Passed my CHCS on the second try — here's what actually helped

by Amanda H. 0 views3 replies
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Amanda H.OP
May 27, 2026

So I finally passed the Certified Healthcare Customer Service (CHCS) exam last week and honestly I'm still a little shocked. Failed my first attempt back in March by 11 points — I thought I'd studied enough but the customer interaction scenarios completely threw me off. I'd spent most of my prep time on the technical side and totally underestimated how heavily they weight de-escalation and empathy-based responses.

Second time around I used a structured CHCS study guide and drilled the practice scenarios obsessively. What really clicked for me was timing my sessions — I gave myself 6 weeks, about 45 minutes a day, and tracked which domains I kept missing. Patient rights and HIPAA-adjacent communication questions were my weak spots. I also found a CHCS practice test that mirrored the real question style much better than the free stuff floating around Reddit.

Scored an 82 this time. Huge relief. Happy to share more details about what resources I used if anyone's preparing — especially if you're balancing this with a full-time frontline role like I was.

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Tyler B.
May 27, 2026
Congrats!! I'm sitting for mine in about 5 weeks and the scenario questions are already stressing me out during practice. Can you say more about the study guide you used? I've been mostly relying on the official candidate handbook but it feels thin. Also did you find the real exam matched the difficulty of your practice materials or was it harder?
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Nicole F.
May 28, 2026
This is really encouraging. I failed my first attempt too and was honestly considering just dropping it. The exam tips I kept finding online were super vague — 'know your communication styles' okay, thanks, not helpful. My weak area is probably the healthcare-specific regulations section. Did you spend extra time there or was it mostly the soft skills stuff that showed up more?
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Marcus T.
May 28, 2026
11 points the first time is actually really close — a lot of people give up after that. Six weeks with consistent daily sessions is solid advice. That's basically the same schedule I used when I passed my CPHRM. Consistency beats cramming every time with these types of exams.

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