Top 9 Level I CFA® Program Formulas Explained!

This page is split into two clearly separated parts: FinQuiz Editorial Additions and the Original Guest Post (Text Unchanged). Making formulas stick? Pair this with How to Remember CFA Formulas

Disclosure

  • The guest author does not endorse FinQuiz products.
  • FinQuiz editorial additions are separate from the original guest post.
  • Promotional download lines that had been inserted into the guest text have been removed; the author’s words are otherwise preserved exactly, with no links added.

FinQuiz Editorial Additions (2026 Update)

This section is written by FinQuiz editors. The guest post below was originally published in October 2015, in the paper-exam years when candidates gridded answer sheets in pencil—yet almost nothing in it needs translating, because the two things it leans on hardest have barely moved: what the exam rewards, and the calculator in your hand.

The remarkable part: the exam still hands you no formula sheet, and the same two calculator families are still the only ones allowed—so Joseph’s CF0/NPV/IRR keystroke walkthrough works key for key on the 2026 exam. What changed is the delivery: Level I is now 180 multiple-choice questions in two 135-minute computer-based sessions at Prometric test centers, with multiple exam windows per year. Learn the “why” of each formula, exactly as he prescribes, and the format change costs you nothing.

What has changed since 2015

  • Paper out, Prometric in: Level I moved from two paper sittings a year to computer-based testing in multiple windows—180 questions, two 135-minute sessions, an optional ~30-minute break. The remaining 2026 Level I windows are August 18 and November 11.
  • Calculator policy: unchanged. Only the TI BA II Plus family and HP 12C family are approved. Bring your own (it stays in full view on your desk); personal writing utensils are prohibited and the center provides erasable scratch materials—so calculator fluency matters even more than in the pencil era.
  • Still closed-book: no formula sheet is provided or permitted at the exam. His flash-cards-and-daily-practice-problems routine remains the proven way to make formulas automatic—our companion piece on how to remember CFA formulas turns it into a daily system—and a study-side formula sheet is for the weeks before exam day, not during it.
  • His level framing still rings true: Level I remains the concepts-and-relationships exam, with the heavier quantitative lift arriving at Level II—now tested as item sets (vignettes) rather than standalone questions.
  • The curriculum has been reorganized into Learning Modules and is refreshed regularly, so treat his nine picks as a way of thinking—master the “why,” then the mechanics—and anchor your actual formula list to the current readings for your exam window.
  • What we removed: two promotional download lines that had been inserted into the guest text in later years (a 2019 mock-exam plug and a formula-sheet download plug) are gone, along with leftover image-caption debris. Everything else is exactly as published.

Recommended Level I resources (FinQuiz)

Only Level I resources are promoted in the editorial areas of this page.

  • Level I Formula Sheet (Primary) — every key formula organized by topic and Learning Module, for the daily recall passes this post prescribes.
  • Level I Summary — flow-chart review that shows how the formulas connect, so you recognize which one a question is really asking for.
  • Level I Question Bank — the “practice problems over and over” Joseph calls your best friend. An optional extra alongside the official practice included with your CFA Institute registration.
  • Level I Notes — LOS-aligned coverage for learning the “why” behind each formula from the ground up.
  • Level I Full Course Playlist — free video-led coverage with guided pacing.
  • Free Full-Length Mock Exam — one complete 180-question mock (two 90-question sessions) free with any account.
Practical pairing: Do exactly what Joseph says—write out one practice problem per formula and work it daily—with the formula sheet open beside you to check notation. When the button sequences and setups feel automatic, benchmark under time with the free mock.

Original Guest Post (Text Unchanged)

Disclosure: The guest author does not endorse FinQuiz products. The content below is displayed with no edits, no paraphrasing, and no reordering. No links have been added into the author’s text. Two promotional download lines that had been inserted into the guest text in later years have been removed; the author’s words are otherwise preserved exactly as they last appeared on the FinQuiz blog. Originally published October 12, 2015; the version preserved here is the final one that ran on the site, a later refresh that retitled the post and updated some “CFA Level 1” phrasing to “Level I CFA Program.”

Peeling back the cover on your Level I CFA Program books can be a shock at first. Thousands of pages and hundreds of Level I CFA Program formulas sit in front of you and can seem overwhelming. Before you freak out, it’s not really so bad. While formulas become crucial on the level 2 exam and its quantitative focus, the formulas on the first exam are much more about learning relationships and the process. Learn the ‘why’ of the formula and you’ll remember how to work it on the exam easily. I thought I would cover some of the most important level 1 formulas and how to approach the mountain of equations.

