LPN practice questions are the single most reliable predictor of NCLEX-PN success, and the right question bank can shave weeks off your preparation timeline while building the clinical judgment skills employers actually want. Our free 2026 test bank delivers more than 1,200 questions written to the current NCSBN test plan, each with detailed rationales that explain not just the correct answer but why every distractor falls short. Whether you graduated last week or last year, working through quality practice items is how you turn textbook knowledge into pass-the-exam fluency.
The NCLEX-PN tests six client need categories, and your study time should mirror their weighting on the actual exam. Pharmacological Therapies and Physiological Adaptation together account for nearly a third of test items, while Safety and Infection Control, Coordinated Care, Health Promotion, Psychosocial Integrity, and Basic Care and Comfort fill out the remainder. Practicing across all six categories โ rather than just your favorites โ exposes weak spots early and gives your brain the variety it needs to recognize patterns under exam pressure.
Most candidates underestimate how different NCLEX-style questions feel compared to nursing school exams. The PN test rarely asks you to recall a fact in isolation. Instead, it presents a brief clinical scenario and asks you to prioritize, delegate, or identify the next best action. Working through 75 to 100 practice questions per day in the final month before your test date trains the prioritization reflex that separates first-time passers from repeat testers. The questions on this page are organized to build exactly that reflex.
Beyond raw repetition, what makes practice questions transformative is the rationale review afterward. Plan to spend at least as much time analyzing why you missed an item as you spent answering it. Read every option, not just the keyed answer, and ask yourself which client conditions would have made each distractor correct. This habit transforms a question from a one-time memory check into a multi-concept review and is the single biggest difference between candidates who plateau at 55% and those who climb past 75% on practice tests.
The questions you'll find below mirror real NCLEX-PN item types: multiple choice, select-all-that-apply, ordered response, fill-in-the-blank dosage calculations, and exhibit-based questions where you must interpret a chart or lab panel before answering. Each format demands a slightly different cognitive approach, and the only way to develop comfort with all of them is exposure. Our free quizzes rotate through these formats so you encounter the same mix you'll see on test day at your Pearson VUE center.
If you're brand new to the NCLEX-PN, start with our Basic Care and Comfort set to build confidence with familiar bedside topics, then layer in Pharmacology and Physiological Adaptation as your scores climb. If you've already taken the exam once and need to retake, jump straight into Safety, Coordinated Care, and prioritization-heavy item sets โ those are the areas where unsuccessful candidates most often lose points. Either way, the goal of the next 60 to 90 days is steady exposure followed by ruthlessly honest rationale review.
Bookmark this page, take one quiz today, and commit to a daily question target. The candidates who pass on their first attempt almost never cram. They build a question-a-day habit, escalate to 75-question timed sets in the final weeks, and walk into the exam having already seen thousands of variations on the prompts they'll face. Below you'll find everything you need to start that habit right now โ no signup, no paywall, just the practice questions that work.
The most common mistake LPN candidates make with practice questions is treating them like flashcards โ answer, check, move on. That approach builds recall but does almost nothing for the clinical reasoning skills the NCLEX-PN actually measures. A more effective method is the three-pass review: first, answer the question without looking at options to force genuine recall; second, eliminate distractors using your rationale; third, after revealing the answer, write a one-sentence summary of the underlying concept in a notebook. This triples your retention per question.
Volume matters, but distribution matters more. A candidate who answers 3,000 pharmacology questions and 200 psychosocial questions will walk into the exam dangerously unbalanced. Aim for proportional practice โ if pharmacology represents 13% of the test, roughly 13% of your practice questions should target medications. Use the category breakdowns on this page to audit your study log every Sunday and rebalance the following week. Most question banks let you filter by category, and you should be using that filter constantly, not just defaulting to mixed sets.
