CAPM Practice Tests 2026 — Free Sample Questions for the Certified Associate in Project Management Exam
Free CAPM practice tests covering all exam domains: predictive methods, agile, business analysis, schedule, cost, and stakeholder management.

CAPM Practice Tests: How to Prepare for the PMI Certification Exam
The CAPM (Certified Associate in Project Management) is PMI's entry-level project management credential, and it's a legitimately tough exam. You'll face 150 questions in three hours covering everything from predictive waterfall methodologies to agile frameworks, business analysis, and stakeholder engagement. That's a lot of ground — and it's why practice tests are so central to effective CAPM preparation.
Unlike some certification exams that test rote memorization, the CAPM tests your ability to apply project management concepts to realistic scenarios. You'll read a scenario describing a project situation, then choose the best course of action based on PMI's methodology. This means understanding a framework deeply enough to reason through novel situations — and that's a skill you develop by practicing, not just by reading the PMBOK Guide. Taking CAPM practice tests repeatedly is the most efficient way to find out which domains you actually understand versus which ones you've just read about.
Practice questions also calibrate your pacing. At 150 questions in 180 minutes, you have exactly 72 seconds per question. That's tighter than it sounds when you're reading a 6-line scenario and weighing four plausible answers. Candidates who take their first timed practice test often discover they're spending 2–3 minutes on hard questions and running out of time at the end. Fixing that pacing issue before exam day requires deliberate timed practice — not more content review. Working through CAPM certification guide helps you understand the full scope of what PMI tests and how the credential fits into a project management career path. Reviewing CAPM practice test questions covers the full range of PMI domains in a format that matches the actual exam structure.
CAPM Exam Domains: What's Tested
- Project Management Framework — PMI's process groups (initiating, planning, executing, monitoring and controlling, closing), knowledge areas, and integration management principles form the foundation of predictive (waterfall) content
- Schedule Management — WBS creation, activity sequencing, critical path analysis, schedule compression techniques (crashing vs. fast-tracking), and earned value schedule metrics (SV, SPI)
- Cost Management — Budget development, cost baseline, earned value metrics (CV, CPI, EAC, ETC, VAC), and forecasting formulas that CAPM consistently tests in calculation questions
- Risk Management — Risk identification, qualitative and quantitative analysis, risk response strategies (avoid, transfer, mitigate, accept), and residual vs. secondary risk distinction
- Quality and Procurement — Quality planning, control charts, make-or-buy decisions, contract types (FP, T&M, Cost-reimbursable) and their risk allocation between buyer and seller

How to Use CAPM Practice Tests Effectively
The most common CAPM preparation mistake is using practice tests as a scorecard rather than a learning tool. Taking a practice test, noting your score, and moving on doesn't improve your actual knowledge — it just confirms what you already know. The real work happens in reviewing every question you got wrong (and every question you got right by guessing).
For each incorrect answer, don't just note the right answer — understand why that answer is right according to PMI's methodology. CAPM scenario questions often have two or three plausible-sounding answers. The distinguishing factor is usually which option aligns with PMI's process-based approach: follow the process, communicate with stakeholders, document the decision, escalate through proper channels. If you're consistently choosing the "pragmatic" or "shortcut" answer over the "correct PM process" answer, you've found a mindset gap that practice questions can help fix.
Aim to take at least 4–5 full-length practice tests before your exam date, ideally under timed conditions. Your practice test performance won't exactly predict your exam score — different question banks have different difficulty calibration — but consistent performance above 70% across multiple practice sets suggests readiness. Below 60% consistently means you need more content review before the test will help. At 60–70%, you're in the range where targeted review of weak domains + more practice is the right approach. Reviewing CAPM project management framework questions isolates the predictive methodology content that makes up the largest share of exam questions. Practicing with CAPM agile frameworks practice test builds the agile and hybrid delivery knowledge that accounts for a significant and growing portion of the current exam. Working through CAPM stakeholder management questions covers the communications and stakeholder engagement content that generates multiple scenario questions on every test form.
Domain-specific practice is particularly useful in the final two weeks before your exam. Once you've done full practice tests and identified which domains are consistently below your average, switch to targeted domain practice rather than more full-length tests. If your cost management score is dragging your overall average down, a focused block of earned value calculation practice will do more good than another 150-question marathon.
CAPM Practice Test Strategy by Domain
- ▸Memorize the six core formulas: CV=EV-AC, SV=EV-PV, CPI=EV/AC, SPI=EV/PV, EAC=BAC/CPI, ETC=EAC-AC — these appear in at least 5–8 calculation questions per exam
- ▸Practice interpreting results: negative CV and SV means over-budget and behind schedule; CPI and SPI below 1.0 means unfavorable performance
- ▸VAC (Variance at Completion) = BAC - EAC — the exam often asks you to calculate what the total cost variance will be at project end
- ▸When practice questions give you two values and ask for a third, write out the formula before plugging in numbers — calculation errors under time pressure are common
- ▸TCPI (To-Complete Performance Index) = (BAC-EV)/(BAC-AC) — less common but appears; measures the efficiency needed to meet the budget
- ▸PMI's agile questions test whether you understand when to apply agile (high change, unclear requirements, experienced team) vs. predictive (low change, clear scope, regulated environment)
- ▸Scrum ceremony questions often test the boundaries between roles — the scrum master facilitates and removes impediments but does NOT direct the team or set sprint goals
- ▸When a question presents a conflict between the product owner and development team, the correct answer usually involves the scrum master facilitating discussion, not overriding either party
- ▸User story questions test INVEST criteria (Independent, Negotiable, Valuable, Estimable, Small, Testable) — stories that fail INVEST criteria need refinement before sprint planning
- ▸Velocity questions: if a team completed 30, 25, and 28 story points in three sprints, expected velocity for planning is approximately 28 (average or recent-sprint-weighted average)
- ▸When a practice question presents a project problem, the PMI-correct answer almost always follows the sequence: assess/analyze first, then act — jumping straight to action is rarely right
- ▸Change requests in predictive projects go through the integrated change control process regardless of size — 'I'll just make a small adjustment' answers are wrong
- ▸Communication channel formula questions: a project adds 3 members to an existing 5-person team — calculate channels before (10) and after (28), answer is the difference (18 new channels)
- ▸Risk questions: when a risk occurs that was previously identified, the response should follow the pre-planned risk response, not improvise on the spot
- ▸Procurement questions frequently test contract type risk allocation — firm-fixed-price protects the buyer; cost-plus protects the seller; T&M falls in between

