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Is PRINCE2 7 Still Relevant In 2026? 

 May 13, 2026

By  Dave Litten

Dave Litten Blogs


I aim to offer practical, actionable advice that can be applied to your projects, regardless of your experience level as a project manager. Drawing on my personal experiences, I will provide insights on how to tackle the challenges and intricacies inherent in managing a diverse range of projects. Join me here

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Yes, And Here Is Why

I get asked whether PRINCE2 7 is still worth learning. The short answer is yes. PRINCE2 7 has been updated to work with modern delivery approaches, it puts people and behaviour at the centre, and it replaces the old Themes with seven practical Practices that map directly to real project problems. The method now includes guidance for digital and data driven projects and makes tailoring a core principle so it fits small teams, large programmes, agile squads, and hybrid delivery models. Recruiters still recognise PRINCE2 as a valuable credential and the exam has been updated to reflect people, culture, digital, and scenario based logic.

What that means for you

If you want a qualification that actually helps you run projects in 2026, PRINCE2 7 is designed to be useful rather than academic. It gives governance that works with iterative delivery, and it helps you make decisions that create value and sustain benefits. The Practices are practical, the role descriptions are clearer, and the emphasis on tailoring means you can apply the method without forcing a one size fits all process onto your team.

Is PRINCE2 7 Still Relevant In 2026 Yes, And Here Is Why

The fastest way I teach people to pass

Start with the Practices because they are the backbone of the method. Learn what each Practice is trying to achieve and how it supports the project. Next, read the role descriptions and map responsibilities to the Practices so you can answer who approves, who escalates, who owns, who monitors and who decides without hesitation. Finally, move into realistic timed scenario practice so you build the judgement the Practitioner exam requires. Practise until the scenarios feel predictable rather than confusing. This sequence is the exact route hundreds of my students have used to pass first time.

How long it takes in real life

For Foundation, if you can study full time you can be ready in about two days. If you are fitting study around work or family life plan on three to five days. If you already have solid project experience the Foundation will feel familiar and you will probably be ready in two to three days. If you are new to projects give yourself four to five days to absorb the concepts and practise a few sample questions. Foundation tests understanding rather than memory, so focus on the purpose of each Practice and how they connect.

For Practitioner, the exam tests interpretation and judgement in scenario form so it needs more practice. If you can study full time plan on about five days of focused preparation. If you are studying part time allow seven to ten days. If you already know PRINCE2 well you will probably need five to seven days to adapt to the scenario style. If scenario based exams are new to you allow seven to ten days so you can practise timed papers and sharpen your decision making.

Common mistakes to avoid

Do not rely on old PRINCE2 material because anything written before the 2023 update will slow you down and teach the wrong emphasis. Do not try to memorise the manual. Foundation rewards understanding, not rote recall. Do not skip scenario practice for Practitioner because the exam is about judgement, not trivia. Use up to date explanations, examples, mock questions and exam strategies that match the current syllabus.

Dave Litten


Dave spent 25+ years as a senior project manager for UK and USA multinationals and has deep experience in project management. He now develops a wide range of Project Management Masterclasses, under the Projex Academy brand name. In addition, David runs project management training seminars across the world, and is a prolific writer on the many topics of project management.

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