Finally passed CHA after failing twice — here's what actually worked

by Brian Y. 11 views3 replies
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Brian Y.OP
May 27, 2026

Okay so I've been lurking here for months and figured I owed it to this community to post my experience. I failed the CHA exam twice — first time by 11 points, second time by 4. I was devastated after that second attempt because I'd studied for six weeks straight. The problem was I kept using the same approach: just re-reading my textbook and hoping things would stick.

What finally clicked for the third attempt was switching to active recall. I found a solid CHA practice test resource and started doing timed question sets every single day, even just 20-30 questions in the morning before work. I also grabbed a CHA study guide that broke down food safety regs and sanitation protocols by category — that structure helped me stop mixing up concepts I'd been confusing forever.

My biggest exam tip: don't ignore the regulatory compliance section. I underweighted it both times I failed. It ended up being a huge chunk of the actual test. Scored a 78 on my third attempt. Not flashy, but it's a pass and I'll take it. Ask me anything.

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Alex G.
May 28, 2026
This is so validating to read. I'm scheduled for my second attempt next month and the regulatory stuff is exactly where I bombed too. Can I ask which practice test resource you used? I've been burning through random quizlets but the quality is all over the place and I'm not sure I'm actually preparing for the right content areas.
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lisa.prep
May 28, 2026
Three attempts is nothing to be ashamed of, that exam is genuinely hard and the pass rate reflects that. Welcome to the other side!
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Sofia R.
May 28, 2026
Congrats on passing! The active recall thing is real — I'm a nursing student and that's basically all we do for boards prep. For the CHA I'd also add that making flashcards for HACCP principles specifically helped me a lot. Those seven steps get tested in different ways and you have to know them cold, not just roughly. Took me about 45 hours total of focused study spread over five weeks.

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