Finally passed my ABMDI exam — here's what actually helped me

by Carlos B. 7 views3 replies
C
Carlos B.OP
May 27, 2026

After failing my first attempt in February, I just got my results back and I finally passed the ABMDI certification exam. Honestly wasn't sure I was going to make it — medicolegal death investigation is such a niche field and finding quality study materials felt impossible at first. I work full-time as a deputy coroner so carving out study time was brutal.

What turned things around for me was getting serious about using an ABMDI practice test to figure out where my weak spots were. I was strong on death scene documentation and pretty solid on decomposition stages, but my knowledge of medicolegal jurisdiction and the coroner vs. medical examiner system differences was embarrassingly thin. Once I identified that, I could focus my energy instead of just re-reading the same chapters over and over.

Anyone else here studying for the ABMDI right now? Happy to share my full study guide breakdown and the rough timeline I followed — took me about 11 weeks of serious prep the second time around. Feel free to ask anything.

C
Chloe W.
May 28, 2026
This is really encouraging to read. I failed my first attempt last fall and honestly considered just not retaking it. The exam felt way heavier on legal statutes and jurisdiction nuance than I expected — my study guide barely touched that stuff. How much of the actual exam would you say was death scene reconstruction vs. the legal/administrative side? Trying to rebalance my prep this time.
T
Tom W.
May 28, 2026
Congrats! I'm sitting for it in July and jurisdiction stuff is killing me too. Can I ask — did you use any specific ABMDI practice test resource or just the board's self-assessment? I've been going through the ABDI candidate handbook but it only takes you so far. Also, roughly how many questions did you drill per day? I'm doing maybe 30-40 and wondering if that's enough.
A
Alex G.
May 28, 2026
11 weeks is reassuring — I've been panicking thinking I needed six months. The jurisdiction gap is real, so many of us come from field experience and just assume that stuff is common sense until the test proves otherwise. Good luck with your recertification cycle when that comes around!

Join the Discussion

Sign in or register to reply with your account, or reply as a guest below.