Civic Literacy Exam — Complete Guide 2026
Florida Civic Literacy Exam guide 2026: exam format, US history and government topics, passing score, and how to prepare for the Florida civic literacy test requirement.

What Is a Civic Literacy Exam?
A civic literacy exam is a standardized assessment of knowledge about government, democracy, history, and citizenship. These exams exist in several distinct contexts:
State-mandated high school civics requirements: Many US states require students to pass a civics or civic literacy test as a graduation requirement. The most common format is based on the 100 questions used in the US Naturalization civics exam — with state-specific passing thresholds (often 60 of 100 questions or a set number of correct answers).
College civic literacy requirements: Several states and universities require entering freshmen or graduating seniors to demonstrate civic literacy through a standardized test. Florida's Civic Literacy Examination and similar state-level requirements assess college students' knowledge of American government and history.
US Naturalization Civics Test: Administered by USCIS (US Citizenship and Immigration Services) as part of the naturalization process for permanent residents applying for US citizenship. Applicants are asked up to 10 of the 100 civics questions and must answer at least 6 correctly to pass.
Prepare with our civic literacy exam practice questions covering the full 100-question USCIS civics question bank and American history topics.
Civic Literacy Exam at a Glance
- Government: Branches, checks and balances, Constitution
- History: Founding, Civil War, 20th century events
- Rights: Amendments, citizenship, civil rights
- Format: Oral — officer asks up to 10 questions
- Passing: 6 correct out of 10 asked
- Prep: All 100 questions publicly available
- HS graduation: Many states: 60/100 or state equivalent
- College: Florida, Arizona, and others require it
- Format: Multiple choice or oral (varies)
- Top area: Principles of American democracy
- System: Government structure and functions
- History: Colonial, founding, modern American history
Civic Literacy Exam — Key Topics Covered
Civic literacy exams — whether for high school graduation, college requirements, or naturalization — consistently test these core knowledge areas:
1. Principles of American Democracy:
The rule of law, the Constitution as the supreme law of the land, separation of powers, checks and balances, federalism, and the rights protected by the Bill of Rights. Questions include: 'What is the supreme law of the land?' 'What do we call the first 10 amendments?' 'What is freedom of religion?'
2. System of Government:
The three branches of government (legislative, executive, judicial), their powers and responsibilities, how a bill becomes a law, the role of the Supreme Court, and the structure of Congress (Senate and House of Representatives). Know how many senators there are (100), the term lengths (senators: 6 years, representatives: 2 years), and who the current leaders are.
3. Rights and Responsibilities:
Constitutional amendments (especially the First, Second, and 13th–19th), voting rights, the obligations of citizenship, and the rights of all people living in the US. Questions include: 'Name one right guaranteed by the First Amendment' and 'What is one responsibility that is only for US citizens?'
4. American History:
Colonial period, Revolutionary War, founding documents (Declaration of Independence, Constitution, Federalist Papers), Civil War and Reconstruction, World Wars, the Civil Rights Movement, and late 20th century American history. See our civic literacy exam practice resources for the full question bank with answers and our us history test guide for deeper history preparation.

USCIS Naturalization Civics Test — What to Expect
If you are preparing for US citizenship, the civics portion of the naturalization interview works as follows:
Format: An immigration officer asks you up to 10 questions (selected from the official 100-question list). You must answer at least 6 correctly to pass. Questions are asked orally — you respond verbally, not in writing.
The 100 questions: USCIS publishes the complete list of 100 civics questions and their accepted answers — there are no surprises. Every question you could be asked is publicly available. The most effective preparation is to memorize the answers to all 100 questions.
Special considerations: Applicants who are 65 or older and have been permanent residents for 20+ years only need to know 20 of the 100 questions (the 65/20 exemption). These 20 questions are marked with an asterisk (*) on the official USCIS list.
Re-testing: If you do not pass the civics portion, you can be re-tested one additional time. Practice with our civic literacy exam resources including the full 100-question practice set with official accepted answers.
Civic Literacy Exam Preparation Checklist

Civic Literacy Exam Questions and Answers
More Civics and History Resources
About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.