AUD CPA Exam 2026: Syllabus, Pass Rates & Study Plan

by Vicky Sarin
CPA Section Guide · AUD

AUD CPA Exam 2026: Syllabus, Format and How Indian Candidates Pass It

AUD is the Core CPA section that tests the whole audit and attestation process — ethics, risk, evidence and reporting — under US standards. For ICAI-trained candidates it is the most transferable section, because Indian Standards on Auditing are converged with the ISAs. The catch is the judgment-heavy question style and the US-specific labels. This guide maps the 2026 Blueprint and gives you a structure to pass it.

Updated June 2026 · Eduyush CPA Team · 12 min read

📅
2026 Blueprint
Effective 1 January 2026
4 hours
78 MCQs · 7 TBSs
📊
47.80%
Q1 2026 pass rate
Quick answer

The AUD CPA exam is the Core section that tests the entire audit and attestation process — ethics and independence, risk assessment, obtaining evidence, and reporting — under US auditing standards. The 2026 version contains 78 multiple-choice questions and 7 task-based simulations across four Blueprint areas, scored 50% MCQ and 50% TBS over a four-hour sitting. AUD is the most transferable Core section for Indian CAs because Indian Standards on Auditing are converged with the ISAs, but its judgment-based questions and US-specific report wording make it deceptively tricky. The pass rate was around 48% in 2025 and 47.80% in Q1 2026.

AUD at a glance Detail
Duration 4 hours
MCQs 78
TBSs 7
Pass rate (Q1 2026) 47.80%
Core / Discipline Core
Difficulty Medium–high — judgment-heavy, standards-dense
Best taken Early — strong after FAR
Main focus The audit process under US standards
Key takeaways
  • AUD is one of three Core sections every candidate must pass — see the six CPA sections for how it fits the full exam.
  • Four Blueprint areas: Ethics & General Principles, Assessing Risk, Performing Procedures & Obtaining Evidence, and Forming Conclusions & Reporting.
  • Evidence (30–40%) and Risk (25–35%) together are up to three-quarters of the exam — they decide your result.
  • AUD is judgment-based, not computational. It is the least number-heavy Core section, which is why it trips up candidates who study by formula.
  • For Indian CAs, AUD is the section where audit experience pays off most — the concepts transfer; only the US labels are new.

What is the AUD CPA exam?

AUD is the Core CPA exam section that tests the audit and attestation process: professional ethics and independence, planning and risk assessment, obtaining and evaluating evidence, and forming conclusions and reporting. The full name is Auditing and Attestation.

The 2026 Blueprint frames AUD around real engagements — financial statement audits of issuers and nonissuers, compliance audits, audits of internal control, single audits, and attestation work. It tests the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct, AICPA standards (SAS) for nonissuers, and PCAOB standards for issuers. Crucially, AUD rewards judgment: you apply professional skepticism to facts, not just recite a rule.

Note for Indian candidates

Your audit training transfers more directly here than in any other section. India's Standards on Auditing are converged with the ISAs, so risk assessment, internal controls, evidence, sampling and opinion types will feel familiar. What is new is the US framework split (PCAOB for issuers, AICPA SAS for nonissuers) and US report wording. Coming straight from ICAI? Read the CPA-after-CA path for Indian CAs first.

What is tested on AUD? The four Blueprint areas and weights

AUD is tested across four content areas, each given a percentage range in the 2026 Blueprint. Evidence and risk dominate; ethics and reporting are lighter but unavoidable. The ranges below are the official AICPA allocations effective 1 January 2026.

Blueprint area Weight Skill emphasis
I — Ethics, Professional Responsibilities & General Principles 15–25% Independence and conduct
II — Assessing Risk & Developing a Planned Response 25–35% Risk and controls
III — Performing Further Procedures & Obtaining Evidence 30–40% Evidence and procedures
IV — Forming Conclusions & Reporting 10–20% Opinions and reports
🎯 Exam pattern

Areas II and III combined are up to three-quarters of the exam. Weight your study the way the Blueprint does — risk assessment and evidence first, ethics and reporting close behind. Reporting is small (10–20%) but high-yield: the report-type questions are predictable and reward memorising the exact wording differences.

