US CPA Exam fees in India 2026: Fees, States & Total Budget

by Vicky Sarin

CPA Exam fees in India

📅June 2026Last verified
💱₹97 / $1Rounded to nearest ₹1,000
📋NASBA + NIESSource verified
Quick answer

The US CPA costs ₹4–4.5 lakh from India in 2026: NIES evaluation ₹24,000, state application ₹5,000–20,000, four exam sections at roughly ₹75,000 each (domestic fee ~$263 + India international fee $460 per section), and a review course from ₹32,000 (Surgent via Eduyush) to ₹2 lakh (Becker via Simandhar). You never pay it all at once — the largest single payment is one exam section. Figures rounded to the nearest ₹1,000 at ₹97/$, verified against NASBA schedules June 2026. For the full application sequence, see the step-by-step guide to becoming a CPA from India.

Key takeaways
  • Each section costs ~₹75,000 all-in — the $460 India international testing fee is charged on top of the ~$263 domestic exam fee, a two-layer structure most fee guides miss entirely.
  • Montana is the most recommended state for Indian CAs: it explicitly accepts CA coursework, requires no SSN for the exam, and allows an affidavit for licensure — no other state makes all three commitments in writing.
  • All NASBA exam fees are non-refundable. A missed appointment, a no-show, or an expired NTS costs ₹75,000 — the full per-section retake fee.
  • Review course choice swings your total by up to ₹1.7 lakh — from Surgent at ₹32,000 to Becker at ₹2 lakh — for the same CPA credential at the end.

 

 

How Much Does the CPA Cost from India in 2026?

Every cost, every payment recipient, every timing stage — in one table.

Fee component Paid to USD INR
NIES credential evaluation NASBA / NIES $250 ₹24,000
State application + evaluation + licence State board / CPAES $50–530 ₹5,000–51,000
Exam sections — 4 × ₹75,000 † NASBA (two payments per section) ~$2,892 ₹3,00,000
Ethics exam (required by most states) AICPA — after passing all four sections $195 ₹19,000
Surgent review course (via Eduyush) Course provider ₹32,000
Total — first attempt, India testing ₹4.0–4.5 lakh

† Per section: ~$263 domestic exam fee (≈ ₹26,000) + $460 India international testing fee (≈ ₹45,000), billed as two separate NASBA transactions. Both non-refundable. INR rounded to the nearest ₹1,000 at ₹97/$, June 2026. For what happens after passing, see CPA exam passed vs CPA licensed.

Where your ₹4.2 lakh goes
₹3,00,000
Exam — 4 sections
₹60K
State
₹32K
Surgent
₹24K
NIES

Exam fees are 70% of the budget — which is why state choice and first-attempt passes matter more than course price.

 

 

How Much Does CPA Cost After CA?

For an Indian CA, the budget is simpler than for any other profile: your 150 credits are already in place, so there are no bridge-course or top-up costs. Here is what most CA candidates actually spend.

Cost item Amount (rounded)
NIES credential evaluation ₹24,000
Exam fees — 4 sections, India testing ₹3,00,000
State fees — evaluation, application, licence ₹60,000
Surgent review course (via Eduyush) ₹32,000
Typical total for a CA ₹4.2–4.5 lakh

† ₹24,000 + ₹3,00,000 + ₹60,000 + ₹32,000 = ₹4,16,000. Most states also require the AICPA ethics exam (₹19,000) after passing all four sections — that takes the upper end to ₹4.35 lakh, which is where the ₹4.2–4.5 lakh range comes from.

A CA also moves faster — typically 9–12 months — which means fewer NTS-expiry risks and almost no credit top-up cost. For the full credit mapping and study strategy, see the CPA after CA guide.

 

 

When Do You Actually Pay? The CPA Payment Timeline

You do not need ₹4.5 lakh in the bank on day one — CPA costs are staged across 12+ months, and the largest single payment is one exam section.

⏱ When the money actually leaves your account
Month 0
₹24,000
NIES evaluation

Month 0–1
₹32,000
Surgent — start studying

Month 2–3
₹15–50,000
State application

Month 3–4
₹75,000
First section

Months 5–12
₹75,000 × 3
Remaining sections, as ready

After passing
₹12–25,000
Licence + ethics

Peak single payment: ₹75,000 — one exam section. You never need ₹4.5 lakh upfront.

🔑 Key insight

NASBA requires you to pay for one section at a time, which naturally spreads the cost. Your peak monthly outflow is ₹75,000 — one exam section — not the full ₹4.5 lakh. Most working candidates fund the entire journey from monthly salary without a loan.

 

 

Why Do Indian Candidates Pay More Than Everyone Else?

