How to Study for the EA Exam While Working Full-Time
To study for the EA exam while working full-time, plan 8β10 hours a week for about 6β9 months, take one part at a time, and make practice questions β not lectures β the core of every session. A moderate routine you keep for months beats an ambitious plan that collapses in three weeks. With a traditional course, budget ~70β90 hours each for Parts 1 and 2 and 40β60 for Part 3; with an adaptive course like Surgent, Eduyush learners average closer to 50β80 hours per part.
Built for professionals with limited hours
Surgent EA Review via Eduyush uses adaptive A.S.A.P. technology to skip what you already know β Surgent reports it cuts study time by ~40%, and its ReadySCOREβ’ predictor mirrors the real exam to tell you when you're ready. Free 2-year NAEA membership included.
Explore the Surgent EA Course βπ± Prefer to talk it through? WhatsApp us at +91Β 96433Β 08079.
How Hard Is the EA Exam for a Working Professional?
The EA exam is demanding but very passable β the difficulty for working professionals is rarely the material; it's protecting study time across months of real life. The latest pass rates tell the story: Part 1 (Individuals) ~58%, Part 2 (Businesses) ~71%, Part 3 (Representation) ~70%. Part 1 is the one that catches people out, so it deserves the most time.
Most professionals who don't pass aren't short on ability β their study system collapsed under long workdays, tax-season pressure and inconsistent energy. The fix isn't more intelligence or more hours; it's a routine that survives a normal week. See our deep dive on why working professionals struggle and the pass-rate analysis.
How Long Does It Take β and How Many Hours?
Plan for about 180β240 study hours total on a traditional course. At a sustainable 8β10 hours a week, that's roughly 8β11 weeks per part and 6β9 months overall. Your background and your tools both shift this β an adaptive course skips what you already know, and an experienced accountant or Indian CA/ACCA can compress familiar parts.
| Part | Traditional hours | Pass rate | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Part 1 β Individuals | 70β90 | 58% | Broadest and most foundational; the hardest part β give it the most time. |
| Part 2 β Businesses | 70β90 | 71% | The most content, but a higher pass rate. Dense, not impossible. |
| Part 3 β Representation | 40β60 | 70% | Least content, most memorisation. The quickest win of the three. |
Those ranges assume a traditional, linear course. Surgent's adaptive A.S.A.P. engine removes the time you'd waste on topics you already know β Surgent reports it cuts study time by about 40%, and Surgent students study roughly half as long as Gleim students. In line with that, Eduyush's own learner dashboards show Surgent candidates averaging ~50β80 hours per part. For limited weekly hours, that gap is the difference between finishing in six months and giving up at four.
Either way, plan by readiness, not by a fixed date. See exactly what each part covers in the EA syllabus.
Why Most EA Study Plans Fail for Working Professionals
Most EA advice is written for full-time students with 20β30 hours a week. Copy that model on 8β10 hours and it looks fine in week one and falls apart by week six. Three traps cause most of the damage:
| Trap | The fix |
|---|---|
| Passive consumption β watching lectures, re-reading notes and listening to audio feels like studying but builds almost no readiness. | Make active recall the core: drill questions, especially on weak topics. The exam tests application under time pressure. |
| Weekend-only marathons β an 8-hour Saturday block is your hardest work on your most depleted day. | Short daily sessions. An hour on Monday sticks better than four hours on Saturday three months later. |
| Overestimating your hours β registration-week optimism plans the ideal week, not the real one. | Build the plan around the week you actually have β meetings, commute, family and energy dips included. |
Surgent's adaptive engine targets only your weak areas, and ReadySCORE shows your projected exam score in real time β so every one of your limited hours counts.
See the Surgent EA Course βThe Enrolled Agent Study Plan: Three Decisions
Here's the system, in three decisions.
1. Choose your part order
Take one part at a time β never run two in parallel on limited hours. Pick the order that fits your situation (see how different professionals prepare for background-specific routes):
| Order | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| 1 β 2 β 3 (foundational) | Most people; builds knowledge logically and tackles the hardest part while you're freshest. | You start with the toughest part, so momentum builds slowly. |
| 3 β 1 β 2 (momentum) | Anyone who needs an early win β Part 3 is the shortest, so you bank a pass fast. | You still face Part 1 before the finish. |
| Strength-first | Experienced accountants β start with the part matching your day job (e.g. business tax β Part 2). | Less logical sequencing; fine if you know your strengths. |
Whatever the order, finish all three within the carry-over window β see our exam dates guide for the current rule and the MarchβApril blackout to plan around.
2. Set a fixed daily slot
A study time that's the same every day becomes automatic and needs far less willpower than a flexible "whenever I can" plan. Sixty focused minutes daily, six days a week, is the backbone. Protect it like a meeting.
3. Run each part in three phases
Across roughly 10 weeks per part:
Learn + drill (Weeks 1β5). Phase 1 of 3
For each domain: a light pass through the material, then immediately drill questions on it. Never watch a lecture without questioning the topic the same session.
Weak-area drilling (Weeks 6β8). Phase 2 of 3
Full-domain practice questions, filtered to your weakest topics. Review why every wrong option is wrong, not just the right answer.
Simulate + book (Weeks 9β10). Phase 3 of 3
Full timed mock exams. Book the real exam only when your readiness signal (Surgent's ReadySCORE) clears the line β not just because the calendar arrived.
