FACHE Study Guide: A 12-Week Roadmap That Actually Fits Your Calendar

If you've Googled "FACHE study guide," you've probably found generic 200-hour Excel sheets that assume you don't have a job. This one doesn't. Built around real executive calendars and used by 60+ pass-first-try healthcare execs I've coached.

By Walter Dusseldorp, MBA, FACHE, LSSBB · Updated May 11, 2026 · 12 min read

Here's the inconvenient truth about FACHE prep:

Most candidates fail not because they didn't study enough hours, but because those hours were distributed wrong, ordered wrong, and not stress-tested under exam pressure. Two candidates can put in identical 130 hours and one passes calmly while the other misses by 14 points.

The difference is structure.

12
Weeks total
10-12
Hours / week
130
Hours total
1,500+
Practice qs

The principles this roadmap is built on

Before the week-by-week, four ideas you have to internalize for any of this to work:

1. Front-load Healthcare Delivery and Management. These are the two heaviest-weighted domains (~30% combined) and they're foundational — every other domain references them. You'll learn faster in weeks 3-12 if weeks 1-2 are solid here.

2. Defer your strongest domain. Whichever domain matches your day job (Quality if you're a QI leader, Finance if you're a CFO, etc.) — push it to weeks 8-9. You don't need it early. Your weakest domains need the prime study window.

3. Practice questions early and constantly. Don't wait until week 9 to start practice questions. From week 2 onward, every study session ends with 15-25 questions on whatever you just covered. Pattern recognition compounds.

4. Three full timed simulations before exam day. Non-negotiable. Two hours, one hour break, do another. Most candidates first feel exam fatigue on exam day. You should have already felt it three times by then.

The 12-week schedule

Hours assume you can carve out ~10-12/week. If you only have 6-8, extend to 16 weeks. If you have 15+, this compresses to 9-10 weeks. The proportions matter more than the calendar dates.

WEEK 1 · ORIENTATION

Lay the foundation. Don't study yet.

~6 hours · No practice questions yet · Focus: blueprint + diagnosis
WEEK 2 · HEALTHCARE DELIVERY SYSTEM

The system as a system.

~12 hours · 50 practice questions · Domain weight: ~14%
WEEK 3 · MANAGEMENT & LEADERSHIP

Heaviest weight. Don't skim.

~12 hours · 75 practice questions · Domain weight: ~16%
WEEK 4 · LAWS & REGULATIONS

The domain that ruins more retakes than any other.

~12 hours · 60 practice questions · Domain weight: ~10%
WEEK 5 · QUALITY & PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT

Methodologies you can name AND distinguish.

~11 hours · 60 practice questions · Domain weight: ~12%
WEEK 6 · BUSINESS / FINANCE

Numbers at exam pace.

~12 hours · 60 practice questions · Domain weight: ~12%
WEEK 7 · HUMAN RESOURCES

Beyond compliance familiarity.

~10 hours · 50 practice questions · Domain weight: ~10%
WEEK 8 · HEALTHCARE TECHNOLOGY & INFORMATION MANAGEMENT

Where most execs are decades behind.

~11 hours · 50 practice questions · Domain weight: ~10%
WEEK 9 · PROFESSIONALISM, ETHICS, GOVERNANCE & ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

Lowest combined weight (~16%), but easy points.

~10 hours · 50 practice questions · Domain weights: ~8% + ~8%

Where are you on this schedule?

The FACHE Diagnostic Quiz scores you on all 9 domains in 5 minutes. You'll know exactly which weeks above to spend extra time on — and which to fly through.

Take the Diagnostic →
WEEK 10 · INTEGRATION + WEAK DOMAINS

Plug the holes.

~12 hours · 100 practice questions across all domains
WEEK 11 · FULL SIMULATION #1 + ANALYSIS

Hour 0-3 of three exam simulations total.

~12 hours · Sim #1 + full review
WEEK 12 · SIMS #2 + #3, TAPER, EXAM PREP

Two more sims, then taper.

~10 hours · Sim #2, Sim #3, light review

What this schedule assumes

That you have an MHA, MBA-Healthcare, or 7+ years of healthcare admin experience. If you have a clinical background and moved into admin, add an extra 30-40 hours, mostly spread across Healthcare Delivery, Business/Finance, and Governance.

That you can protect ~10-12 study hours per week. The most common failure pattern isn't intellectual — it's calendar. The first two weeks you have to defend the study block aggressively or this schedule erodes.

That you have access to a practice question bank with explanations. The 1,500+ practice questions and explanations are non-optional. The FACHE Prep Course bundles this with the Practice Twin AI simulator, but you can build your own with various ACHE-licensed banks.

The single highest-ROI habit

Every wrong answer gets re-read until the explanation makes sense — then re-flagged for a second attempt 7 days later.

Most candidates skim explanations and move on. Pass-first-try candidates can articulate why they were wrong and what trap they fell into. That distinction shows up on exam day when ACHE writes two plausible answers and you have to pick the academically-correct one over the operationally-correct one.

The FACHE Prep Course — 12 weeks, $599 one-time

This roadmap, built into a structured course with the Practice Twin AI exam simulator, 1,500+ explained questions, and a pass-or-refund guarantee. Built by a healthcare exec who passed first try and has spent a decade coaching others through.

See the full course →

If you only have 8 weeks (or less)

The 8-week compress: combine weeks 1 + 2 into 1, weeks 3 + 4 into 2, and skip the integration week (10). Run only two full simulations instead of three. Increase your weekly hours from 10-12 to 15-17.

This works but is brutal. Most 8-week candidates I've coached have either failed and retaken on the regular 12-week schedule, or passed with high stress. If you have a choice, take the 12 weeks.

If you have 6 months

Extend the calendar but keep the proportions. Do each domain over 2 weeks instead of 1. Add a mid-course full simulation at week 12. Run weekly practice question sessions throughout. The risk with 6 months is losing focus — schedule small wins (mini-sims, completed cheat sheets) to maintain momentum.

The bottom line

FACHE doesn't reward heroic last-month sprints. It rewards calm, structured, blueprint-driven prep across 12 weeks. The candidates who pass first try aren't the smartest in the room — they're the ones who treated their prep like a project plan with a hard deadline and managed it accordingly.

If you're sitting in the next 3-12 months: start week 1 this Sunday. Block the study hours in your calendar before any other commitments. Print the blueprint. Take the diagnostic. The earliest you start, the lower your stress curve.

Good luck.

Walter Dusseldorp is the founder of The Dutch Mentor and creator of the FACHE Prep Course. He earned his FACHE in 2014 and has spent the last decade coaching healthcare executives through certification and into senior leadership roles.