What topics are in AUD?

The substance of AUD is the audit process, framed by ethics at the front and reporting at the end. Here is what each area asks you to apply — usually as a judgment call, not a calculation.

I — Ethics & Independence
AICPA Code of Professional Conduct, the threats-and-safeguards framework, independence across SEC, PCAOB, GAO and DOL, professional skepticism, engagement terms and documentation.
II — Risk & Controls
COSO Internal Control framework, entity-level and IT general controls, SOC 1 reports, materiality and performance materiality, risk of material misstatement, fraud versus error.
III — Evidence
Sufficient appropriate evidence, sampling, tests of controls versus tests of details, analytical procedures, external confirmations, accounting estimates, going concern, subsequent events, written representations.
IV — Reporting
The four opinion types (unmodified, qualified, adverse, disclaimer), issuer versus nonissuer reports, compilation, review and preparation engagements, and Government Auditing Standards.

The IT-controls content in Area II overlaps directly with the ISC Discipline — see our guide to accounting information systems for the deeper controls layer.

Common mistake

The single biggest AUD trap is missing the entity type. Questions explicitly state whether the engagement is for an issuer (PCAOB standards) or a nonissuer (AICPA SAS) — and the required answer changes with it. Read the entity type and engagement type before the options. Skipping that line is how prepared candidates lose marks they should keep.

How many MCQs are on AUD? The exam format

AUD contains 78 multiple-choice questions and 7 task-based simulations, delivered across five testlets in a four-hour sitting. MCQs and TBSs are each worth 50% of your score, so the simulations carry half your result.

Component Count Detail
Multiple-choice questions 78 Two MCQ testlets of 39 each
Task-based simulations 7 Three TBS testlets: 2 + 3 + 2
Scoring weight 50 / 50 MCQs 50%, TBSs 50%
Total time 4 hours Passing score 75 on a scaled basis
💡 Study tip

AUD MCQs are wordy and turn on a single qualifier — "most likely", "least likely", "best describes". Read the call of the question first, then the stem, then the options. Since CPA Evolution (January 2024) the exam uses a linear design: every MCQ testlet is weighted equally, so difficulty does not ramp based on your first testlet. Pace steadily, bank time on the questions you know cold, and protect the back half for the TBSs, where half the score lives.

What is the difference between PCAOB and AICPA?

PCAOB standards apply to audits of issuers; AICPA standards apply to audits of nonissuers. That one distinction drives a large share of AUD questions, so fix it early.

PCAOB — issuers
  • Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, created by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
  • Issues PCAOB Auditing Standards (AS).
  • Governs audits of issuers — SEC-registered public companies.
  • Inspects registered audit firms.
AICPA — nonissuers
  • American Institute of CPAs; its Auditing Standards Board sets the rules.
  • Issues Statements on Auditing Standards (SAS).
  • Governs audits of nonissuers — private companies.
  • Also issues the Code of Professional Conduct and SSARS (review, compilation, preparation).
Note

The question always tells you which it is. "An audit of an issuer" points you to PCAOB standards; "an audit of a nonissuer" points you to AICPA SAS. That single word selects the framework — and often the correct answer.

Is AUD the hardest CPA section?

No. Among the three Core sections, AUD sits in the middle.

47.80%
AUD
Mid-pack Core (Q1 2026)
66.65%
REG
Most passable Core
43.46%
FAR
Toughest Core

AUD's pass rate was around 48% in 2025 and 47.80% in Q1 2026 — above FAR (43.46%) and the BAR Discipline (41.30%), but below REG (66.65%). FAR is the toughest Core section by pass rate, not AUD. For the full picture across all six sections, see the CPA pass rates in context.