CAPM Certification: Pros and Cons
- +No work experience required — the CAPM is accessible to new graduates and career changers with only 23 hours of project management education
- +PMI credential recognition — PMI certifications are recognized globally across industries; the CAPM provides a credential-based entry point into project management careers
- +Lower cost than PMP — at $225–$300, the CAPM is significantly cheaper than the PMP ($405–$555) while still earning PMI's credential recognition
- +Exam content is well-defined — PMI publishes an Exam Content Outline that maps all tested domains and tasks, making targeted preparation efficient
- +Foundation for PMP — CAPM certification experience (content knowledge + exam preparation) directly supports eventual PMP certification, which requires project experience
- −Limited career differentiation — many employers prioritize PMP over CAPM; the CAPM may provide less salary differentiation than expected without accompanying project experience
- −Content breadth — covering predictive, agile, and business analysis domains requires studying multiple methodologies simultaneously, which is cognitively demanding for first-time candidates
- −3-year validity requires recertification — PDU requirements for maintaining CAPM add ongoing cost and time investment after initial certification
- −Exam cost without guaranteed ROI — $225–$300 plus study materials is a meaningful investment for candidates unsure whether project management is their intended career path
- −Scenario-based format disadvantages test-takers — candidates who know PM content but struggle with scenario interpretation may not perform proportional to their actual knowledge level
CAPM Practice Test Resources and Study Timeline
PMI doesn't publish official CAPM practice tests — the closest official resources are the Exam Content Outline and the sample questions in PMI's exam prep materials. Third-party practice test providers fill this gap with varying quality. Joseph Phillips's CAPM exam prep course on Udemy includes practice tests that are well-aligned with current exam content. PMI's Learning platform offers prep resources that carry official weight. PrepCast has a CAPM-specific simulator with a large question bank. The quality of practice questions varies considerably, and no single resource perfectly mirrors the actual exam difficulty.
For a 60-day study timeline, the structure that works well is: the first 30 days on content (PMBOK Guide + Agile Practice Guide + PMI Exam Content Outline), with light practice questions embedded in each domain as you study it. Days 31–45 transition to mixed practice with domain-specific review for weak areas. Days 46–55 move to full-length timed practice tests with intensive review of wrong answers. The final week before your exam should focus on earned value formulas, a final review of your weakest domain, and one more full practice test to confirm readiness.
Candidates with backgrounds in software development often find the agile content straightforward but struggle with predictive methodology — particularly the earned value calculations and procurement content. Candidates from business administration backgrounds often find the predictive methodology intuitive but need more work on agile ceremonies and roles. Honest self-assessment before starting preparation saves time by letting you front-load study on your actual weak areas. Reviewing CAPM schedule management questions covers critical path, schedule compression, and earned value schedule metrics that consistently generate calculation questions on the exam. Working through CAPM cost management practice test covers budget development, earned value cost metrics, and forecasting formulas that represent the highest-calculation-density section of the exam.
CAPM Practice Test Questions and Answers
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.