Free Tool · Personalised Schedule

CeMAP Study Time Planner

Set your target exam date and weekly study hours. We tell you whether your timeline is realistic, build a module-by-module schedule, and flag where to adjust if it’s too tight.

Live calculation · No signup · Updated

What this planner does

CeMAP takes most people 6–12 months of part-time study, but it can be done faster (3 months full-time) or slower (18+ months around heavy work commitments). The right pace depends on your target exam date, weekly study hours, and existing knowledge — not a one-size-fits-all assumption.

This planner takes your specific inputs and tells you three things instantly: whether your target is realistic, how to split the time across CeMAP’s three modules, and what to adjust if the schedule is too tight. Industry-standard study hour benchmarks (190–260 hours total for full CeMAP) are baked into the calculation.

How to use it

  1. Set your target exam date — when you want to be CeMAP-qualified by.
  2. Set weekly study hours — how much time you can realistically commit each week.
  3. Pick your starting level — complete beginner, financial services background, or already studied.
  4. Choose your study pattern — daily, evenings/weekends, or block study.
  5. Read your verdict — realistic, tight, or unrealistic — with a module-by-module schedule.

Updates instantly as you change inputs. No signup, no data stored.

Plan your CeMAP timeline

Adjust the inputs — your schedule updates instantly.

Your starting level
Your study pattern
Realistic schedule Estimated completion
16–22 weeks

Based on 8 hrs/week starting from today. Total study budget needed: 190–260 hours for full CeMAP.

Module-by-module schedule

Module 1 (FRE1 + FRE2)8 weeks60–80 hrs
Module 2 (MRT1 + MRT2)10 weeks80–100 hrs
Module 3 (ASEW + ASSC)5 weeks30–50 hrs
Mock exams & revision3 weeks20–30 hrs
Total26 weeks190–260 hrs

Recommendations

  • Your timeline is comfortable — stick to a consistent schedule and you’ll finish on or ahead of target.

Estimates based on industry-standard CeMAP study hour benchmarks. Actual time varies by individual. The £198 fee is the uAcademy course cost — LIBF (Walbrook Institute) exam registration fees are paid separately.

Reference

CeMAP study hour benchmarks

The numbers behind the planner. These are typical study hour ranges for each CeMAP module, drawn from industry consensus and uAcademy student data across 5,000+ learners.

Module 1 60–80 hrs

FRE1 + FRE2 (FSRE)

Financial Services, Regulation and Ethics — industry fundamentals, regulatory framework, ethical practice.

Module 2 80–100 hrs

MRT1 + MRT2 (MORT)

Mortgage law, practice, products, post-completion. The largest module by content volume — give it the most time.

Module 3 30–50 hrs

ASEW + ASSC (ASSM)

Assessment of Mortgage Advice Knowledge — written and scenario-based assessments. Smaller module, but practice-heavy.

Buffer 20–30 hrs

Mock exams & revision

Critical for exam confidence. Strong CeMAP students treat mocks as separate study time, not bolted onto module work.

How it works

How we calculate your study schedule

The planner takes four inputs — your target exam date, weekly study hours, starting level, and study pattern — and combines them with industry-standard CeMAP study hour benchmarks to produce a realistic schedule and an honest verdict.

1

Hours per module

Full CeMAP requires 190–260 hours for a complete beginner: 60–80 for Module 1 (FSRE), 80–100 for Module 2 (MORT), 30–50 for Module 3 (ASSM), and 20–30 for mock exams & revision. Drawn from industry consensus and 5,000+ uAcademy student outcomes.

2

Starting level adjustment

Some financial services background applies a 0.8× multiplier to total hours (Module 1’s regulatory content lands faster). Already studied related material? 0.65×. Complete beginners get the full estimate.

3

Study pattern efficiency

Distributed daily practice is most efficient — 1.0×. Evenings and weekends gets 0.95× (small loss from longer gaps). Block study gets 0.8× (significant retention loss when you cram into long sessions with days between).

4

Verdict thresholds

Realistic = available hours ≥ required + 15% buffer. Tight but possible = you’ll just hit target with little setback room. Unrealistic = the maths doesn’t work; you’d need more weeks, more hours, or both.

The honest bit. Individual variation is real. Some students complete CeMAP in 80 hours; others take 300+. The numbers here are central estimates — if your first module takes longer than the planner suggests, recalibrate. The schedule isn’t a contract.

Sources: Walbrook Institute (LIBF) CeMAP specification, uAcademy internal data on 5,000+ student outcomes (2014–2026), and consensus estimates from major training providers.

FAQ

Common questions about CeMAP study time

How long does CeMAP take on average?
Most uAcademy students complete CeMAP in 6 to 12 months of part-time study (around 8 hours per week). Intensive learners studying full-time can finish in 3 months. Slower-paced students working full-time often take 12–18 months. The big factors are weekly hours and consistency — distributed daily practice typically beats heavy weekend cramming.
What if my schedule is “tight but possible”?
“Tight” means the maths works but you have little room for setbacks. To convert tight to comfortable: add 1–2 hours per week, push the exam date back by a few weeks, or both. Tight schedules are achievable for highly motivated learners but riskier — illness, work spikes, or family events can derail them. The planner shows you exactly how much buffer to add.
Why does the planner say my schedule is unrealistic?
If the planner says unrealistic, your weekly hours × weeks until exam don’t add up to the minimum 190 hours needed for full CeMAP at your starting level. The fix is one of three things: increase weekly hours, push the exam date back, or split the qualification — for example, sit Module 1 first, then plan Modules 2–3 separately.
Is 8 hours a week enough?
8 hours a week is a typical commitment for working adults studying CeMAP and gets you through the qualification in 6–7 months at a comfortable pace. Less than 5 hours a week makes it hard to maintain momentum — material starts to fade between sessions. More than 15 hours a week is achievable but only sustainable if you have meaningful blocks of dedicated time, like a sabbatical or part-time work.
Should I study modules in order or in parallel?
Sequential is best for most students: complete and pass Module 1 (FSRE) before starting Module 2 (MORT), and Module 3 (ASSM) last. Sequential reduces context-switching and gives you the regulatory foundation needed for Module 2’s mortgage-specific content. Parallel study is possible for experienced learners but rarely faster overall — confused students take longer to clarify than focused students take to study.

Ready to start earning these figures?

CeMAP is the qualification employers ask for. uAcademy’s online course gets you there in 6–12 months for £198 — with 274 lessons, 30 mock exams, expert tutor support, and a pass guarantee.

£198 is the uAcademy course fee. LIBF (Walbrook Institute) exam registration fees are paid separately — current rates listed on the Walbrook CeMAP page.

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