What makes AUD feel hard is not computation — it is the volume of nuanced standards and the judgment-based question style. There is rarely one obvious answer; you choose the best response among several defensible ones. The candidates who pass practise that judgment until the standards become instinct.

AUD does not test whether you can compute. It tests whether you can decide. Those who struggle treat it like a memory exam; those who pass treat it like a thinking exam.

How hard is AUD for Indian CAs?

For Indian CAs, AUD is the most transferable Core section — the one where your training does the most work. The friction is relabelling, not relearning.

✅ Transfers from your CA training
  • Risk assessment and the audit approach
  • Internal control concepts and testing
  • Audit evidence and sampling
  • Materiality and opinion logic
  • Professional skepticism — all ISA-converged
🆕 New US-specific labels
  • PCAOB versus AICPA SAS framework split
  • US report wording and modified opinions
  • SSARS engagements: compilation, review, preparation
  • Government Auditing Standards and single audits
  • Independence across SEC, PCAOB, GAO and DOL

Expect the concepts to feel comfortable and the labels to feel foreign. That is the right kind of difficulty — it rewards practice, not raw learning.

🤖 Why adaptive learning fits AUD

AUD's difficulty is judgment under a mountain of nuanced standards — the wording of opinions, the issuer/nonissuer split, the line between a review and an audit. That is exactly what Surgent CPA Review's A.S.A.P. technology targets: it diagnoses where your judgment slips — say, modified opinions or independence threats — and drills those question types until recognition is automatic, instead of re-testing standards you already apply correctly. For a practising CA who knows the concepts but not the US labels, that targeting compresses study time sharply. See how it fits the full pathway on the Eduyush CPA course page.

How long does AUD take to study?

Plan AUD study time by your background. ICAI-trained CAs need the fewest hours of any Core section here, because audit experience and the ISA-converged base transfer almost wholesale. Other backgrounds need more runway to build audit intuition from scratch.

Background Estimated AUD study hours
CA (ICAI) 70–100
ACCA 80–110
B.Com 110–150
Non-accounting 140–190

Estimates, not guarantees — your hours depend on prior audit exposure and weekly consistency.

AUD topics Indian candidates struggle with most

A handful of topics account for most of the friction — almost all where US practice diverges from the converged Indian framework, or has no Indian counterpart. Front-load practice here.

🎯 Highest-friction AUD topics
  • Issuer vs nonissuer split — PCAOB for issuers, AICPA SAS for nonissuers, and the report differences.
  • Modified opinions — when to qualify, when to issue an adverse opinion, when to disclaim.
  • SSARS engagements — compilation, review and preparation, with no clean Indian analogue.
  • Independence rules — the AICPA conceptual framework plus SEC, PCAOB, GAO and DOL requirements.
  • SOC 1 reports and IT general controls — how a service organisation's controls affect the user-entity audit.
  • Government Auditing Standards — single audits under the Uniform Guidance, entirely US-specific.

AUD CPA vs ACCA AA: what is the difference?

AUD and ACCA's Audit and Assurance (AA) test the same discipline through different lenses: AUD is US-standard and objective; AA is ISA-based and written. Indian candidates weighing the two should compare format and framework, not just the pass rate.

Dimension AUD (CPA) AA (ACCA)
Standards US — PCAOB AS + AICPA SAS ISA-based (international)
Format 78 MCQs + 7 TBSs (objective) Constructed written responses
Pass rate ~48% (47.80% Q1 2026) ~46% (recent sittings)
Focus US reporting, issuer/nonissuer International audit, single framework
Level Core CPA section Applied Skills paper
🔑 Which feels easier?

The pass rates are close, so format decides it. If you prefer objective testing, AUD's MCQ-and-simulation structure suits you. If you write strong narrative answers, AA's constructed responses play to that. For Indian candidates, AA's ISA framework sits closer to the Standards on Auditing you already know — but AUD's judgment-style MCQs reward the same audit instinct without the essay-writing load.

