ACP Autodesk Inventor — is the certified professional exam actually much harder than the associate?

by derek_v 107 views6 replies
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derek_vOP
May 26, 2026

I passed the Autodesk Certified Associate for Inventor last year with an 82% and I'm thinking about going for the Certified Professional. I've been using Inventor daily for about 4 years in a mechanical design role — mostly sheet metal, weldments, and assemblies. The CA exam felt like it tested whether you knew where the commands were and basic part modeling. Is the CP testing the same stuff at a harder level, or is it genuinely different content?

Prep resources for the ACP are thin compared to the CA level. Autodesk's own learning portal has some materials but they're mostly tutorial-style, not exam-focused. I've been doing practice questions from a third-party site and scoring around 69%. My weakest areas are the iLogic and parameter-driven design questions — I use some of that in daily work but not at the level the exam seems to test.

There's apparently a presentation and documentation component involving drawing views, bill of materials, and iParts that catches people off guard. My day-to-day work doesn't involve much drawing production so that's another gap. If anyone's taken the ACP recently: how many iLogic questions came up, and how deep does the BOM and drawing section go?

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derek_v
May 26, 2026

If drawing production is a gap, spend time in the Drawing Manager specifically on automated view creation, annotation styles, and revision table management. Those topics generate more CP questions than most people expect coming from a pure modeling background.

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fatima_y
May 28, 2026

The iParts and iAssemblies section tripped me up on my first attempt. It's not heavily weighted but there are usually 6–8 questions and if you've never built a table-driven iPart you'll lose all of them. Build two or three from scratch before the exam and it'll make sense.

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amelia_f
May 28, 2026

The jump from CA to CP is real. CA tests recognition — do you know where the tool is. CP tests application — can you solve a design problem efficiently. Give yourself at least 6–8 weeks of deliberate practice before sitting for it.

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mkayla_r
May 29, 2026

Passed the ACP last November after failing the first attempt. The iLogic questions on my exam were scenario-based — they give you a situation and ask what rule or parameter setup would accomplish it. Less about syntax, more about knowing when and why to use iLogic versus just driving dimensions manually.

The drawing section had about 12–15 questions on mine. Section views, broken-out sections, BOM item numbering logic — you need hands-on experience, not just conceptual knowledge.

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PracticeQueen
June 18, 2026

Yes, it's genuinely harder, but not in the way most people expect. The CA tests whether you know how to do things. The CP tests whether you understand why Inventor works the way it does — and that's a very different skill. I found the wrong answers on the CP are almost always plausible, like they're specifically designed to catch you if you've just been clicking through workflows without thinking about what's happening under the hood.

Honestly the thing that helped me most was going back through practice questions and really digging into why each wrong answer was wrong, not just confirming the right one. With 4 years of daily use you've probably built up some solid intuition, but there are almost always a few habits you picked up that technically work but aren't how Inventor's parametric engine actually wants you to do it. Those are the traps. Sheet metal and assemblies especially have some quirks around constraints and feature order that'll trip you up if you're not thinking through the logic carefully. Good luck with it.

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FirstAttempt_S
June 18, 2026

Honestly, I almost gave up like two months in. The CA felt straightforward enough, but the CP is a different animal — you're not just clicking through workflows, you're expected to know why things work the way they do. I struggled hard with assembly constraints and adaptive parts, kept bombing the practice sets and started thinking maybe 4 years wasn't enough. What actually turned it around for me was drilling specific domains I was weak on. I found these free acp assembly modeling questions and they're way more scenario-based than what I'd been using, which is exactly what the real exam throws at you.

So yes, it's harder, but not impossibly harder if you've been doing real mechanical design work daily like you have. Your sheet metal and weldments experience will carry you on some sections. Just don't underestimate the assembly and iLogic stuff because that's where I saw people trip up. I passed with a 79% on my second attempt and it felt earned.

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