How long did you study for the Animal Care and Veterinary certification exam?

by Tyler B. 125 views3 replies
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Tyler B.OP
May 27, 2026

Hey everyone, I've been lurking here for a few weeks and finally made an account because I really need some advice. I'm sitting for my Animal Care and Veterinary certification in about 6 weeks and honestly feeling pretty overwhelmed. I work full-time at a small animal clinic so my study time is limited — maybe 45 minutes to an hour on weeknights and a longer session on Sundays.

I've been working through a Animal Care and Veterinary Animal Care and Veterinary Nutrition & Dietary Management practice test and nutrition is definitely my weak spot. I keep second-guessing myself on dietary management questions. Does anyone have exam tips specifically for that section? I scored a 67% on my first practice test and I'm hoping to hit at least 80% before test day.

Also wondering if a good Animal Care and Veterinary study guide is worth buying at this point or if I should just focus on practice tests and my clinic notes. Any advice from people who've already passed would mean a lot right now.

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Ravi S.
May 28, 2026
Honestly I think practice tests are more valuable than any study guide at this stage. I burned through three different guides and retained way less than when I just drilled questions and looked up every wrong answer. There are some solid free resources online — I actually used the Animal Care and Veterinary Animal Care and Veterinary Nutrition & Dietary Management 2 and Animal Care and Veterinary Animal Care and Veterinary Nutrition & Dietary Management 3 practice tests to build up on the concepts I was missing. Going from 67% to 80% in 6 weeks is completely doable.
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Hannah K.
May 28, 2026
Six weeks is actually a decent runway if you're consistent. I passed last spring after about 8 weeks of studying roughly the same hours you're describing. For nutrition specifically, the dietary management questions tripped me up too — I'd focus on energy requirements by life stage and therapeutic diets for common conditions. Those came up way more than I expected. Don't neglect the pharmacology basics either, even if they seem obvious from daily clinic work.
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Jordan L.
May 28, 2026
67% starting score is not bad at all — I started lower and passed on my first try. The exam tips that helped me most: read every question twice, watch for absolute words like 'always' or 'never,' and trust your clinical experience when the theory feels fuzzy. You've got this.

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