ACCA Financial Reporting (FR) develops FA into a full reporting exam. Success requires a reliable grasp of IFRS-based accounting, well-organised workings and the ability to explain the effect of accounting treatments.
1. Start with the complete Financial Reporting (FR) course
Begin at the OpenTuition Financial Reporting (FR) course page. Use the notes and lectures together in the published chapter order. Notes give you the structure; the lectures explain the difficult points, calculations and exam approach.
As you work through the course, organise your revision around these core areas:
- conceptual framework and regulatory context
- single-entity financial statements
- assets, liabilities, revenue and financial instruments
- group financial statements
- interpretation and analysis of financial statements
Do not try to “cover” a topic by only watching a lecture. Read the notes, pause to make a short annotation, then test yourself before moving on.
2. Use a repeatable chapter routine
- Read the relevant notes to understand the aim of the chapter.
- Watch the matching lecture and add only useful explanations, examples and warnings to your notes.
- Attempt the related OpenTuition questions without looking at the answers first.
- Mark your work carefully, correct the error and return to the notes or lecture if the reason is not clear.
- Add recurring mistakes to an error log, not just a list of topics to revisit.
Study standards through the accounting entries and their effect on the statements. For each topic, be able to explain recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosure before attempting a question.
3. Turn knowledge into exam marks
Question practice should begin from the first chapter. OpenTuition questions are the first check that you understand a topic; a current revision kit and ACCA’s official practice resources then give you the volume of exam-standard practice needed to become fast and accurate.
Use proformas and workings consistently. In group questions, keep acquisition analysis, goodwill, non-controlling interest and consolidation adjustments separate so that you can diagnose errors quickly.
When reviewing an answer, do more than read the solution. Identify the precise point where your approach changed: misunderstanding the requirement, selecting the wrong technique, missing a fact, weak explanation, or poor time management. That is how practice produces improvement.
4. Add ACCA technical articles and examining team guidance
OpenTuition should sit alongside ACCA’s own exam support resources. Early in your preparation, use the resource finder for the exact Financial Reporting (FR) exam and read the relevant technical articles and examining team guidance. They explain the emphasis of the exam, the approach to requirements and the areas where students commonly lose marks.
In your final revision phase, use examiner reports with sample or practice questions: attempt the question first, review the published answer, then read the examiner feedback and write down two or three changes you will make in your next attempt. This is particularly valuable for application, professional skills, written explanations and time management.
5. A practical six-week revision plan
Weeks 1–4: learn and test. Work through the course in order using notes, lectures and chapter questions. Keep short weekly review sessions so that earlier topics do not fade while you study later ones.
Week 5: targeted question practice. Use a current revision kit or official ACCA practice materials. Group questions by weak area at first, then move to mixed sets. Revisit OpenTuition lectures only when your review identifies a genuine gap.
Week 6: timed exam practice. Practise complete financial statements and group questions to time, then use technical articles and examining team feedback to improve your explanations, interpretation and treatment of adjustments. Review every attempt, revisit your error log and use support before exam day rather than carrying uncertainty into the exam.
6. Final tutor advice
Do not rely on memorised formats alone. FR rewards students who understand why an adjustment is made and can carry it through accurately into the final statements.
If you are stuck after working through the notes, lecture and question, ask a focused question in the OpenTuition Ask ACCA Tutor forum. Include your own attempt and the exact step you do not understand; that leads to much better help and faster progress.
Used consistently, OpenTuition gives you a structured teaching route, while ACCA guidance and disciplined question practice turn that knowledge into exam performance.

