Cardiac magnetic resonance myocardial perfusion imaging (CMR-MPI) is considered a state-of-the-art non-invasive modality for ischemia detection but its additive value in a multiple-test strategy in patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) is not fully validated. We aimed to evaluate CMR-MPI integration with exercise treadmill test (ETT) for the diagnostic workup of patients with suspected CAD, having invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) as reference standard.In this prospective single-center study, patients with suspected CAD underwent sequential ETT, CMR-MPI and X-ray invasive coronary angiography (XA). Significant CAD was defined by the presence of stenosis >40% with FFR ≤0.8 in vessels >2mm or ≥90% stenosis/occlusion.80 symptomatic patients (68% male, 61±8years) were enrolled. Compared to ETT, CMR-MPI showed similar sensitivity (81%) and higher specificity (93 vs. 58%, p<0.001) for CAD detection (prevalence=46%) translating into better diagnostic performance (AUC 0.87 vs. 0.70; p=0.002). CMR-MPI improved accuracy independently of ETT in all patients with high pre-test probability and in intermediate-probability patients but those with a clearly positive-ETT (symptoms+ST-shift), in whom ETT correctly identified CAD. In the low-probability group CMR-MPI was useful as a gatekeeper for XA after a positive-ETT. The best integrating protocol achieved a global accuracy of 89% (AUC 0.88) and was clearly superior to an approach based solely in ETT (AUC 0.70, p<0.001), yet similar to isolated CMR-MPI (AUC 0.87, p=ns).CMR-MPI has high sensitivity and specificity for CAD detection and may be combined with ETT in a diagnostic workflow aiming to increase accuracy and reduce the number of unnecessary catheterizations.