Your Weekly EA Study Schedule
A realistic week for a full-time professional at ~9 hours:
| Day | Time | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| MonβFri | 60 min each | One topic: brief learn, then drill MCQs on it (active recall). |
| Saturday | 2β3 hours | New domain + a longer question set; review weak answers. |
| Sunday | 1 hour or deliberate rest day | Weak-area MCQs and a short review β or a planned rest to avoid burnout. |
On a brutal workday, do 15 minutes of questions rather than skipping entirely. Keeping the chain unbroken matters more than the length of any single session.
What to Actually Do in Each 60-Minute Session
The highest-leverage habit is turning every session into active recall. Here's a session template you can follow exactly:
| Minutes | Do this |
|---|---|
| 0β10 | Review yesterday's topic with 10 quick questions (spaced repetition). |
| 10β40 | Learn one new sub-topic briefly, then drill 15β25 questions on it. |
| 40β55 | Weak-topic questions from your running list. |
| 55β60 | Log every wrong answer by reason: knowledge gap, misread question, misread option, or calculation slip. |
Paste your diagnostic into an AI tool with a prompt like: "I'm preparing for EA Part 1. My weakest areas are [topics]. Build me a 2-week micro-plan with daily question targets and a memory table for each." Our EA self-study with AI guide has the full prompt set.
How to Study During Tax Season (or Any Crunch)
During tax season or a brutal work stretch, don't try to hold a full schedule β you'll burn out and quit. Drop to 20β30 minutes of MCQ review a day to protect what you've learned, and resume full preparation when the crunch ends. Retention maintained is far cheaper than knowledge rebuilt from scratch.
Why Surgent Is the Best Fit for Working Professionals
When your time is scarce, the course you choose changes your timeline more than any other decision. Surgent EA Review is the most time-efficient EA prep for working professionals, and the reasons are specific:
| Feature | What it does | Why it matters when you're busy |
|---|---|---|
| A.S.A.P. adaptive engine | Diagnoses what you know and feeds you only weak-area study; you skip mastered topics. | Surgent reports it cuts study time ~40% β and Surgent students study about half as long as Gleim students. |
| ReadySCOREβ’ | Predicts the score you'd get if you sat today, updated daily β Surgent cites 98% accuracy. | It mirrors the real exam, so you book only when you're genuinely ready and stop wasting attempts. |
| Unlimited practice exams | Full timed simulations on demand. | Builds exam stamina around a full-time job without guesswork. |
| Access until you pass | Higher tiers don't expire before you pass; 97% student pass rate and a pass guarantee. | Removes deadline panic if work derails a month. |
That combination β adaptive time-compression plus an exam-accurate readiness signal β is exactly what a candidate on 8β10 hours a week needs. It's why Eduyush dashboards show Surgent learners finishing parts in ~50β80 hours rather than the traditional 70β90. To go further with AI alongside it, see our EA self-study with AI guide.
The plan is identical wherever you live β testing is now remote via PSI for international candidates. Build your timeline around the PSI testing windows and the MarchβApril blackout, and budget toward the upper hour ranges if English-language US tax terminology is new to you.
What Successful Working Professionals Do Differently
- They protect a fixed daily slot instead of relying on motivation.
- They drill questions early rather than watching lectures to feel productive.
- They book by readiness (a ReadySCORE signal), not by an arbitrary date.
- They downshift, not quit, when work explodes.
- They take one part at a time and bank passes steadily.
EA Study Strategy FAQs
How many hours do I need to study for the EA exam?
About 180β240 hours total on a traditional course β roughly 70β90 each for Parts 1 and 2 and 40β60 for Part 3. With an adaptive course like Surgent, Eduyush learners average closer to 50β80 hours per part.
How long does it take to pass the EA while working full-time?
At a sustainable 8β10 hours a week, about 6β9 months for all three parts β roughly 8β11 weeks per part, less with adaptive prep.
How hard is the EA exam?
Passable but demanding. Pass rates run about 58% (Part 1), 71% (Part 2) and 70% (Part 3). For working professionals the real challenge is sustaining study time, not the difficulty of the material.
Which EA part should I take first?
Most people do 1 β 2 β 3 to build foundationally and tackle the hardest part while fresh. If you want an early win, start with Part 3 (the shortest). Experienced accountants can start with the part matching their day job.
Can I self-study for the EA while working?
Yes β most candidates do. The key is an adaptive question bank, a fixed daily slot, and active recall over passive lecture-watching. Surgent's adaptive engine and AI tools make self-study far more efficient.
Does Surgent really cut study time?
Surgent reports its adaptive A.S.A.P. technology reduces study time by about 40% by skipping what you already know, and that its students study roughly half as long as Gleim students. Eduyush learner dashboards show Surgent candidates averaging ~50β80 hours per part.
β EA Pass Rates Β |Β Part 1 Study Plan β
Vicky Sarin, CA (INSEAD), is the Founder of Eduyush and an authorised global reseller for Surgent EA Review. He has supported thousands of candidates across India, the Middle East and Southeast Asia working toward global finance credentials including the EA, ACCA, DipIFR, CPA and CIA. Connect on LinkedIn.
Surgent EA via Eduyush β adaptive A.S.A.P. prep that cuts study time ~40%, ReadySCORE readiness tracking, 1,800+ MCQs, access until you pass, and a free 2-year NAEA membership.
Explore the Surgent EA Course βπ± Want help building a weekly plan around your actual schedule? Message Eduyush on WhatsApp at +91Β 96433Β 08079 and we'll map it with you.
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