We are ACCA (Association of Chartered Certified Accountants), a globally recognised professional accountancy body providing qualifications and advancing standards in accountancy worldwide. Founded in 1904 to widen access to the accountancy profession, we’ve long championed inclusion and today proudly support a diverse community of over 252,500 members and 526,000 future members in 180 countries.
Our forward-looking qualifications, continuous learning and insights are respected and valued by employers in every sector. They equip individuals with the business and finance expertise and ethical judgment to create, protect, and report the sustainable value delivered by organisations and economies.
Guided by our purpose and values, our ambition is to lead the accountancy profession for a changed world. Partnering with policymakers, standard setters, the donor community, educators and other accountancy bodies, we’re strengthening and building a profession that drives a sustainable future for all. Find out more at: www.accaglobal.com
Dec 05, 2025
Asia leads global confidence in tax fairness, but trust gaps persist elsewhere in the world
Dec 03, 2025
ACCA's latest report outlines how public sector finance leaders can build trust and deliver purposeful impact
Nov 25, 2025
Your digital transformation roadmap
Nov 24, 2025
ACCA's latest report establishes a ground-breaking framework for integrating sustainability considerations into investment decision making.
Nov 24, 2025
Insights on how business operations impact stakeholders are imperative for organisations to be resilient and thrive. As such, interconnected sustainability and financial information is no longer optional – it’s essential.
Nov 19, 2025
Drawing on responses from over 2,000 professionals and 31 roundtable discussions around the world, this research provides lived experiences and perceptions of fraud to show how it has become industrialised, yet at the same time even more enabled by human actions, governance gaps and technological advancements that conventional controls fail to address.