Pellet-B Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)
Pass the Pellet exam with confidence. Practice questions with detailed explanations and instant feedback on every answer.

The POST Entry-Level Law Enforcement Test Battery — universally known as the Pellet-B — is the standard written examination that California law enforcement agencies use to screen applicants at the entry-level officer stage. The California Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) developed the Pellet-B to ensure that every recruit entering a California police or sheriff's academy possesses the core reading comprehension and writing ability required to perform police work safely and effectively.
This page provides a free printable Pellet-B practice test PDF you can download, print, and use for offline timed study. The questions in the PDF cover both the Reading/Vocabulary component and the Writing Ability component exactly as they appear in the real exam. Download the PDF below, set a timer, and score yourself honestly before your official test date. For interactive online practice with immediate answer explanations, the pellet b practice test is available anytime on any device.
Pellet-B scores are valid for three years from the date of your official test administration. Many large California agencies — including county sheriff departments and mid-sized municipal police departments — use POST-administered testing sessions that any agency can draw from. Smaller agencies sometimes administer the Pellet-B independently at their own facilities under POST guidelines. Either way, the test content and scoring methodology are identical.
Reading/Vocabulary Component (105 Questions, 90 Minutes)
The Reading/Vocabulary component is by far the larger of the two components. You receive 90 minutes to answer 105 questions organised into two formats:
Reading Comprehension Passages
Passages are drawn from materials a working law enforcement officer would routinely encounter: police department policies and procedures, use-of-force directives, penal code excerpts, field training manuals, and departmental memoranda. Each passage is followed by four to six multiple-choice questions. Question types include:
- Inference and implication: The passage describes a situation or policy, and you must identify what logically follows even though the text does not state it directly. For example, a passage about escalation-of-force policy might be followed by a question asking what a reasonable officer should do in a scenario the passage does not explicitly address.
- Main idea identification: You select the statement that best captures the central point of the passage. Distractors often contain accurate detail from the passage but miss the main point.
- Fact vs. opinion: You distinguish between statements the passage presents as objective fact and statements that reflect a judgment or interpretation.
- Sequential ordering: A passage describes a multi-step process — an evidence-handling procedure, a booking sequence, an arrest protocol — and you identify the correct order of steps.
- Understanding complex sentences: Some questions isolate a single dense sentence from the passage and ask you to identify its meaning or the relationship between its clauses.
Vocabulary Fill-in-the-Blank
These questions present a sentence drawn from a law enforcement context with one word removed. You select the word from four options that best completes the sentence based on the surrounding context. The vocabulary tested is not obscure academic language — it is the professional vocabulary of law enforcement reports, court documents, and departmental communications. Words like "probable cause," "affidavit," "corroborate," "exigent," and "culpable" appear in these questions. The best preparation is reading actual police reports, criminal complaint forms, and California penal code language to absorb the vocabulary naturally in context.
Writing Ability Component (15 Minutes)
The Writing Ability component gives you 15 minutes to write a short narrative based on a law enforcement scenario you are shown. The scenario typically presents a sequence of events — a traffic stop, a dispute call, a suspect encounter — and you must write a coherent first-person account of the events in the order they occurred using proper grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
POST scores the Writing Ability component on a standardised rubric. The minimum passing T-score is 2+. The score evaluates:
- Sentence structure: Do your sentences have clear subjects and verbs? Do you avoid run-ons and sentence fragments that would make a police report confusing or legally inadequate?
- Grammar and usage: Subject-verb agreement, correct pronoun reference, proper verb tense consistency throughout the narrative.
- Punctuation and spelling: Errors that would create ambiguity in a legal document are weighted more heavily than minor stylistic choices.
- Logical flow: Events must be presented in a logical chronological or causal sequence. A narrative that jumps back and forth in time without clear transition signals scores poorly regardless of its grammatical accuracy.
T-Score Explained
POST uses T-scores rather than raw percentage scores to report Pellet-B results. T-scores are a standardised metric where a score of 50 represents the average performance of the reference population, and each unit on the T-score scale corresponds to a defined interval relative to the population standard deviation. This standardisation allows POST to compare scores fairly across different test administrations and different agency cutoffs.
