EPA 609 Refrigerant Certification Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)
Download a free EPA 609 practice test PDF. Print and study offline for the EPA Section 609 automotive refrigerant handling certification examination.
The EPA Section 609 certification is required by federal law for any technician who services motor vehicle air conditioning (MVAC) systems. The exam tests knowledge of refrigerant handling regulations, equipment operation, and environmental protection practices under the Clean Air Act. Studying with a printed practice test lets you work through the material at your own pace before sitting for the proctored exam.
This free EPA 609 practice test PDF covers all key topic areas: refrigerant types and properties, recovery and recycling equipment, refrigerant handling procedures, and MVAC service regulations. Use it alongside your study guide to identify gaps in your knowledge and build confidence before test day.
EPA 609 Fast Facts
Refrigerant Types and Properties
The EPA Section 609 exam requires technicians to understand the two primary refrigerants used in modern motor vehicle air conditioning systems: R-134a and R-1234yf. R-134a has been the standard automotive refrigerant since the 1990s when it replaced ozone-depleting R-12 (Freon). R-1234yf is the next-generation refrigerant now required in most new vehicle platforms due to its significantly lower global warming potential (GWP of 4 vs. R-134a's GWP of 1,430).
Understanding refrigerant properties matters for both safety and service. R-1234yf is mildly flammable (ASHRAE Class A2L), meaning technicians must follow specific handling precautions that do not apply to R-134a. Both refrigerants require dedicated, non-interchangeable service fittings to prevent cross-contamination — a key regulatory requirement tested on the exam.
Refrigerant identification is also covered. Technicians must know how to use a refrigerant identifier before servicing any vehicle, especially in situations where the system may have been previously serviced with an incorrect or blended refrigerant. Introducing contaminated refrigerant into recovery equipment can destroy the machine and result in regulatory violations.
Recovery and Recycling Equipment
EPA regulations require that all refrigerant removed from MVAC systems be recovered using approved equipment. Technicians must understand the difference between recovery-only units and recovery/recycle/recharge (RRR) machines, and they must know which EPA certification standard applies to each type of equipment.
Recovery equipment must be certified to SAE J2788 for R-134a systems or SAE J2843 for R-1234yf systems. These standards specify minimum recovery rates and residual refrigerant limits. The exam tests whether technicians understand why equipment certification matters: improperly recovered refrigerant that vents to the atmosphere violates the Clean Air Act and can result in significant fines.
Recycled refrigerant that meets purity standards can be returned to the same vehicle. However, refrigerant that has been reclaimed (processed to original purity by a certified reclaimer) is the only type that can be resold or used in a different vehicle. The exam distinguishes between recovery, recycling, and reclaiming — three distinct processes that technicians must be able to describe accurately.
Refrigerant Handling and the Clean Air Act
Section 609 of the Clean Air Act prohibits the knowing venting of refrigerants during the service, maintenance, repair, or disposal of MVAC systems. Technicians must understand what constitutes a violation, what the penalty thresholds are, and what "de minimis" releases are — small releases that occur despite the use of proper procedures and are unavoidable under good-faith service practices.
The purchase of refrigerant in containers larger than two pounds is restricted to certified technicians. This purchase restriction is a primary reason technicians pursue Section 609 certification, and exam questions frequently address who is required to be certified, what documentation an employer must maintain, and what container size thresholds apply.
The exam also covers proper refrigerant cylinder handling, including the prohibition on filling disposable cylinders and the requirement to store refrigerant in approved containers. Overfilling a cylinder beyond 80% capacity creates a hazardous overpressure condition — an exam-tested safety fact that also has real-world consequences in a shop environment.
MVAC Service Procedures
MVAC-specific service procedures tested on the Section 609 exam include how to perform a proper system evacuation, how to verify system pressure before and after service, and how to charge a system to the correct refrigerant weight specification. Undercharging reduces cooling performance; overcharging increases compressor head pressure and can damage system components.
Leak detection procedures are also covered. Technicians should understand how electronic leak detectors, UV dye systems, and nitrogen pressure tests are used to locate refrigerant leaks before recharging a system. Recharging a system with an unrepaired leak wastes refrigerant, violates EPA regulations, and will result in a comeback.
The exam also addresses compressor oil requirements. PAG (polyalkylene glycol) oil is used with R-134a systems, while R-1234yf systems typically require POE (polyol ester) oil. Mixing incompatible oils or using the wrong viscosity grade can cause compressor failure — a practical knowledge area that translates directly from the certification exam to everyday shop work.
After working through this printed practice test, test yourself further with the full online EPA 609 practice test, which provides instant feedback and detailed explanations for every answer so you can understand the regulatory reasoning behind each correct response.