CA Final Goes Twice a Year.
Students Left in the Lurch.
ICAI’s April 2026 circular drops the September and January attempts and cuts old-syllabus windows from four to two — with barely a month’s notice. The TaxRoutine Research Team analyses what this means, why students are right to be concerned, and whether ICAI’s “stakeholder consultation” claim holds up.
What Exactly Changed — and Who Is Immediately Affected?
Until this announcement, CA Final exams were held three times a year — January, May, and September. From May 2026 onwards, only May and November remain. September and January are gone.
For most people reading this in the abstract, it sounds like a minor scheduling adjustment. For students in specific cohorts right now, it is anything but minor.
The Syllabus Ticking Clock — New Income Tax Act, 2025
This exam schedule change does not exist in isolation. It compounds a separate, already-stressful development: the new Income Tax Act, 2025 becomes part of the CA Final syllabus effective May 2026. Students preparing under the Income Tax Act, 1961 now have a hard and compressed window to clear under the familiar framework.
Under the original three-attempt calendar, students had the following old-syllabus windows remaining from April 2026. Here is how the two schedules compare:
| Attempt | Under Original 3× Schedule | Under New 2× Schedule |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | May 2026 | May 2026 |
| 2nd | September 2026 ✗ Removed | — Does not exist — |
| 3rd | November 2026 | |
| 3rd | January 2027 ✗ Removed | — Does not exist — |
Students who had counted on four more old-syllabus attempts now have two. The September and January windows have been deleted from the exam calendar entirely.
At a Glance — Pros and Cons
- More preparation time between attempts
- Aligns with global professional exam frameworks
- Reduces exam fatigue and candidate burnout
- Improved ICAI examination logistics and security
- Encourages serious, fully-prepared attempts
- Stronger signalling value for first-attempt passes
- September and January windows removed overnight
- Old-syllabus attempts cut from 4 to 2 for current cohort
- No transition or grace arrangement provided
- Forces students onto new IT Act 2025 syllabus prematurely
- Career and articleship timelines disrupted
- Stakeholder consultation claim is questionable
The Case FOR This Change
More Meaningful Preparation Windows
Four months between attempts was consistently insufficient for candidates managing full-time articleship alongside studies. A six-month cycle allows deeper revision, structured mock practice, and a genuine strategic reset between attempts. Preparation quality, on average, should improve over time.
September and January Attempts Were Often Reactive Retakes
Students sitting September typically had only eight to ten weeks since their May attempt. January sitters had similarly short recovery windows from September. These “quick retake” cycles historically produced weaker pass rates. Removing them may reduce the number of under-prepared attempts across the board and encourage more deliberate preparation cycles.
Convergence With Global Professional Examination Standards
ACCA, CPA (USA), CMA, and CIMA all conduct final-level examinations once or twice a year. CA Finals being held thrice annually was an outlier. This change strengthens the international comparability of the Indian CA credential — a consideration that matters as Indian CAs increasingly pursue global careers.
Examination Security and Administrative Quality
Three national-level exam cycles per year placed substantial strain on ICAI’s examination infrastructure. Two cycles should improve operational quality, reduce leak risk, and allow for more rigorous post-exam grievance redressal — benefiting candidates and the institution alike.
The Case AGAINST This Change
September Students Have Been Left Stranded — Right Now
This is not a theoretical future concern. Students who built their 2026 plan around a September attempt — and chose not to register for May — have woken up to find their planned window simply does not exist. The May 2026 registration deadline has passed. They have no near-term exam option. ICAI’s circular offers them nothing.
Old-Syllabus Attempts Effectively Halved for the Current Cohort
Students had four more old-syllabus attempts remaining: May, September, and November 2026, plus January 2027. With September and January removed, they now have two. For students who need multiple attempts — due to the genuine difficulty of the exam, not lack of effort — this is a significant contraction of their safety net, and may force an early, unprepared transition to the IT Act, 2025 syllabus.
New Income Tax Act Creates a Hard Deadline Nobody Planned For
The IT Act, 2025 entering the syllabus from May 2026 was already a pressure point. The exam calendar change now compresses the window to clear under the familiar framework. Students who cannot clear by November 2026 must either pivot to an entirely new tax framework from May 2027, or wait and re-prepare from scratch. This cascading pressure was entirely avoidable with proper advance notice and transition arrangements.
Abrupt Implementation With Zero Transition Mechanism
The circular is dated 6 April 2026 and effective from May 2026 — a matter of weeks. There is no phased rollout, no grandfathering arrangement, and no relief for students whose plans were explicitly built around the three-attempt calendar. A change affecting lakhs of registered CA Final candidates warranted a minimum of 6–12 months’ advance notice. Its absence is indefensible from an administrative fairness standpoint.
Career and Articleship Timelines Take a Concrete Hit
A candidate who misses November 2026 faces a six-month wait until May 2027. This delays CA membership confirmation, joining dates at firms, and salary progression. For students from middle-income families who depend on clearing quickly to begin contributing financially, a six-month forced gap is a real economic burden.
“Stakeholder Consultation” — A Claim That Doesn’t Hold Up
The circular justifies this decision on “feedback from stakeholders.” The TaxRoutine Research Team’s assessment is direct: this claim is, at best, incomplete.
Students are the primary stakeholders in any CA exam policy change. The formal student representation bodies within ICAI — SICASA (State-level) and NICASA (National-level) — are widely acknowledged to be largely ceremonial organisations focused on events, workshops, and cultural programmes. They do not have a formal track record of meaningfully escalating student policy concerns to the Council.
If ICAI’s “stakeholder consultation” was routed through these bodies — which is the standard institutional channel — then students were consulted in name only. No student polling, no open feedback mechanism, and no public record of student input is cited in the announcement. Until ICAI publishes a transparent account of who was consulted and what was received, this claim should not be accepted at face value.
Factors That Could Go Either Way
Pass Rate Trajectories Are Unpredictable
A better-prepared candidate pool may push pass rates upward over time. Conversely, higher per-attempt pressure and the psychological weight of fewer opportunities could exert a downward counter-effect. The net impact will only be clear after two to three full biannual cycles — likely by late 2027.
Coaching Industry Restructuring — Quality vs. Cost
Coaching institutes built on three annual batch cycles will need to restructure. Longer batches may improve instructional depth but could also raise costs. The outcome for students will vary significantly by geography and coaching provider.
TaxRoutine Research Team Verdict
The long-term rationale for reducing CA Final examination frequency has merit. A biannual schedule should, over time, produce better-prepared candidates and a more credible qualification signal. We do not dispute this.
What we dispute — strongly — is the manner of implementation. This circular was issued with less than one month’s notice, affecting students who had made concrete plans around a three-attempt calendar, and it coincides with the most significant syllabus change in recent memory. Students who are expressing concerns on social media are not being unreasonable. They are reacting rationally to a decision that materially affects their careers, was made without adequate prior notice, and was justified by a “stakeholder consultation” that appears to have excluded the most important stakeholders of all.
ICAI owes this cohort a transparent account of the consultation process and a considered transition arrangement. Until then: the principle is right, but the execution is a failure of institutional responsibility.