Every section has two mandatory fee layers — and most guides quote only one.

What one exam section actually costs from India
~$263
Domestic exam fee
≈ ₹26,000
+
$460
India international fee
≈ ₹45,000
=
~₹75,000
per section, all-in

Most fee guides quote only one of the two layers. Both are mandatory, both are non-refundable, and the international fee is paid separately through your NASBA account after you receive your NTS.

India pays the highest international testing rate NASBA charges — $460/section, compared to $390 for every other international location.

Location International testing fee / section INR Over 4 sections
Other international locations $390 ₹38,000 ₹1,52,000
India $460 ₹45,000 ₹1,80,000
India premium +$70 / section +₹7,000 +₹28,000 total
🔑 Key insight

Sitting in the US avoids the $460 India surcharge but adds travel and accommodation — typically $2,000–5,000 for a single trip. For most candidates, paying the India premium (₹1,80,000 over four sections) is still cheaper and less disruptive than a US trip. The surcharge is the cost of sitting at home.

 

 

Which State Should You Choose?

Montana is the most common answer for Indian CAs — but it is one branch of a decision, not the decision itself. Work through these four questions in order.

Question 1
Are you a qualified CA?
Yes →
Choose
Montana
Accepts CA coursework · no SSN for exam · affidavit for licence
Question 2
Need a fully SSN-free path — exam and licence?
Yes →
Choose
Guam
Only jurisdiction with no SSN at any stage
Question 3
Is global brand recognition your priority?
Yes →
Choose
New York
SSN waived for internationals · strictest education review
Otherwise
B.Com + M.Com, MBA, or undecided
Choose
Washington
Lowest application fee (~₹10,000) · no SSN for exam · flexible experience rules
Important

Avoid Alaska: NASBA's Alaska eligibility page states that CA coursework "is considered professional training and is, therefore, not accepted toward the education requirements" — making it a dead end for Indian CAs. Also avoid non-participating jurisdictions (Alabama, Idaho, North Carolina, US Virgin Islands), which do not allow international testing at all. Verify any state's current rules directly on NASBA's international candidates page before paying any fee.

State application fees add ₹5,000–63,000 to your bill depending on the jurisdiction — here is what each recommended state charges.

State Evaluation fee Application fee (per section) Licence fee Total state fees (INR)
Montana $146 $96 $125 ~₹63,000
Guam $136 Included $250 ~₹37,000
Washington ~$50 ~$100 ~$200 ~₹62,000
Illinois ~$140 ~$120 ~$100 ~₹70,000
New York ~$85 ~$295 ~₹62,000 †

† New York total = (4 × $85) + $295 = $635 ≈ ₹62,000. NY education evaluation fee is billed separately and varies by applicant background — add ₹5,000–10,000 if your state board requires one. All other state totals include the listed components only.

The state decision involves more than application fees — SSN rules, CA coursework acceptance, and post-exam licensing paths matter more than a ₹20,000–30,000 fee difference. The best CPA states guide for Indian candidates covers the full decision framework.

 

 

Which Review Course — and Why Does Surgent Carry the Lowest Risk?

Three courses worth considering for Indian candidates — and why course price is the wrong starting point. Unsure which Discipline section to pair with your course? The CPA syllabus guide breaks down BAR, ISC and TCP by career goal.

Provider India price Best for
Surgent Premier Pass (via Eduyush) ₹32,000 CAs and working professionals; adaptive engine targets weak areas; 7,700+ questions; pass guarantee
Gleim CPA ₹1,00,000–1,40,000 Intensive MCQ practice learners; deepest question bank of any provider
Becker (via Simandhar) ₹1,40,000–2,00,000 Big 4 aspirants with employer reimbursement; live classes and placement support

The economics of the course decision are simpler than the feature comparisons suggest: one failed section costs ₹75,000 — more than twice the price of Surgent. The course is insurance against the retake.

Path Course cost Cost of one failed section Total exposure
Surgent (via Eduyush) — pass first time ₹32,000 ₹32,000
Self-study — one section failed ₹0 ₹75,000 ₹75,000+
Becker (via Simandhar) — pass first time ₹1,40,000+ ₹1,40,000+

Eduyush sells Surgent Premier Pass at ₹32,000 — roughly 85% below the global price of ~$1,999. For the full comparison including question bank sizes, video hours, and pass-guarantee terms, see the full review course comparison for Indian students.

 

 

What Hidden Costs Should You Budget For?

Four costs that do not appear on NASBA's fee page but appear on candidates' bank statements.

