Failed CPCS first attempt — what am I missing in my prep?

by Chloe W. 7 views3 replies
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Chloe W.OP
May 27, 2026

So I just got my results back and I didn't pass the theory test on my first go. Scored 68% and you need 72% to pass, which is honestly gutting because I felt pretty confident walking out of there. I've been operating plant for about four years now, mostly 360 excavators and rough terrain forklifts, so the practical side doesn't worry me — it's the health and safety theory where I keep falling down.

I've been using a CPCS practice test site to drill questions but I think I've just been memorizing answers rather than actually understanding the reasoning behind them. A mate of mine who passed first time said the study guide he used broke down the regulations in plain English, which made a huge difference. Can anyone point me toward something like that? I've got my resit booked for six weeks from now and I really need to use the time properly.

Mainly struggling with the lifting operations and lifting equipment regs (LOLER) section and anything to do with safe working loads. Any exam tips from people who've been through this recently would be massively appreciated.

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Kevin O.
May 27, 2026
Mate, been there. Failed my first attempt by three questions. What clicked for me was stopping the practice test grinding and actually reading the HSE guidance notes on LOLER and PUWER cover to cover — boring as hell but worth it. Once I understood why the rules exist, the answers just made sense instead of feeling like a guessing game. Give yourself at least two solid study sessions per week minimum, not just squeezing questions in on your phone.
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Jessica L.
May 28, 2026
The CPCS study guide from the CITB is actually decent and it's free to download from their site — don't pay for some third-party version. That said, the practice questions on there are a bit easier than the real exam in my opinion. The actual test catches you out with scenarios where two answers look correct but you have to pick the most correct one. Those tripped me up badly. Also worth knowing the categories of plant you're NOT being tested on, because the theory is card-specific.
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Alex G.
May 28, 2026
Six weeks is loads of time if you're focused. I'd say 30–40 hours of structured study is what most people need for a resit. Don't neglect the hand signals section either — loads of people assume they know them and drop easy marks. Good luck on the resit, you'll smash it.

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