Finally passed AICP after two attempts — here's what actually worked

by rachel_s 106 views3 replies
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rachel_sOP
May 27, 2026

I passed the AICP exam last month on my second try and I honestly can't believe I'm typing that. First attempt I scored a 64% — passing is 70% — so close but so far. I'd been a planner for six years at that point, figured my work experience would carry me. It did not. The exam is a totally different beast than day-to-day planning work.

What changed the second time around was structure. I gave myself 14 weeks, blocked off two hours every weekday morning before work, and actually followed a real study guide instead of just rereading the AICP Candidate Handbook and hoping for the best. I focused hard on law and ethics, which I'd basically ignored round one, and drilled practice questions every single day. Probably did 800+ questions total across different resources.

The biggest mindset shift: stop studying what you know and start hunting for what you don't. My weak spots were environmental planning and plan implementation — stuff I never touched in my actual job. If you're prepping right now, what areas are tripping you up? Happy to share specifics on what resources I used.

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rachel_s
May 28, 2026
This is so encouraging, thank you for posting. I'm sitting in June and law/ethics is exactly where I'm struggling. I've been using an AICP practice test bank and my scores are hovering around 67-68% which feels brutal when I know I need 70. Did you find that practice test scores translated pretty well to the real thing, or was the actual exam harder than what you were seeing in prep materials?
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Marcus T.
May 28, 2026
Congrats!! I passed two years ago and the two-attempts story is more common than people admit — nobody talks about it because it feels embarrassing, but honestly the exam is legitimately hard. The 14-week structured timeline sounds right. I'd add: don't skip the history and theory section even if it feels abstract. It showed up way more than I expected. Also the AICP exam tips about reading every answer choice before picking one saved me at least five questions I'd have rushed.
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Tyler B.
May 28, 2026
Law and ethics was my nemesis too. What finally clicked for me was treating it as logic puzzles rather than memorization. The code of ethics questions especially — they're testing your reasoning, not whether you memorized the exact wording. Good luck to everyone sitting this cycle.

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