Practice problems and flash cards are going to be your best friends. There’s really no substitute for working formulas over and over again for remembering them on the exam. Write out practice problems of the most difficult and most important formulas and then practice them daily until you can do them easily.

Formulas #1: Future Value of a Single Cash Flow

The future value of cash flows is not a difficult formula and one that you’ll do on your financial calculator but it’s really a building block to a lot of the more difficult formulas for time value of money. Make sure you understand this basic formula and what the different notations mean.

FVN=PV(1+r)N

i.e. if your savings account earns interest at a 5% rate and you have $100 deposited, how much will it be worth in 20 years?

FV20=$100(1+.05)20 =$265.33

Formulas #2: NPV and IRR

Both NPV and IRR are also found easily with the calculator but they pop up many times in conceptual questions so you really need to understand the idea behind each. Remember that a key assumption of IRR is that cash flows are reinvested at that rate, which may not be realistic. Also, if there are multiple cash outflows, there will be multiple IRRs or none at all. There may be a conflict between NPV and IRR when projects are mutually exclusive or when there are multiple cash outflows. In this case, NPV is preferred.

Using the calculator is relatively easy,

  • The initial project cost or investment is a negative (outflow) as CF0
  • CO1 through x are the stream of cash flows and entered as a positive (inflow)
  • If cash flows are an equal amount, you can enter them as F (frequency)
  • Press the NPV button and enter the interest rate
  • Down arrow CPT NPV
  • For IRR, just press the IRR button and CPT

Formulas #3: Sharpe Ratio

The Sharpe Ratio is a measure for adjusting risk across investments and measuring return on the same scale. While bonds may offer a much lower rate, are they a better or worse investment than stocks given their lower volatility? It’s a pretty easy calculation and you’ll see it come up in all three exams so make sure you can remember it quickly.

Sharpe ratio = (Asset Return – Risk Free Rate) / Asset Standard Deviation

Formulas #4: Capital Asset Pricing Model

There are a lot of flaws in the CAPM and it’s used more in academics but it is still a very useful formula and will appear throughout the CFA exams. Beyond the formula, you should pay attention to drawbacks of using the CAPM.

Ra = rf + Ba (rm-rf)

The required return (Ra) is the amount of return required given a specific asset’s additional risk relative to the market and the risk free rate. You multiple an asset’s beta (Ba) by the difference between the expected return on the market (rm) and the risk free rate (rf). You then add back in the risk free rate. The difference between the market’s expected return and the risk free rate is called the market premium, the additional return required for taking on market risk.

Formulas #5: DuPont Analysis of ROE

DuPont analysis breaks down the return on equity (ROE) into three components, profit margin – asset turnover – equity multiplier.

ROE = (Net Income/Sales)*(Sales/Assets)*(Assets/Equity)

Which becomes (Net Income/Equity) in its simplest form.

The formula provides another layer of analysis on which to compare company profitability. It’s not enough to be able to say that one company has a high return on its shareholder equity but you need to know the source of the return.

Formulas #6: Dividend Discount Models

The Gordon Growth Model (GGM) is arguably one of the most used formulas in the curriculum. It is a single-stage model, assuming that dividends will grow at a constant rate into perpetuity. The general formula is:

Price = Div0 (1+growth) / (Rce – growth)

An important note is that the required return must be higher than the growth rate in dividends to use the formula. This is not usually a problem in single-stage models because the long-term growth rate will probably be fairly low. Be ready to calculate some of the data points on the exam (like finding the discount rate through CAPM or the growth rate through ROE and the payout ratio). The GGM is not appropriate when the company is experiencing super-normal growth for a period before it slows to perpetual growth. For this scenario, you need one of the multi-stage models.

Formulas #7: Weighted Average Cost of Capital

Understanding and calculating the WACC is another foundational concept that you will need to master. The concept is pretty intuitive, a firm’s cost of capital (spending) is a weighted average of the cost from each source (debt or equity). Debt is normally less expensive and tax shielded but can be risky at high amounts.

