EIT exam strategy — taking it straight out of school vs waiting a year

by chloe_g 23 views4 replies
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chloe_gOP
May 24, 2026

I'm finishing my civil engineering degree in May and trying to decide whether to sit for the FE exam before graduation or give myself a few months after. My university's NCEES pass rate for first-time takers is around 68% for civil, which isn't terrible but also not confidence-inspiring. Everyone I've talked to says to take it while the material is fresh, but I'm also taking 18 credits this semester and genuinely don't have much prep time right now.

My plan if I wait: spend June through August doing 2-3 hours of dedicated FE prep per day using the NCEES Reference Handbook and a prep course. That's roughly 200 hours of study time before sitting in September. The civil discipline breakdown weights transportation, geotechnical, and structural pretty heavily, which aligns with my coursework, but I've heard the breadth portion can surprise people.

The argument for taking it now is that statics, mechanics of materials, and fluid mechanics are essentially still in my working memory from this semester's courses. If I wait, I'll have to re-learn some of that. Has anyone done a direct comparison — taken it right after graduation versus with a full dedicated prep period months later?

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fatima_y
May 25, 2026

The NCEES FE Reference Handbook is your primary tool regardless of when you sit. Get comfortable navigating it under time pressure — the exam is open-book with that handbook and knowing where to find things fast is genuinely a skill you need to practice.

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amelia_f
May 25, 2026

Civil pass rates vary a lot by sub-discipline background. If your coursework was heavy on structural and geotech you'll feel comfortable in those sections. The breadth portion at the start covers everything though so don't neglect your weaker areas from junior year.

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tamara_w
May 25, 2026

Waited 8 months after graduating and regretted it. Had to essentially re-teach myself fluid mechanics and thermodynamics from scratch. The 200-hour plan you described is doable but it's a grind when you're working full time. Take it while it's fresh if at all possible.

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ingrid_p
May 26, 2026

I took it two weeks after my last final and passed on the first try. The material being fresh was a real advantage — I barely touched statics or dynamics in my prep because I'd literally just taken those courses. The downside was I was burned out from the semester and had to push through fatigue.

If you can carve out even 3-4 weeks of focused prep post-graduation, that's probably the sweet spot.

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