RCMP entrance exam — RPAB scores and what to realistically expect

by brett_l 115 views4 replies
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brett_lOP
May 23, 2026

I applied to the RCMP and I'm preparing for the Regular Member Selection Process. The written component includes the RPAB which covers cognitive ability, situational judgment, and personality-type assessments. I'm not sure how much I can actually prep for these versus just showing up and performing. Has anyone gone through this process in the last year or two?

I'm most worried about the cognitive sections — specifically reading comprehension under time pressure and the spatial reasoning components. I've been doing general cognitive practice tests online for 3 weeks, about 45 minutes a day. I'm 28 years old coming from a municipal management role with no military or policing background.

The situational judgment portion sounds like the part where you really can't memorize answers — it's about how you think. But I've read that understanding the RCMP core competencies helps frame your reasoning. Is that accurate, or is it really just personality screening that you either pass or don't?

Also wondering about the full timeline from application to conditional offer. I've heard everything from 8 months to 2 years depending on staffing and background check complexity. My background is clean but I've lived in 3 provinces and briefly in the US, which I assume extends the security screening.

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amelia_f
May 23, 2026

Municipal management background is actually useful for the situational judgment community scenarios. You've dealt with stakeholders, competing priorities, and public-facing situations — lean into that experience when you're reasoning through the scenarios.

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mkayla_r
May 24, 2026

Timeline from submission to conditional offer was 14 months for me and I had a straightforward background. International residence adds at least 3-4 months to security clearance from what several people in my intake told me.

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priya_s
May 25, 2026

The situational judgment part is somewhat coachable in the sense that understanding the core competencies helps. But don't try to game it by picking what sounds most “police-like.” They're looking for consistency across scenarios and genuine judgment, not a polished performance.

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sophie_m
May 25, 2026

The cognitive sections are genuinely time-pressured. Practicing under timed conditions is more useful than doing questions at your own pace. I used standard civil service practice batteries and found it translated well to the real thing.

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