Timed practice is essential, but only after you've built accuracy. For the first three weeks of dedicated review, work untimed and prioritize understanding. Once you're consistently scoring above 65% in untimed mode, switch to a 90-second-per-question cap. The actual exam allows roughly 90 seconds, but candidates routinely report that pressure shaves 10 to 15 seconds off real-world pacing. Training at the slightly tighter pace builds buffer for the harder items you'll inevitably hit on test day.
Rationale review deserves its own dedicated block of study time, not just a quick glance after each question. Many top scorers spend 40 minutes answering 50 questions and then 60 minutes reviewing rationales. That ratio feels backward to most candidates, but it's where the learning lives. If a rationale mentions a lab value, drug class, or disease process you don't recognize, stop and look it up in your textbook before moving on. The interruption feels inefficient but compounds dramatically over a 90-day study window.
Track your performance in a simple spreadsheet with three columns: category, score, and date. After two weeks of practice, patterns emerge. Maybe you're crushing Basic Care at 85% but stuck at 52% in Pharmacological Therapies. That data tells you exactly where to spend the next week. Candidates who skip this tracking step often feel like they're studying hard without measurable improvement, while those who track adjust quickly and watch their composite scores climb week over week.
Don't ignore the wrong-but-felt-confident questions. These are the most dangerous items in your bank because they reveal misconceptions you didn't know you held. Mark every question where you were certain and incorrect with a star, then re-quiz only those starred items every Sunday until you get them right twice in a row. This single technique can move a borderline candidate into safely-passing territory in under a month.
Finally, don't burn out. The candidates who pass aren't the ones who study 10 hours a day for two weeks โ they're the ones who study 2 to 3 focused hours a day for two to three months. Schedule rest days, protect sleep, and treat the NCLEX-PN like the marathon it is. Question banks reward consistency more than intensity, and a tired brain registers almost none of the rationale you read at midnight.
Traditional four-option multiple-choice items still make up the majority of the NCLEX-PN. Each question presents a scenario or fact-based prompt followed by one best answer. Distractors are written to sound plausible, often pulling from common misconceptions or partially correct interventions. Reading the question stem carefully and identifying keywords like 'first,' 'priority,' or 'most important' is critical because two answers may both be technically correct.
Practice strategy: cover the answer choices before reading them and predict the correct response from memory. Then compare your prediction to the options. This forces deeper processing than passively scanning choices and dramatically reduces the trap of being seduced by attractive distractors. Aim for 70% of your practice volume on multiple-choice items since they remain the bedrock format of the exam.
SATA items are the most-feared question type on the NCLEX-PN, and for good reason โ partial credit doesn't exist. To earn the point, you must select every correct option and leave every incorrect one unchecked. Five to seven choices typically appear, and any combination from one to all of them may be correct. These questions test depth of knowledge rather than test-taking strategy, since elimination tricks rarely work.
Approach each option as a standalone true-or-false question. Read the stem, then ask 'is this option true for this client?' five separate times. Don't anchor on the first correct answer and assume the rest follow a pattern. SATA items reward complete, accurate knowledge and punish guessing, so they're an excellent diagnostic for which content areas truly need more review time.
The NCLEX-PN now includes ordered response (drag-and-drop sequencing), fill-in-the-blank dosage calculations, hot-spot anatomy questions, exhibit-based items requiring chart interpretation, and audio or graphic items. Dosage calculations are particularly high-yield because they appear on nearly every exam form and reward candidates who memorize core conversion factors. Round only at the final step and include units in your answer.
Ordered response questions test prioritization frameworks like ABCs (airway, breathing, circulation), Maslow's hierarchy, and the nursing process. Practice these by writing the framework letters next to each option before sequencing. Exhibit items demand systematic chart review โ vitals first, then labs, then medications, then nursing notes โ so you don't miss the buried piece of data that drives the correct answer.
Data from major test-prep companies consistently shows that candidates scoring 75% or higher on mixed-category practice quizzes pass the NCLEX-PN at rates above 90%. Below 65%, the pass rate drops sharply. Use the 75% threshold as your green light to schedule the real exam โ and as a clear signal to keep studying if you're not there yet.
