ABIM Anki Deck & Study Materials: Best Resources to Pass
Prepare for the ABIM Anki Deck & Study Materials: Best certification. Practice questions with answer explanations covering all exam domains.
ABIM Study Materials: What Works and What Doesn't
Preparing for the ABIM Internal Medicine board exam is one of the most demanding study efforts in medicine. You've made it through residency, you know internal medicine—but the ABIM boards test breadth and precision across every subspecialty in a way that daily clinical work often doesn't. Choosing the right study materials can mean the difference between a confident pass and a stressful near-miss.
This guide covers the most effective ABIM study materials currently available—including the ABIM Anki deck that's become a staple of board prep—and helps you build a study plan that uses them strategically.
The ABIM Anki Deck: What It Is and Why Residents Use It
Anki is a spaced repetition flashcard application. The "ABIM Anki deck" typically refers to community-created flashcard sets designed specifically for internal medicine board preparation. These decks have become extremely popular among residents and physicians preparing for the ABIM exam because they leverage spaced repetition—a learning method that's scientifically proven to improve long-term retention far more efficiently than re-reading notes or textbooks.
What a Good ABIM Anki Deck Covers
The most widely used ABIM Anki decks cover high-yield facts across all of internal medicine's major subspecialties: cardiology, nephrology, pulmonology, gastroenterology, endocrinology, rheumatology, hematology, oncology, infectious disease, neurology, and the core IM topics (hospital medicine, ambulatory care, geriatrics). They also include pharmacology—drugs of choice, mechanisms, dosing adjustments for renal/hepatic impairment, and common drug interactions that appear repeatedly on the boards.
Limitations of Anki for ABIM Prep
Anki decks alone aren't sufficient ABIM preparation. Flashcard systems are excellent for fact retention but don't develop the clinical reasoning skills needed for the exam's scenario-based questions. A physician who knows every fact in a deck but can't work through a complex diagnostic question under time pressure will struggle with the real exam. Anki works best paired with question-based learning resources.
UWorld Internal Medicine: The Gold Standard Question Bank
UWorld is widely considered the most effective question bank for ABIM preparation. Its questions are known for being harder than the actual boards—which is exactly the point. Doing UWorld questions consistently, reading every explanation (right and wrong answers), and noting patterns across questions builds the clinical reasoning that the ABIM exam actually tests.
Most ABIM candidates work through UWorld 1–2 times during their prep period. First pass: do questions in topic blocks to cover content systematically. Second pass (if time permits): random, mixed-subject timed blocks to simulate exam conditions.
UWorld's explanations are often better study material than many textbooks. Read them carefully—don't just note the answer and move on.
MKSAP: The Official ABIM-Endorsed Resource
The Medical Knowledge Self-Assessment Program (MKSAP), produced by the American College of Physicians, is the most directly aligned resource to the ABIM exam. ABIM actually recommends MKSAP as a preparation tool, and MKSAP's question format closely mirrors the boards.
MKSAP covers every IM subspecialty with monographs (detailed review chapters) and corresponding practice questions. It's expensive compared to other resources—a full subscription runs several hundred dollars—but it's the most authoritative content available. Many physicians use MKSAP as their primary reference and supplement with a question bank like UWorld.
Amboss
Amboss is an increasingly popular alternative to UWorld. Its question bank is somewhat smaller, but its integrated library feature is distinctive—every question links directly to a detailed clinical knowledge article in the Amboss library. This makes Amboss particularly useful for physicians who want to understand the pathophysiology behind exam topics, not just memorize the right answer.
Amboss also offers an ABIM-specific question mode that filters questions by board relevance. Some candidates use Amboss as a primary question bank; others use it as a supplement after completing UWorld.
Board Vitals
Board Vitals offers a dedicated ABIM internal medicine question bank with thousands of questions. It's typically less expensive than UWorld and useful as an additional question source—particularly for candidates who've finished UWorld and want more practice material. It's rarely used as a primary resource but earns consistent positive reviews as a supplement.
IM Essentials
IM Essentials, also from ACP, is a companion to MKSAP with a focus on clinical decision-making and evidence-based medicine. It's particularly useful for physicians who feel strong on facts but want to strengthen their approach to complex clinical scenarios. Less widely used than MKSAP or UWorld, but worth knowing about.
Building Your ABIM Study Plan
Resources alone don't get you through the ABIM exam. How you use them—and in what order—matters enormously.
Phase 1: Foundation (6–8 weeks before exam)
Work through MKSAP or UWorld by subspecialty. For each subspecialty, read the relevant review material first, then do the practice questions. Starting with questions before any content review often leaves you guessing without context; starting with content first makes questions more meaningful.