Hidden cost Amount How to avoid or minimise
Failed section retake ~₹75,000 per section Register only when scoring 70%+ consistently on full practice exams — see Prometric booking guide
Expired NTS (missed appointment or no-show) Full forfeit — ~₹75,000 Set a calendar alert 30 days before NTS expiry; rescheduling is free 60+ days before your slot
University transcript delivery to NIES ₹2,000–8,000 per institution Check if your university is partnered with TrueCopy for digital delivery; eliminates courier cost entirely. Full document rules in the NIES evaluation guide
NIES report expiry (valid 1 year) Re-send fee (1–5 yrs); full $250 (after 5 yrs) Apply to your state board within 12 months of the NIES report date — do not let it sit
Important — The NTS expiry risk

Under CPA Evolution rules, each NTS covers one testing event only and cannot be reused after expiry. If work, travel, or health prevents you from sitting — you forfeit the full ~₹75,000 and must re-register before you can book again. There is no hardship waiver. Do not register for a section until you have a clear, confirmed study window to prepare and sit within the NTS validity period.

 

 

Is the CPA Worth the Cost?

At ₹4.5 lakh all-in, the question is how quickly the salary premium pays it back. Three realistic scenarios.

Scenario Total investment Annual salary premium Payback period
Conservative — mid-career, India-based ₹4.5 lakh ₹3 lakh / yr ~18 months
Typical — Big 4 / MNC US-practice team ₹4.5 lakh ₹8 lakh / yr ~7 months
US-posted role (post-CPA) ₹4.5 lakh ₹45 lakh+ / yr < 2 months
🔑 Key insight

At a pre-CPA salary of ₹10 lakh and a post-CPA salary of ₹18 lakh, the ₹8 lakh annual premium pays back a ₹4.5 lakh investment in under 7 months. Even a conservative ₹3 lakh annual premium returns the investment in 18 months. The CPA's financial case is strongest for candidates already in Big 4 or MNC US-practice teams — where the credential directly unlocks US-client billing rights and cross-border role eligibility. For the full salary and career comparison, see CPA vs CA in India.

 

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is CPA so expensive in India?

Every section carries two layers of exam fees: a domestic fee of ~$263 paid to NASBA, plus India's international testing fee of $460 — the highest international rate NASBA charges anywhere (other countries pay $390). Add the NIES credential evaluation ($250 / ₹24,000) that US candidates never pay, and an Indian candidate spends roughly ₹2 lakh more than a US test-taker for the same exam.

Can I do CPA under ₹5 lakh?

Yes — the typical first-attempt total is ₹4–4.5 lakh with Surgent at ₹32,000 via Eduyush and a lower-fee state like Guam or Washington. Staying under ₹5 lakh depends almost entirely on passing each section first time: one failed retake adds ₹75,000 and pushes you over the threshold. The review course is the cheapest insurance against that outcome.

What happens if I fail a section?

No refund is issued. You must re-register with your Board of Accountancy, pay the full ~₹75,000 section fee again ($263 domestic + $460 India international), and receive a new NTS before you can schedule another attempt. Budget for at least one retake in your overall planning — per-section pass rates run roughly 45–55%, so most candidates fail at least one section.

Is Surgent cheaper than Becker?

Surgent via Eduyush costs ₹32,000; Becker via Simandhar runs ₹1,40,000–2,00,000 — a difference of ₹1.1–1.7 lakh. Surgent at ₹32,000 is also less than half the cost of a single failed section retake (₹75,000). For CA-qualified candidates who can skip relearning accounting fundamentals, Surgent's adaptive engine typically delivers faster preparation with no compromise on pass rates.

Can employers reimburse CPA fees?

Big 4 and large MNCs with US-practice teams increasingly do — usually post-pass and tied to a specific provider (often Becker). Confirm your firm's policy before choosing a course: some firms reimburse only their preferred provider, and Surgent at ₹32,000 is not typically on the reimbursed list. If your employer covers fees, Becker's employer-reimbursement standard may justify its higher cost.

Can I pay CPA fees in instalments?

NASBA exam and registration fees must be paid in full in USD — no instalment option exists. Review course providers (Surgent, Becker, Gleim) all offer payment plans at checkout. Indian no-cost EMI on international-enabled credit cards covers the NIES fee and course purchase for most major Indian banks at 3–9 month tenors.

How much does CPA cost after CA?

₹4.2–4.5 lakh all-in through Montana with Surgent — NIES ₹24,000, exam fees ₹3,00,000, state fees ₹60,000, Surgent ₹32,000. A CA needs no bridge or top-up courses, which eliminates the ₹50,000–2,00,000 education gap cost that non-CA graduates sometimes incur. For the credit mapping and which state accepts your ICAI qualification, see the CPA after CA guide.

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