Scoring expectations on LPN practice questions vary widely depending on the bank you're using, and understanding that variation prevents unnecessary panic. Easy banks designed for fundamentals review may produce 80% scores from candidates who would fail the real NCLEX, while application-level banks may yield 60% scores from candidates who go on to pass comfortably. The score itself matters less than the trend โ week-over-week improvement is the reliable signal that your preparation is working.
A reasonable benchmark for the final two weeks before your exam is scoring 70% to 75% on mixed-category sets of 75 questions completed under time pressure. If you're consistently above that range, you're in safely-passing territory. If you're below 65%, consider postponing your exam date by two to four weeks rather than gambling with an attempt that costs you another $200 and 45 days of mandatory waiting before retesting. The financial and emotional math overwhelmingly favors postponement.
Pay attention to category-level scores, not just composite averages. A candidate scoring 75% overall but 50% in Pharmacology has a real problem because pharm carries the highest weight on the test. Drill the lagging category until it reaches at least 65% before declaring yourself exam-ready. The NCLEX adaptive engine ruthlessly tests weak areas, so a low category score on practice is a near-guarantee of struggling questions on the real thing.
Question difficulty progression matters too. The NCLEX-PN uses computer adaptive testing, so the exam adjusts to your ability level in real time. Practice banks that label questions by difficulty (easy, medium, hard) let you simulate this by spending the final two weeks primarily on medium and hard items. If you can score 70% on hard-tagged questions, you're prepared for whatever the real CAT engine throws at you in the upper-difficulty bands.
Don't be fooled by perfect scores on individual quizzes. A 100% on a 25-question quiz means almost nothing if you've taken that quiz before, even months earlier โ your brain remembers more than you think. Trust larger sample sizes (100+ questions) and quizzes you've never seen before. Most quality banks rotate question pools or let you exclude previously-seen items, and you should be using those features aggressively.
If you've taken the NCLEX-PN before and didn't pass, your Candidate Performance Report shows category-level performance. Use that report to drive your retake study plan rather than starting over. Categories rated 'Below Passing Standard' should consume 60% of your question volume on round two, while categories rated 'Near' or 'Above' need only maintenance practice. This targeted approach typically cuts retake prep time by 30 to 40 percent compared to a generic study plan.
Build in a final-week taper. The week before your test, drop your daily question count to 25 to 40, focus on rationale review of already-attempted items, and avoid new full-length simulations after Tuesday. Cognitive science consistently shows that recovery and consolidation matter more than last-minute cramming, and walking into the exam well-rested produces better outcomes than walking in with 200 more questions completed but exhausted.
Test day strategy starts the night before, not the morning of. Lay out two forms of ID (one must be government-issued photo ID with a signature that matches your registration exactly), confirm your testing center address and parking situation, and pre-program the route into your phone so you're not making decisions in the morning. Pearson VUE recommends arriving 30 minutes early; arriving 45 minutes early gives you time to handle traffic, security check-in, and a bathroom break before the clock starts.
Eat a real breakfast with protein and complex carbohydrates โ eggs and oatmeal beat coffee and a granola bar by a significant margin in cognitive endurance studies. Avoid heavy sugar, which produces an energy crash 90 minutes in, right when you'll be hitting the hardest middle stretch of the exam. Hydrate moderately; you can take breaks during the test, but each break consumes time and breaks concentration, so plan to drink enough to be alert but not so much that you'll need a bathroom every hour.
The NCLEX-PN runs on a computer adaptive engine, so the test can end anywhere between 85 and 205 questions depending on how confidently the algorithm determines your competency level. Do not panic if your test ends at 85 questions โ that's neither a guaranteed pass nor a guaranteed fail. Equally, do not assume a test running to 205 means failure. The algorithm is doing exactly what it's designed to do, which is establish your ability with statistical confidence regardless of how many questions it takes.
