Fewer than one in five people who register for the CFA Program make it through all three exam levels. The ones who do gain access to a credential that opens doors at firms like JPMorgan Chase, BlackRock, and UBS, and that signals a level of technical rigor few other finance qualifications can match.
If you are weighing whether the charter is worth the time, this guide breaks down exactly what the process involves, from enrollment through your first day as a charterholder.
How to Become a CFA: The Short Answer
Becoming a CFA charterholder requires five steps:
- Meet the entry requirement (a bachelor’s degree, or four years combining education and full-time work experience)
- Enroll in the CFA Program and register for the Level I exam
- Pass Level I, Level II, and Level III in sequence
- Accumulate 4,000 hours of qualified investment-related work experience over a minimum of 36 months
- Submit professional reference letters and apply for CFA Institute membership
Most candidates complete this in four to five years. The exams alone demand close to 900 hours of study across all three levels, and the work experience requirement often runs in parallel rather than after the exams.
Step 1: Confirm You Meet the Entry Requirements

The CFA Institute allows two paths into the program. You can hold a bachelor’s degree, or be in your final year of one, or you can substitute four years of qualifying full-time work experience, higher education, or a combination of the two. Each year of postsecondary education counts as 1,000 hours toward that total.
You also need a valid international passport, the ability to sit the exam in English, and residence in a participating country. Undergraduates do not have to wait until graduation. You can sit for Level I as early as 23 months before your expected graduation date and Level II as early as 11 months before.
A finance or accounting degree is not mandatory, but it does shorten the learning curve. Candidates who already understand financial statement analysis, corporate valuation, and portfolio construction tend to move through Level I material faster than those starting from scratch.
Step 2: Pass the Three CFA Exams

Each level tests a different layer of investment expertise, and the format changes as you progress.
| Level | Focus | Format | Average Pass Rate |
| Level I | Investment tools, ethics, and professional standards | 180 multiple-choice questions | ~41% |
| Level II | Asset valuation and applied analysis | 22 vignette-based item sets | ~45% |
| Level III | Portfolio management and specialized pathways | Mixed item sets and essay questions | ~52% |
Level III now lets candidates choose a specialization in Portfolio Management, Private Wealth, or Private Markets, which allows the final stretch of the program to align more closely with your intended career path. If you are weighing a private wealth track, our guide to private wealth management walks through what that career actually involves day to day.
The CFA Institute recommends a minimum of 300 hours of study per level, and its own research puts the average closer to 322 hours. Level I is offered four times a year, Level II three times, and Level III twice, so a failed attempt can cost you six months or more before your next shot.
Step 3: Accumulate Qualified Work Experience

Alongside the exams, you need 4,000 hours of acceptable work experience completed over at least 36 months. This does not have to follow the exams. It can happen before, during, or after you sit for Level I, II, or III.
The CFA Institute defines qualifying experience broadly, but at least half of it must be directly tied to the investment decision-making process, such as research, portfolio construction, trading, or risk analysis, or to producing work that feeds into that process. Full-time, part-time, and remote roles all count. Unpaid internships do not.
Given how much of the CFA curriculum overlaps with core financial modeling and valuation work, many candidates use this stretch of the process to sharpen the technical side of the job. Our breakdown of the finance certifications that actually move the needle in 2026 covers how the CFA stacks up against other credentials employers weigh during hiring.
Step 4: Submit References and Apply for Membership

Once you have passed all three exams and logged the required hours, you prepare two to three professional reference letters. References from a direct supervisor or an existing CFA charterholder carry the most weight, since they can speak specifically to your judgment and analytical work.
From there, you submit your membership application along with documentation of your work experience and pay the applicable fee. The CFA Institute typically reviews regular membership applications within 10 business days, though affiliate applications can take up to four weeks. Once approved, you become a CFA charterholder and gain access to the Institute’s global member directory and continuing professional development resources.
What the Process Costs
Budget for three separate expenses: a one-time enrollment fee when you register for Level I, an exam registration fee for each level, and your annual membership dues once you become a charterholder.
Registration costs vary depending on how early you register, and each level currently runs in the range of $1,140 to $1,240 with early registration, though late registration adds a meaningful premium.
Retaking a failed level means paying the fee again, which is the main reason experienced candidates emphasize a disciplined study schedule over a rushed one.
FAQ
Conclusion
The CFA charter rewards candidates who treat it as a multi-year commitment rather than a single test to clear.
The exam content builds on itself level by level, the work experience requirement runs on its own timeline, and the payoff shows up less in the letters after your name and more in the technical judgment you develop along the way.
If you are already building the modeling and valuation skills the CFA curriculum demands, that groundwork will serve you well long before you sit for Level I.





