prorate, flipping a sign, using gross instead of net). If you compute first, you find your answer. If you reverse-engineer from the options, you find their answers.
Step 3: eliminate like an auditor
When your prediction isn't clearly there, or the question is conceptual and slippery, switch to disciplined elimination instead:
- Kill absolutes. Options with “always,” “never,” “guarantees,” or “eliminates” are usually wrong on a judgment-based exam, standards speak in “reasonable” and “ordinarily.” (Watch out: ethics and independence rules are the exception, because some of those rules genuinely are absolute.)
- Kill the wrong actor. Auditors don't fix the client's controls; management doesn't choose audit procedures. Any option that assigns a responsibility to the wrong party is dead on arrival.
- Kill the half-right. The classic trap is an option that's 80% correct with one wrong clause. Read every option to the end, the poison is usually in the last few words.
- Respect the qualifier. Down to two finalists? Re-read the call. “First” questions want the earliest step in a sequence, not the most important one. “Best” wants the strongest form of evidence or the most direct procedure, not merely an acceptable one.
Step 4: manage the clock, not the question
- Budget roughly 1.25 minutes per MCQ and check the clock at testlet boundaries, not after every question.
- Decide in 90 seconds or flag it. A question you've stared at for four minutes is no more likely to crack on minute five, but it's guaranteed to steal time from the questions after it. Pick your best elimination, flag it, and move on.
- Never leave blanks. There's no penalty for guessing. A flagged guess can be revisited within the testlet; a blank is a guaranteed zero.
- Expect the difficulty to shift. The MCQ testlets adapt, doing well can route you to a harder second testlet. So harder questions feeling hard is a good sign, not a collapse. Don't let perceived difficulty spiral into panic.
Train the technique, not just the content
Technique only becomes automatic through reps under mild pressure. That's the idea behind our free practice stack: every topic in the FAR and AUD guides has original MCQs with an explanation for every option, so you learn the trap patterns, not just the rules. The AUD Trainer's Blitz mode adds a 20-second clock to force the read-the-call habit, and the timed mocks rehearse the full clock-management game before exam day does it for real.
360+ MCQs to practice on, free
Every question explains why each wrong answer is wrong. That's where the technique lives.
Start practicing →CPA Exam Lab is an independent study resource published by Arc & Ledger LLC. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the AICPA® or NASBA. “CPA” is a registered trademark of the AICPA. This article is educational content, not professional advice, always verify exam logistics with NASBA and your state board of accountancy.