NCLEX Study Materials β Free Questions & Answers (2026 June)
Pass your NCLEX exam with the best study materials. π― Free practice questions with detailed answer explanations, study plans, and exam prep resources

Best NCLEX Study Materials for 2026
Preparing for the NCLEX-RN or NCLEX-PN exam requires the right study materials and a structured study plan. Whether you're a new nursing graduate or retaking the exam, this comprehensive guide covers everything you need to pass on your first attempt.
The National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX) uses Computerized Adaptive Testing (CAT), which means the test adjusts its difficulty based on your responses. This format requires a different study approach than traditional exams β you need to master critical thinking and clinical judgment, not just memorize facts.

Key Takeaway: The NCLEX pass rate for first-time, US-educated candidates is approximately 87-89%. With proper preparation using quality study materials, you can significantly increase your chances of passing on the first attempt.
Creating Your NCLEX Study Plan
A well-structured NCLEX study plan is the foundation of successful exam preparation. Most nursing experts recommend studying for 4-8 weeks before your exam date, dedicating 3-5 hours per day to focused study.
6-Week NCLEX Study Schedule
Here's a proven study plan that covers all NCLEX content areas systematically:
- Weeks 1-2: Content review of all major nursing domains β pharmacology, med-surg, pediatrics, maternal/newborn, mental health, and fundamentals
- Weeks 3-4: Practice questions β complete 75-150 questions daily, reviewing rationales for both correct and incorrect answers
- Weeks 5-6: Full-length practice exams, targeted review of weak areas, and final review of priority topics

Top NCLEX Study Resources
1. NCLEX Review Books
The most popular NCLEX review books include Saunders Comprehensive Review, Kaplan NCLEX-RN Prep, and Hurst Review. Each offers different approaches:
- Saunders: Comprehensive content review with 5,700+ practice questions β best for thorough content review
- Kaplan: Focuses on test-taking strategies and decision trees β best for learning how to think through questions
- Hurst: Core content in a simplified format with mnemonics β best for quick review
2. Question Banks (QBanks)
Practice questions are the single most effective study tool for the NCLEX. The best question banks include:
- UWorld: Considered the gold standard with detailed rationales and performance analytics
- Archer Review: Known for questions similar in style to the actual NCLEX
- NCLEX High Yield: Focuses on the most commonly tested content
NCLEX Key Concepts
What are the 'Rights' of medication administration?
Right patient, right drug, right dose, right route, right time, right documentation, right reason, right response
Normal adult heart rate range?
60-100 beats per minute at rest. Bradycardia < 60, Tachycardia > 100.
Normal adult temperature range?
97.8Β°F - 99.1Β°F (36.5Β°C - 37.3Β°C) orally. Add 1Β°F for rectal, subtract 1Β°F for axillary.
Normal adult blood pressure?
Systolic: < 120 mmHg, Diastolic: < 80 mmHg. Hypertension Stage 1: 130-139/80-89.
NCLEX Content Areas and Priority Topics
The NCLEX-RN test plan is organized into four major client needs categories:
Safe and Effective Care Environment (21-33%)
This includes management of care (17-23%) and safety/infection control (9-15%). Focus on delegation, prioritization, informed consent, advance directives, and standard precautions.
Health Promotion and Maintenance (6-12%)
Covers growth and development, prevention/early detection of disease, and health screening. Know developmental milestones, immunization schedules, and prenatal care.
Psychosocial Integrity (6-12%)
Includes coping mechanisms, grief and loss, mental health concepts, therapeutic communication, and crisis intervention.
Physiological Integrity (38-62%)
The largest category covering basic care, pharmacology, reduction of risk potential, and physiological adaptation. This is where most questions come from.

- βRegister with Pearson VUE and schedule your exam date
- βTake a diagnostic practice test to identify weak areas
- βCreate a 4-8 week study schedule with daily goals
- βComplete content review of all major nursing domains
- βPractice 75-150 questions daily with rationale review
- βTake 3+ full-length CAT practice exams
- βReview pharmacology β know drug classifications and nursing implications
- βMaster prioritization and delegation questions
- βStudy lab values and normal ranges
- βTake a final practice exam 3 days before your test
- +Question banks (UWorld, Archer) provide the most exam-like practice
- +Consistent daily study builds long-term retention
- +Study groups provide accountability and different perspectives
- +Practice tests identify weak areas before the real exam
- βPassive reading without practice questions is ineffective
- βCramming the night before causes anxiety and doesn't improve performance
- βUsing only one resource limits exposure to different question styles
- βStudying too many hours without breaks leads to burnout
About the Author
Registered Nurse & Healthcare Educator
Johns Hopkins University School of NursingDr. Sarah Mitchell is a board-certified registered nurse with over 15 years of clinical and academic experience. She completed her PhD in Nursing Science at Johns Hopkins University and has taught NCLEX preparation and clinical skills courses for nursing students across the United States. Her research focuses on evidence-based exam preparation strategies for healthcare certification candidates.
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