How should you approach AUD, and where does it fit?

Take AUD early, ideally after FAR — you audit financial statements, so understanding how they are built makes the audit content land faster. The detailed logic is in our guide to where AUD fits in your exam sequence.

1
Lock ethics and independence first. The AICPA Code of Professional Conduct and the threats-and-safeguards framework frame every later judgment.
2
Build risk assessment and internal controls. COSO, entity-level and IT general controls, materiality, and the risk of material misstatement.
3
Drill evidence — the largest area. Tests of controls vs tests of details, sampling, analytics, confirmations, estimates and going concern. Most cycles go here.
4
Finish with reporting. Memorise the four opinion types and the issuer/nonissuer report differences close to the exam, while the wording is fresh.
5
Practise TBSs deliberately. AUD simulations include research and document-review tasks and carry 50% of the score. Working professionals should ringfence weekend blocks — see the study plan for working professionals in India.
🔑 Key insight

AUD ethics and REG ethics are different bodies of rules. AUD tests the AICPA Code of Professional Conduct and auditor independence; REG tests Circular 230 and tax-preparer conduct. A question's framing tells you which framework applies — confusing the two is a common cross-section error.

Questions candidates ask Eduyush about AUD

What is AUD in CPA?
AUD is the Core CPA section that tests the audit and attestation process — ethics and independence, risk assessment, obtaining evidence, and reporting — under US standards. It covers audits of issuers (PCAOB standards) and nonissuers (AICPA SAS), plus review, compilation and attestation engagements.
Is AUD harder than FAR?
No. FAR is the toughest Core section by pass rate (43.46% in Q1 2026) versus AUD at 47.80%. FAR is broad and computation-heavy; AUD is narrower but judgment-based. For most candidates FAR demands more study hours.
How many MCQs are on AUD?
AUD has 78 multiple-choice questions and 7 task-based simulations. The MCQs are split into two testlets of 39, and the simulations into testlets of 2, 3 and 2. MCQs and TBSs each count for 50% of the score over a four-hour exam.
Is AUD mostly theory?
Largely, yes — it is the least computational Core section. There is light quantitative work in sampling and materiality, but most of the exam is judgment and standards application: choosing the best response, the correct opinion, or the appropriate procedure.
How many hours should I study for AUD?
It depends on background: roughly 70–100 hours for an ICAI-trained CA, 80–110 for an ACCA, 110–150 for a B.Com graduate, and 140–190 for a non-accounting candidate. AUD usually needs fewer hours than FAR or REG.
What is the difference between PCAOB and AICPA?
PCAOB standards govern audits of issuers (SEC-registered public companies); AICPA standards (SAS) govern audits of nonissuers (private companies). The AICPA also issues the Code of Professional Conduct and SSARS. Each AUD question states the entity type, which selects the framework.
Can I pass AUD without audit experience?
Yes. Audit experience helps, but it is not required — many candidates pass AUD on structured study alone. Without field experience, lean harder on practice questions and TBSs so the judgment calls become familiar before exam day.
Should I take AUD before REG?
Either order works, but if audit is your strength, AUD first builds confidence and exam endurance. Many Indian CAs take AUD early because it is the most transferable section, then move to REG, which has the steepest unfamiliar-content curve. There is no content dependency between the two.
Is AUD easier than ACCA AA?
Their pass rates are close — AUD around 48%, AA around 46% — so format matters more than difficulty. AUD is objective (MCQs and simulations) under US standards; AA uses written responses under the ISAs. Pick the one whose format suits how you test best.
Is AUD easier than ICAI audit?
They differ in format more than depth. ICAI's audit papers are descriptive and theory-heavy with notoriously low pass rates; AUD is objective and judgment-based. A CA who cleared ICAI audit already holds the concepts, so AUD often feels more passable — provided you relearn the US-specific standards and report wording.
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