LEED Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)
Get ready for your LEED certification. Practice questions with step-by-step answer explanations and instant scoring.

The LEED certification exams are administered by the U.S. Green Building Council and test knowledge of sustainable design, construction, and operations across commercial and residential projects. The entry-level credential — the LEED Green Associate — is a 100-question exam that covers the fundamentals of green building concepts, the LEED rating systems, and the credit categories that determine how points are earned toward certification. Professional credentials, known as LEED AP with specialty designations, require deeper technical knowledge of a specific project type. Whether you are targeting the Green Associate or one of the AP specialties, printed practice materials are a reliable supplement to screen-based study.
This page provides a free printable PDF that covers the core question types found on both exam levels. Download it, print it, and work through it during commutes, breaks, or study sessions away from a device. For scored online practice, use our interactive leed certification practice tests to track progress by topic and identify weak areas before exam day.
Did You Know? Passing the LEED exam on your first attempt saves both time and money. Start with diagnostic practice tests to identify weak areas.
LEED Rating Systems and Credit Categories Explained
LEED is not a single standard — it is a family of rating systems tailored to different project types. Each rating system shares the same core credit categories but weights them differently based on what matters most for that building type. Understanding which rating system applies to a given project scenario is itself a tested skill on both the Green Associate and AP exams.
The Five LEED Rating Systems
Building Design and Construction (BD+C) applies to new construction and major renovations of commercial, institutional, and high-rise residential buildings. It is the most commonly tested rating system on the Green Associate exam. Interior Design and Construction (ID+C) covers tenant fit-outs and commercial interiors where the tenant controls the interior space but not the base building systems. Building Operations and Maintenance (O+M) applies to existing buildings undergoing improvement without major construction — it focuses on operational policies, energy performance, and occupant comfort over time.
Neighborhood Development (ND) expands the scope to entire neighborhoods or mixed-use districts, evaluating land use patterns, connectivity, and community infrastructure alongside building performance. The Homes rating system covers single-family and low-rise multifamily residential construction. Each system issues credits across the same broad categories, but the available point values differ. On exam questions describing a project scenario, identify the building type first, then apply the appropriate rating system rules.
Location and Transportation, Sustainable Sites, and Water Efficiency
Location and Transportation (LT) credits reward projects built near transit, in areas with existing infrastructure, and on previously developed land — reducing the need for automobile travel and protecting undeveloped land from sprawl. Sustainable Sites (SS) addresses how the building interacts with the land around it: managing stormwater, reducing heat island effects from paving and rooftops, controlling light pollution, and protecting ecosystems during and after construction.
Water Efficiency (WE) is a prerequisite-heavy category. To even qualify for LEED certification, a project must demonstrate at least a 20% reduction in indoor water use compared to the baseline established by the Energy Policy Act. Additional credits reward reductions of 30%, 40%, or 50% or more, as well as outdoor water management and cooling tower efficiency. Exam questions in this category often present a baseline calculation and ask you to identify which fixture or strategy produces the required reduction percentage.
Energy and Atmosphere
Energy and Atmosphere (EA) consistently carries the most available points of any LEED credit category, reflecting the USGBC's view that reducing energy consumption and carbon emissions is the central purpose of green building. The prerequisite requires a fundamental commissioning of building energy systems — verifying that mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems are installed and operating as the design intended. Enhanced commissioning goes further and earns additional credits.
Energy optimization credits are based on percentage improvement over the ASHRAE 90.1 energy code baseline, calculated through whole-building energy modeling using software such as EnergyPlus or eQUEST. On-site renewable energy, green power procurement, and demand response participation each earn separate credits. Exam questions in this category frequently reference commissioning agent roles, energy modeling requirements, and the distinction between enhanced and fundamental commissioning scope.
Materials and Resources, Indoor Environmental Quality, and Bonus Categories
Materials and Resources (MR) addresses what buildings are made of and what happens to waste during construction and demolition. Credits reward construction waste diversion (keeping debris out of landfills), the use of recycled content, regionally sourced materials (within 500 miles of the project site), certified wood from responsibly managed forests (FSC certification), and the disclosure of material ingredient information through Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) and Health Product Declarations (HPDs).
Indoor Environmental Quality (EQ) covers the conditions inside the building that affect occupant health, comfort, and productivity. Ventilation rates above ASHRAE 62.1 minimums, low-emitting materials (paints, adhesives, flooring, furniture), construction indoor air quality management plans, acoustic performance, and access to daylight and views all fall under this category. Innovation (IN) credits reward exemplary performance beyond the standard credit thresholds, pilot credits for emerging strategies, and having a LEED Accredited Professional on the project team. Regional Priority (RP) credits are USGBC-designated credits that address environmental priorities specific to a geographic region — up to four RP credits are available per project, worth one point each.

- ✓Download and print the PDF — use it for active recall practice away from screens
- ✓Learn all five LEED rating systems and know which building types each one covers
- ✓Memorize the eight credit categories and study point ranges for BD+C as your baseline
- ✓Master the Water Efficiency prerequisites — 20% indoor reduction is the minimum for certification
- ✓Study Energy and Atmosphere in depth — it has the most points and the most complex prerequisites
- ✓Understand fundamental vs. enhanced commissioning: scope, agent roles, and timing differences
- ✓Practice energy modeling concepts: ASHRAE 90.1 baseline, percent improvement calculations, EnergyPlus
- ✓Know the certification levels by point threshold: Certified 40–49, Silver 50–59, Gold 60–79, Platinum 80+
- ✓Review Materials and Resources EPD/HPD disclosure requirements — tested heavily on recent exams
- ✓Take at least two full timed mock exams under 110-minute conditions before your real test date
Studying LEED concepts in isolation — memorizing definitions without connecting them to how points are earned and prerequisites are satisfied — is the most common reason candidates underperform. Work through practice questions that place content in project scenarios, because the real exam presents situations where you must choose the correct rating system, identify which credit applies, and determine whether a prerequisite or credit threshold has been met. The interactive leed certification practice tests on this site present scenario-based questions that mirror the actual exam format, giving you the applied reasoning practice that PDF review alone cannot fully replace.
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