NHA CCMA Exam Questions PDF 2026: Free Certified Clinical Medical Assistant Practice
NHA CCMA exam questions PDF free download 2026. 180-question practice tests covering all 5 domains. Prep for your Certified Clinical Medical Assistant exam.

Download Your Free CCMA Exam Questions PDF
Get all the NHA CCMA exam questions in a printable PDF you can study anywhere. This file includes practice questions across all 5 exam domains — medical law and ethics, patient care coordination, clinical patient care, administrative and financial, and clinical procedures — formatted exactly as you'll see them on test day.
Use it to annotate, highlight key terms, and review clinical procedures offline. Pair it with the free CCMA practice test online for timed simulation.
- Issuing body: National Healthcareer Association (NHA)
- Questions: 180 total (150 scored + 30 pretest)
- Time limit: 3 hours
- Passing score: 390 out of 500
- Domains: Medical Law/Ethics, Patient Care Coordination, Clinical Patient Care, Administrative/Financial, Clinical Procedures
- Renewal: Every 2 years, 10 CEUs required
What Is the NHA CCMA Exam?
The CCMA (Certified Clinical Medical Assistant) is issued by the National Healthcareer Association — one of the largest allied health certification bodies in the US. It validates competency for medical assistants working in clinical settings: physician offices, urgent care clinics, outpatient surgery centers, and hospitals.
The exam has 180 questions total — 150 scored items plus 30 unscored pretest questions. You won't know which ones count, so treat every question seriously. You have 3 hours to complete it. The minimum passing score is 390 out of 500.
To sit for the exam you need: completion of an accredited medical assistant program, one year of full-time supervised work experience as an MA, or a combination of education and supervised training. No prior certification is required.
The 5 CCMA Exam Domains
The NHA CCMA blueprint organizes content into five domains. Knowing the breakdown helps you prioritize — spend more time on the sections that carry the most weight.
Domain 1 — Medical Law and Ethics (9%)
Covers HIPAA, patient rights, scope of practice, professional boundaries, advance directives, and mandatory reporting. Questions present scenarios where you identify the correct legal or ethical action. Common pitfall: confusing "need to know" HIPAA exceptions and forgetting MAs cannot diagnose.
Domain 2 — Patient Care Coordination and Education (11%)
Focuses on referrals, prior authorizations, discharge instructions, patient communication, and health literacy. You'll see questions about following physician orders, documenting patient education, and identifying barriers to compliance.
Domain 3 — Clinical Patient Care (38%)
The heaviest domain — more than a third of your exam. Expect questions on vital signs, medical histories, wound care, medication administration (oral, topical, injection routes), specimen collection, EKG setup, phlebotomy technique, infection control, OSHA standards, and basic emergency response. EKG and phlebotomy alone justify dedicated study sessions.
Domain 4 — Administrative and Financial (20%)
Medical billing, ICD-10 and CPT coding basics, insurance verification, prior authorization processes, scheduling, medical records management, and HIPAA compliance in administrative contexts. Know the difference between a superbill and an EOB. Understand copay, coinsurance, and deductible mechanics.
Domain 5 — Clinical Procedures (22%)
Point-of-care testing, lab values and critical values, sterilization and autoclave procedures, minor surgical assisting, patient positioning, orthopedic applications (splints, crutch fitting), urinalysis, and microbiology specimen handling.

CCMA Exam Prep Checklist
CCMA vs. CMA (AAMA) — Key Differences
Both credentials are nationally recognized, but they're not identical. The CMA (AAMA) requires graduation from a CAAHEP or ABHES-accredited program — no work experience path exists. The CCMA (NHA) offers a work experience pathway, making it accessible to MAs who trained on the job. Both require renewal every two years. Most employers accept either credential; some larger academic medical centers list CMA as preferred. If you're already working as an MA without a formal accredited program diploma, the CCMA is the accessible route.
Clinical Domain Tips: Phlebotomy, Injections, EKG
Phlebotomy order of draw: Memorize it cold — yellow, light blue, red, gold SST, green, lavender, gray. Know when to use each tube. EDTA (lavender) anticoagulates for CBCs; it cannot be used for chemistry panels. Questions test your response to hemoconcentration (prolonged tourniquet) or hemolysis (excessive fist pumping or rough handling).
EKG setup: Know that V1 and V2 are placed at the 4th intercostal space, right and left of the sternum respectively. Common artifacts: somatic tremor from patient movement, AC interference from electrode placement or wires crossing, wandering baseline from loose leads or poor skin prep. Always document artifact and re-run before reporting.
Injections: SubQ — 25g, 5/8 inch, 45-degree angle, max 1 mL. IM deltoid — 23–25g, 1–1.5 inch, 90 degrees, max 2 mL. IM ventrogluteal/vastus lateralis — up to 5 mL. Z-track technique is required for iron dextran injections to prevent skin staining and irritation.
Administrative Domain: Billing and Coding Basics
You don't need to be a professional coder, but you need fundamentals. ICD-10 codes describe diagnoses — they're alphanumeric (J06.9 = acute upper respiratory infection, unspecified). CPT codes describe procedures — 5-digit numeric (99213 = established patient office visit, low-to-moderate complexity). The exam asks which code type applies in a scenario, not specific code memorization. Know what a modifier does (a 2-digit add-on signaling unusual circumstances). Know that upcoding and downcoding are billing fraud — both are tested.
6–8 Week Prep Timeline
Weeks 1–2 — Foundation: Review all five domains using the NHA study guide or your program textbook. Focus first on medical law/ethics and patient care coordination — lighter sections you can clear fast. Baseline yourself with one untimed practice test.
Weeks 3–4 — Clinical heavy lift: Daily practice on clinical patient care and clinical procedures. Drill phlebotomy, EKG leads, injection routes, infection control, and normal lab value ranges. These two domains together are 60% of your exam score.
Weeks 5–6 — Administrative and billing: Work through billing code basics, insurance types (HMO, PPO, Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP), authorization workflows, and medical records documentation rules. Many candidates underestimate this section.
Weeks 7–8 — Timed simulation: Full 180-question timed tests. Review every wrong answer — not just the right answer, but why each wrong choice is wrong. That process locks in knowledge better than re-reading. Target 390+ consistently before scheduling.
Ready to test your knowledge now? Try the CCMA practice test — free, no login required.

CCMA Questions and Answers
Why Studying With a PDF Works
PDF study isn't just convenient — it changes how you retain information. You can annotate: circle wrong answer choices, write in the margin why they're wrong. That active retrieval beats passive re-reading for exam retention. Print the clinical procedures section and post it where you work. Seeing phlebotomy order of draw on your breakroom wall every shift is more effective than reviewing it once a week. Offline access also removes mid-session Googling, which forces you to retrieve knowledge from memory — exactly what the timed exam demands.
Use the PDF for deep review, then switch to the online CCMA practice test for timed pressure. Both modes together cover the full range of how you'll need to recall information on test day.