Finally passed TPS after failing twice — here's what actually worked

by Chris D. 6 views3 replies
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Chris D.OP
May 27, 2026

I'm not going to sugarcoat it — I bombed the TPS exam twice before I finally passed last month. First attempt I scored a 61 when I needed a 70, second time a 68. I was ready to give up honestly. What finally clicked for me was stopping the random YouTube video approach and actually committing to a structured TPS study guide that walked me through the material in order instead of jumping around topic to topic.

The thing nobody tells you is how much the exam emphasizes practical application over memorization. I spent weeks drilling definitions and it did almost nothing for my score. When I switched to working through a TPS practice test every other day and really reviewing why I got answers wrong — not just what the right answer was — my retention shot up dramatically. Last four weeks before the exam I was consistently hitting 74-78 on practice sets.

If you're just starting out, I'd say budget at least 6-8 weeks of serious study time. Don't underestimate the time management section either — it caught me completely off guard on attempt one. Happy to answer questions if anyone's in the same boat I was.

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Chloe W.
May 28, 2026
This hits close to home. I'm sitting at 65 on my last attempt and my third try is in three weeks. The practice test rotation advice is exactly what my study partner keeps telling me and I keep ignoring it. Going to commit to that schedule starting tonight. Did you find any particular topic areas showed up more heavily than you expected?
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Brian Y.
May 28, 2026
Congrats on passing! Honestly the exam tips that helped me most were about pacing. I was running out of time on every practice set until I forced myself to flag and move on instead of sitting on hard questions. Also the analytical reasoning section is way more straightforward if you sketch out the relationships on scratch paper rather than trying to hold it in your head.
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Megan P.
May 28, 2026
Six to eight weeks sounds about right. I crammed for three weeks on my first attempt thinking it'd be enough — total disaster. Give yourself the time, use real practice material, and don't skip the review process after each session. That review step is where the actual learning happens.

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