When you encounter a question you don't know, do not skip โ you can't, the NCLEX requires an answer to advance. Instead, use systematic elimination: cross off any option that contains an absolute word (always, never), any option that's clearly outside the LPN scope of practice, and any option that would harm the client. From the remaining choices, apply the ABCs or Maslow's hierarchy, then commit and move on. Spending more than two minutes on one item drains time and confidence reserves you'll need later.
If you want a structured way to keep practicing right up until exam week, our LPN Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026) gives you offline questions you can drill on a tablet or paper without screen fatigue. Many candidates find that switching modalities โ alternating between online quizzes and printed sets โ improves retention and reduces the test-taking exhaustion that comes from staring at the same interface for weeks.
Take the two optional breaks the NCLEX offers strategically. The first comes after about two hours, the second after about three and a half. Use them. Stand up, walk to the bathroom, splash water on your face, and reset your posture. Candidates who push through without breaks consistently report a drop in focus in the final third of the exam, which is exactly when the hardest discriminating items tend to appear in the adaptive sequence.
Finally, trust your preparation. If you've worked through several hundred practice questions, reviewed rationales seriously, and consistently scored above 70% on mixed sets, you are ready. Second-guessing in the testing room is the enemy of pacing. Read the stem, eliminate, commit, and move forward. The exam rewards confident pattern recognition built through repetition, not last-minute deliberation. Your weeks of practice questions are the muscle memory that will carry you through.
The final two weeks before your NCLEX-PN are about polish, not new content. By this point, your study log should show consistent practice across all six categories and a wrong-answer notebook with at least 100 entries you've reviewed multiple times. The temptation to start a new content review book or buy a fresh question bank is real, but resist it. Late-stage content shopping signals anxiety, not preparation, and almost always reduces test-day performance.
Schedule a 145-question full-length simulation 10 to 12 days before your exam date. Use a quiet space, no phone, no breaks, and time yourself strictly. The point isn't the score โ it's training endurance and learning how your focus degrades around question 80, 100, and 120. Most candidates discover predictable focus dips at specific intervals, and naming those dips lets you preempt them on test day with a deliberate posture change or sip of water.
Review your wrong-answer notebook end to end during the final week. You'll be surprised how many entries from week two have become obvious in retrospect โ that's evidence your knowledge has consolidated. The handful of entries that still feel uncertain are exactly the topics to spend one final hour with before your test. Don't expand into new material; deepen mastery of what you've already encountered.
Pharmacology deserves a dedicated final-week review even if your category scores are strong. Focus on the high-yield drug families that appear on nearly every NCLEX-PN: anticoagulants and their reversal agents, insulin types and onset-peak-duration profiles, opioids and naloxone, beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, common antibiotics and their toxicity profiles, lithium and digoxin therapeutic ranges, and high-alert medications like potassium chloride and heparin. Memorizing these completely buys you a meaningful number of guaranteed points.
Delegation and scope-of-practice questions are an underrated test-day differentiator. The NCLEX-PN expects you to know exactly what an LPN can and cannot do versus an RN versus a UAP. Memorize three rules: LPNs cannot perform initial assessments or initial teaching, LPNs cannot push IV medications in most states, and LPNs cannot independently develop or modify a care plan. UAPs handle stable patients with predictable outcomes only. These rules answer a surprising percentage of Coordinated Care items correctly.
Sleep matters more than most candidates believe. Two consecutive nights of seven-plus hours immediately before the exam consistently outperforms one cram night followed by exhausted test-taking. If you're a candidate who normally sleeps poorly before big events, talk to your provider about a short course of melatonin or other sleep aid for those two nights. Walking into the exam with adequate sleep can move your effective performance up 5 to 10 percent, which is meaningful margin on a pass-fail test.
One last reminder: the NCLEX-PN is designed to be passable. Roughly 82 percent of US-educated first-time test-takers pass. The exam is not built to trick you, embarrass you, or measure obscure trivia. It is built to confirm that you can think like a safe, entry-level practical nurse. If you've put in the question reps, reviewed your rationales, and walked through the strategies on this page, you've already done the hard work. The test itself is just the day you collect the credential you've earned.