CIH exam — 6 months out, am I pacing correctly?

by sophie_m 67 views4 replies
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sophie_mOP
May 24, 2026

I'm planning to sit for the Certified Industrial Hygienist exam in late fall and trying to build out a realistic study schedule now rather than panicking in September. I have about six months, working as an IH for four years, and I'm doing a first pass through the AIHA study guide right now. Initial practice scores are in the 58-63% range depending on the domain.

The chemistry-heavy sections are killing me — air sampling, analytical methods, that whole domain. I was never great at chem in grad school and it shows. The physical hazards and program management sections are much stronger, probably 75%+ on those already.

Six months feels like a long runway but I've heard people who felt overprepared still failed. Trying to figure out the right intensity level — 1 hour a day for six months, or light for four months then heavy for two?

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jordan_k
May 24, 2026

I did six months and passed on the first try. The strategy that worked for me was 45 minutes daily for the first three months just building domain knowledge, then switching to full practice exams and targeted review for the final three months. Don't skip the light phase — the foundation matters a lot on this exam.

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priya_s
May 25, 2026

The analytical chemistry section has a reputation for being the biggest stumbling block for field IHs. I spent about 30% of my total study time just on that domain even though it's not the largest section. Definitely worth over-indexing there if it's your weak spot.

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nico_b
May 25, 2026

Four years of field experience will carry you more than you expect on the applied questions. Where experienced IHs tend to fail is the quantitative stuff — sampling calculations, statistics, exposure modeling. Make sure you're actually doing the math by hand, not just reading about it.

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chloe_g
May 25, 2026

58-63% at six months out is totally normal — most people I know who passed were under 65% until the last two months. The knowledge compounds faster than you expect once you hit the later study phases.

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