Set up your Anki deck during this phase. Add cards for facts you're consistently missing or that you want to ensure you retain. Don't download a massive deck and try to do 500 cards a day—build cards from your actual weak spots.
Phase 2: Active Practice (4–6 weeks before exam)
Shift to predominantly question-based study. Do UWorld in timed, random mode. Review every explanation, not just the ones you got wrong. Pattern recognition across questions—"I keep missing questions about nephrotic vs nephritic syndrome"—tells you where to spend focused content review time.
Maintain your Anki deck daily during this phase. Spaced repetition requires consistency; skipping days forces you to review cards that have fallen overdue, which breaks the efficiency of the system.
Phase 3: Simulation (2–4 weeks before exam)
Take full-length practice exams under real conditions—timed, complete, without interruption. The ABIM exam prep section covers practice exam resources in depth. MKSAP online mode offers timed practice sets. Use your performance data to identify remaining weak subspecialties.
Our own ABIM practice tests—including ABIM Cardiology, ABIM Endocrinology, and ABIM Nephrology—provide additional subspecialty-specific question practice across the high-yield content areas of the exam.

High-Yield Topics That Appear Repeatedly on the ABIM Exam
Regardless of which resources you use, certain topics appear reliably on the ABIM exam year after year. These are worth extra emphasis in your preparation:
- Cardiology: Heart failure management, ACS workup and treatment, arrhythmia management, valvular disease, hypertension guidelines
- Nephrology: AKI workup, CKD management, acid-base disorders, electrolyte abnormalities, glomerulonephritis
- Pulmonology: COPD exacerbation, asthma management, interstitial lung disease, pulmonary hypertension, PE workup and treatment
- Endocrinology: Diabetes management, thyroid disorders (hypo and hyper), adrenal insufficiency, osteoporosis management
- Rheumatology: Distinguishing inflammatory arthropathies, SLE diagnostic criteria and management, vasculitis, crystal arthropathies
- Hematology: Anemia workup algorithm, coagulation disorders, transfusion thresholds, ITP and TTP management
- Infectious Disease: Antibiotic selection, endocarditis criteria, HIV management, travel medicine
- GI: Hepatitis C treatment, IBD management, GI bleeding workup, pancreatic disease
Eligibility and Exam Logistics
For details on ABIM exam eligibility requirements, scheduling, and exam day logistics, our ABIM exam eligibility guide covers the process from residency completion through exam registration. Our ABIM exam tips article addresses specific strategies for managing the exam itself—question timing, flagging approach, and what to do with questions you're genuinely unsure about.
Practice Questions: The Common Thread
Every effective ABIM study plan—regardless of which resources you prioritize—includes substantial practice question work. The ABIM internal medicine exam is a clinical reasoning test. You can't build clinical reasoning by reading alone. Practice questions force you to apply knowledge under pressure, which is exactly what the exam requires.
Whatever else you add to your preparation, make sure practice questions are central to it. The research on exam preparation is unambiguous: active retrieval practice through questions beats passive review at roughly every comparison that's been studied.
The ABIM exam uses a multiple-choice format with questions covering all major domains. Most versions allow 2-3 hours for completion.
Questions test both knowledge recall and application skills. A score of 70-75% is typically required to pass.
- +Validates your knowledge and skills objectively
- +Increases job market competitiveness
- +Provides structured learning goals
- +Networking opportunities with other certified professionals
- −Study materials can be expensive
- −Exam anxiety can affect performance
- −Requires dedicated preparation time
- −Retake fees apply if you don't pass
Choosing Your ABIM Study Materials
There's no single perfect ABIM study resource. What works depends on how you learn, where your knowledge gaps are, and how much time you have available. What's consistent across successful ABIM candidates is a structured approach: content review combined with substantial question practice, maintained consistently over months, with active tracking of weak areas.
The ABIM Anki deck helps you retain facts. UWorld or MKSAP builds clinical reasoning. Practice exams calibrate your readiness. None of them works in isolation—but together, they cover the full range of what the exam tests.
Start your preparation with a diagnostic practice set to understand where you stand today. Then build a study plan that addresses your specific gaps, not just a generic checklist. That's how physicians with full residency schedules consistently pass one of medicine's most demanding exams.
ABIM Study Tips
What's the best study strategy for ABIM?
Focus on weak areas first. Use practice tests to identify gaps, then study those topics intensively.
How far in advance should I start studying?
Most successful candidates begin 4-8 weeks before the exam. Create a structured study schedule.
Should I retake practice tests?
Yes! Take each practice test 2-3 times. Focus on understanding why answers are correct, not memorizing.
What should I do on exam day?
Arrive 30 min early, bring required ID, read questions carefully, flag difficult ones, and review before submitting.
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.