I've been seeing a lot of confusion about passing scores for the CTP exam, so I wanted to share what I've researched and experienced.
The official minimum is typically 73%, but most successful candidates average around 85% on practice tests before sitting for the real thing. The practice test section tends to drag scores down because it's the most conceptually dense part of the exam.
I found that working through the ctp legal, ethical & regulatory compliance consistently for two to three weeks gets most people into the passing zone. For deeper concept review, certified telehealth practitioner filled in the gaps I had. The key isn't just doing more questions — it's reviewing every mistake and understanding the underlying principle.
Anyone who scored above 90%: what was your actual study timeline? Curious whether people who take more time consistently score higher or if there's a plateau effect.
Really helpful breakdown, thanks for sharing. I'm at week 5 of my CTP prep and the exam prep section is exactly where I'm struggling too. Going to try the approach you described and see if it moves my scores.
Same experience here. The ctp legal, ethical & regulatory compliance was what finally made it click for me — specifically the way it explains the reasoning rather than just giving answers. Took me 4 weeks of consistent practice but scores went from 65% to 86% by exam day.
Really helpful breakdown, thanks for sharing. I'm at week 3 of my CTP prep and the practice test section is exactly where I'm struggling too. Going to try the approach you described and see if it moves my scores.
For the people asking about study timelines: I studied 70 minutes per day for 8 weeks working full time. It's absolutely doable without burning out. The key is consistency — missing days hurts more than extending your timeline.
Honestly the biggest thing that changed my prep was when I stopped just checking which answer was right and started asking why the other three were wrong. On the CTP a lot of the questions are scenario based, and two answers will look correct until you understand the small clinical detail that rules one of them out. If you can't explain why a wrong answer is wrong, you don't actually know the material yet, you just recognized it. That's the trap. I was hitting 80% on practice and still felt shaky until I started doing that.
What helped me most was reviewing every miss out loud, like I was teaching it to someone. I used the ctp certified telehealth practitioner virtual clinical assessments and went back through each question I got wrong, not just the ones I guessed on. By test day the real exam felt familiar because I'd already argued myself out of all the tempting wrong choices. Aim higher than 73% on practice for sure, but make the score mean something. Understanding beats memorizing every time.
Quick update for anyone tracking their own progress. I just hit 84% on a full practice section this weekend, which is the first time I've broken into that 80s range consistently. A month ago I was stuck around 68 and honestly kind of panicking about it. What changed for me was slowing down and actually reading the explanations on the ones I got wrong instead of just rushing to the next set.
I'm giving myself two or three more weeks to push that average closer to 88 before I book the real thing. The 73% minimum sounds doable on paper, but you really do want that cushion because nerves on test day will eat a few points no matter how ready you feel. If you're sitting in the low 70s right now, don't stress, just keep grinding the sections you keep missing. That's where the score actually moves.
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