Just got my score back. So close it hurts.
I felt okay going in but clearly there were gaps. Looking back at my prep, I spent a lot of time on "crst trucking" but I think I underestimated how deep they go on crst the transportation solution inc.
The weird thing is I scored fine on the concept questions but tanked on the application ones. Like I understood the theory but when it came to scenario-based questions I kept second-guessing myself.
For anyone who's failed and then passed — what changed? Did you switch study materials? More practice tests? Different time of day?
Also curious whether the CRST score report tells you which sections you were weak in. Mine just shows an overall score and I have no idea where exactly I lost points.
I actually failed the first time by a few points. Total gut punch. But passed on the second attempt with a comfortable margin.
What changed: I stopped trying to memorize answers and started actually understanding the material. Specifically on crst trucking — I went back to basics and worked forward from first principles.
Also switched from reading to doing. Less time with the textbook, more time on practice questions with detailed answer explanations.
You've got this. The second attempt is always better because you know exactly what the exam is like.
What helped me most with crst specifically: stop thinking about it as a topic to memorize and start thinking about the types of decisions it's asking you to make. Once I shifted to that frame, my CRST scores in that section jumped about 14 points within a week.
Coming back to this thread because I just passed my CRST yesterday. Everything people said about the crst section is spot on — that was the hardest part for me too. For anyone still studying, don't skip the applied questions in the crst practice test pdf. They're the closest to what you'll actually see.
I was in almost the exact same spot six months ago and honestly I almost just paid for a retake prep course and called it a day. What ended up helping me was stopping the broad review and getting really specific about the operational stuff, the regs, the compliance details that feel tedious but show up constantly. That's where I kept losing points without realizing it.
You're probably closer than you think. Three points isn't a knowledge gap, it's a focus gap. I'd go back through whatever practice material you have and flag every question you got right but weren't totally sure about, because those are the ones that'll flip on you next time. Passed on my second attempt and it wasn't because I studied harder, it's because I studied smarter about where the test actually lives.
Related Discussions
- Which section of the IHSA is hardest? My breakdown after taking it5 replies
- Best free resources for A2L prep in 2026 — compiled list5 replies
- Best free resources for OSHA prep — what's actually worth your time5 replies
- Deep dive on exam prep for the CMSP — tips from someone who almost failed it5 replies
- Is HSE certification worth it for career growth? Honest take5 replies