WACC = E/V * Re + D/V * Rd * (1-Tc)

The WACC is equal to the percentage of financing from equity (E/V) times the cost of equity (Re) plus the percentage of financing from debt (Rd) times the cost of debt, adjusted for the tax shield. Use the market value of debt or equity when available. Remember, the company’s capital structure may change over time so it is preferable to use target weights instead of current market value weights.

Formulas #8: Free Cash Flows

FCF models acknowledge that investors have a right to all cash flows from a company and not just those paid out as dividends. Free cash flows are the cash generated from operations after that needed for continued operations is deducted. The advantage is that FCF compared to dividend models is that FCF can be calculated regardless if the company pays a dividend. FCF models are also appropriate for investors that may be able to exercise a control premium on the company. The major disadvantage is in valuing those companies with high capital expenditures, making free cash flow negative at times.

Free cash flow is shown two different ways, Free Cash Flow to Equity and Free Cash Flow to the Firm, each appropriate to two different ownership perspectives. FCFF is the cash flow from operations after capital expenditures that is available to both levels of ownership (debt and equity). FCFE is that left over after paying debt holders, since they have a prior claim.

Free Cash Flow to the Firm (FCFF) is the cash flow available to all capital providers (debt and equity) and equals:

Net income + Net noncash Charges (depreciation and amortization) – Investment in working capital – Investment in Fixed capital + after tax interest expense

Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE) is the cash flow available to common shareholders and equals:

Net income + Net noncash Charges (depreciation and amortization) – Investment in working capital – Investment in Fixed +/- net borrowing

Notice that FCFE is FCFF except without adding back interest expense and taking net borrowing into account.

Understand how to arrive at FCFE or FCFF with CFO

FCFF = CFO + INT (1-t) – invest fixed capital

FCFE= CFO – invest fixed capital +/- net borrowing

Formulas #9: Turnover Ratios

The last formula is actually a series of ratios but all relatively easy to remember. These are the turnover ratios: accounts receivable, inventory turnover, number of days receivables, number of days payable and number of days inventory. You’ll use these to calculate the net operating cycle and all individual ratios are fair game on the exam.

The most important thing here is to remember that when you are combining income statement data and balance sheet data, you need to use an average of the balance sheet data. For example, the inventory turnover ratio is the cost of goods sold (income statement) divided by the average inventory from the current and previous period balance sheet.

Most of these formulas are not difficult and are pretty intuitive if you just think through them for a moment. You’ll need that deep understanding of what is going on in the formula more than you’ll need the formula itself. Make sure you have this conceptual mastery and you’ll have no trouble on level 1 exam.

‘til next time, happy studyin’

Written by Joseph Hogue, CFA

FAQ (Global candidates)

Are these nine formulas still worth prioritizing for the Level I exam?

As a study philosophy, yes: time value of money, NPV and IRR, ratio analysis, and cost-of-capital thinking remain foundations that the rest of the curriculum builds on, and the post’s core advice—learn the “why” of a formula, then drill it daily—is exactly how successful candidates still work. That said, the curriculum is reorganized regularly, so always anchor your formula list to the current Learning Modules for your exam window rather than any fixed top-nine. A current-year formula sheet, like the FinQuiz Level I Formula Sheet, keeps the list and the notation aligned with the readings you are actually tested on.

Does the CFA exam give you a formula sheet?

No. The exam is not open-book: you may not bring formula sheets, notes, or printed materials into the testing room, and personal writing utensils are prohibited—the test center provides erasable scratch materials. Every formula has to come from memory (or from knowing your calculator cold), which is why the post’s practice-problems-and-flash-cards routine still matters. Study-side formula sheets are for the weeks before the exam, not exam day.

How is the Level I exam structured now?

Level I is computer-based at Prometric test centers, offered in multiple windows per year. You answer 180 multiple-choice questions across two 135-minute sessions with an optional break of roughly 30 minutes in between. The remaining 2026 Level I windows are in August and November. The formula skills this post teaches transfer directly—the questions are still standalone multiple choice, just on a screen instead of a paper answer sheet.

Do the calculator tips in this post still work?

Key for key. The only calculators allowed are still the Texas Instruments BA II Plus family and the Hewlett Packard 12C family, so the CF0, NPV, and IRR keystrokes Joseph walks through are unchanged a decade later. Bring your own approved calculator; it stays in full view on your desk during the exam. One warm-up idea: re-run his $100-at-5%-for-20-years future value example and his NPV workflow on your own calculator until the button sequence is automatic, then benchmark yourself with the free FinQuiz full-length mock.