Exam in 60 days. The smallest realistic window for a first-attempt prep. This plan shows exactly what to cover, what to cut, and how each day looks.
60 days × 4h = 240 total hours, 80% of typical CFA Level 1 prep. All published topics fit. This is the smallest still-realistic window for a first-attempt prep — anything tighter and you're cutting load-bearing material.
Typical CFA Level 1 prep runs ~300 hours over ~20 weeks at ~15 hours per week. This cram window gives you 240 total hours (60 days × 4 h/day). The plan below allocates ~75% to coverage and ~25% to review + at least one full mock — that ratio shifts later as the window tightens.
CFA Level 1 has 10 topic areas. With a 60-day window we keep the highest-weight + load-bearing topics and explicitly drop the rest. The cuts below are deliberate — you only pick those topics back up if you finish higher-priority material ahead of schedule.
Every published CFA Level 1 topic fits inside a 60-day window at this hours/day level. Tight, but no triage required. Lower-weight topics get fewer hours but stay on the schedule.
What a real 60-day CFA Level 1 cram plan actually looks like. Heavier topics get more time. Review starts at ~55% of the window. Final stretch is mock-driven. Adjust the start date below to align with your exam.
A visual preview of how exclam.ai compresses 10 CFA Level 1 topics into 60 days. Update the start date so the exam date aligns with your sitting.
Cover Quantitative Methods (6–9%), Economics (6–9%), Financial Statement Analysis (11–14%) in this week — paired because their individual weights are light or the intensive pace requires combining adjacent syllabus sections. Read each objective, flashcard the key formulas, and run one quiz across the group before moving on.
Cover Corporate Issuers (6–9%), Equity Investments (11–14%) in this week — paired because their individual weights are light or the intensive pace requires combining adjacent syllabus sections. Read each objective, flashcard the key formulas, and run one quiz across the group before moving on.
Cover Fixed Income (11–14%), Derivatives (5–8%) in this week — paired because their individual weights are light or the intensive pace requires combining adjacent syllabus sections. Read each objective, flashcard the key formulas, and run one quiz across the group before moving on.
Cover Alternative Investments (7–10%), Portfolio Management (8–12%) in this week — paired because their individual weights are light or the intensive pace requires combining adjacent syllabus sections. Read each objective, flashcard the key formulas, and run one quiz across the group before moving on.
Cover Ethical and Professional Standards end-to-end. Build flashcards covering every learning objective and quiz yourself before moving to the next module.
Weak-topic drilling. exclam.ai surfaces topics where you underperformed during coverage and re-quizzes them. Daily FSRS flashcard reps across all 10 topics to prevent decay. Start doing timed question batches focused on the heaviest-weight sections.
Full-length CFA Level 1 practice exams under timed conditions. Target one mock every 3–5 days. Same-day error review: for every question you miss, re-derive the solution from scratch. Taper in the final 3 days — light flashcards only.
Cram advice is dramatically different for first-attempt candidates and retakers. The plan above is the same; the playbook is not.
Pick one source per topic and do not switch. The fastest content fluency comes from sticking with one (Schweser SecretSauce-style, Mark Meldrum, the CFA Institute curriculum) — switching mid-cram loses you 1–2 days.
Skip the textbook unless it's your only source. Use condensed notes + drill questions. The CFA Institute curriculum at full depth is not a cram-window asset.
Quiz-first coverage on every reading. Take the quiz before you read the chapter — your misses tell you which 30% of the chapter actually needs careful reading.
Save Ethics for the final 3 days. The material is interpretive and recency matters; doing it early means re-doing it before the exam anyway.
Do not skip mocks. Even at a 14-day window, sacrifice one coverage day to do a real timed mock — pacing is the biggest single failure mode for crammed candidates.
Patterns that show up specifically when CFA Level 1 candidates compress the timeline. Worth scanning before you start your week.
Ethics looks easy in mock review but real items hinge on exact Standard language — budget at least 2 full cram days for it, not "I'll glance at it on the train."
FSA is the highest-yield section per hour for cramming because formulas and ratios reappear in Equity and Corporate Issuers — start here.
Derivatives is high-leverage if you know binomial trees and put-call parity. Skip it only if you genuinely have no exposure — it's 5–8% with concentrated testable content.
Quant is foundational but Level 1 questions are mechanical. Time-value-of-money and hypothesis testing are the must-haves; skip stationarity unless you finish early.
Practice 10-question batches under a 15-minute timer — Level 1 averages 90 seconds per question. If you can't hit that pace in mocks, the issue is recall speed, not depth.
Different window, different math, different cut list. Pick the duration that matches your real exam date.
Possible for someone with strong finance/accounting background (CPA, MBA in finance, equity research analyst) who can commit 6+ hours every day. Not realistic from zero. The honest answer: 30 days is the bottom of the first-attempt range, and only with a clean schedule and discipline.
Use the last 2 days of the cram window for Ethics specifically — paraphrased Standards + 100+ Ethics vignettes drilled. CFA Institute publishes the Code & Standards as a free PDF; that's the source. Two focused Ethics days beats two weeks of light Ethics review.
No — time-value-of-money, statistics fundamentals, and hypothesis testing show up in Fixed Income, Equity, and Portfolio Management. Skipping Quant means losing points in those topics too. If you must cut, drop Alternative Investments first.
Yes — one full-length mock minimum, ideally at day 10 of a 14-day window. Pacing is the most common cram-window failure mode. If you discover at the real exam that you can't read a 90-second item in 90 seconds, that's information you needed before exam day.
Topic names and weight bands are paraphrased from the public CFA Institute Level 1 Topic Outline (public). Verify the current outline before your sitting.
CFA Institute Level 1 Topic Outline (public)Upload your CFA Level 1 materials, plug in your exam date, and exclam.ai builds the compressed plan automatically. Free to start.