The minimum POST passing standard is a Reading T-score of 42 and a Writing T-score of 2. However, individual agencies are permitted to require higher cutoff scores. Some agencies — particularly in competitive recruitment markets — require Reading T-scores of 45, 48, or even 50. Before you test, confirm your target agency's minimum score requirement so you know what score you actually need to advance in their hiring process, not just what the bare POST minimum requires.
Score Validity and Retesting
Pellet-B scores are valid for three years from the test date. You may retake the exam after 30 days if you do not achieve a passing score or if you want to achieve a higher score for a more competitive agency. Most candidates who prepare systematically pass on their first or second attempt. Because the test is reading-heavy and vocabulary-focused, candidates who read extensively — news articles, official reports, professional documents — in the weeks before testing typically perform significantly better than those who rely on practice tests alone without expanding their reading exposure.
Key Takeaway: PELLET B certification demonstrates expertise in this field. Most candidates spend 4-8 weeks preparing with practice tests before taking the exam.
How to Use the Pellet-B Practice Test PDF
Print the PDF and simulate real test conditions. Set a 90-minute timer for the Reading/Vocabulary section and a strict 15-minute timer for the Writing section. Do not look up words or check answers mid-test. The goal of the first practice session is to establish a baseline — what is your raw score and what types of questions are you missing? After scoring, categorise every wrong answer by question type: was it a vocabulary question, a comprehension passage question, an inference question, or a fact-vs-opinion question? This tells you exactly where to concentrate your preparation.
Reading Comprehension Strategy
The most effective technique for law enforcement reading comprehension is active reading with a focus on the author's purpose. Before reading a passage in full, scan the questions following it. This primes you to notice the specific information you will need to answer those questions. When you encounter a passage about a departmental policy, ask yourself: "What is the policy, who does it apply to, and what are the consequences of violating it?" — because those are almost always the questions that follow.
For inference questions specifically, train yourself to eliminate answer choices that go further than the text supports. The correct inference is always the most conservative logical conclusion the passage permits. An answer that introduces new information not in the passage — even if it sounds reasonable — is almost always wrong.
Vocabulary Building for Law Enforcement Context
Building law enforcement vocabulary takes sustained exposure over weeks, not overnight memorisation. Read the California Penal Code sections on common crimes (PC 187 — murder, PC 211 — robbery, PC 459 — burglary, PC 647 — disorderly conduct). Read Miranda rights language and understand each clause. Review common terms from criminal complaints and arrest reports: probable cause, reasonable suspicion, exigent circumstances, chain of custody, corpus delicti, actus reus, mens rea. These are exactly the words that appear in Pellet-B vocabulary questions because they are the words law enforcement officers use every day.
Writing Ability Strategy
Fifteen minutes is a short window. Spend the first two minutes reading the scenario carefully and mentally organising the sequence of events. Write a brief outline — four or five bullet points in chronological order. Then write the narrative, following your outline rather than trying to compose and organise simultaneously. Aim for clear, simple sentences over complex constructions. Every sentence must have an explicit subject and verb. Use transitional phrases — "Upon arriving at the scene," "At approximately 14:30 hours," "After securing the perimeter" — to make the chronological flow explicit.

- ✓Complete one timed Reading/Vocabulary practice section — 105 questions in 90 minutes
- ✓Complete one timed Writing Ability practice — 15-minute narrative from a law enforcement prompt
- ✓Categorise every wrong reading answer by question type to identify weak areas
- ✓Read California Penal Code sections on robbery, burglary, assault, and disorderly conduct
- ✓Study Miranda rights language and common arrest report terminology
- ✓Practise inference questions — eliminate choices that go beyond the passage
- ✓Practise writing short narratives in chronological order with explicit transition phrases
- ✓Confirm your target agency's minimum T-score cutoff — it may be above POST's 42 minimum
- ✓Build daily reading habits using police reports, policy documents, and legal briefs
- ✓Schedule your official test date with enough lead time for two full practice rounds
The Pellet-B rewards candidates who read widely and write clearly — two skills that develop with consistent practice over time rather than last-minute cramming. Use the PDF to identify your specific gaps in the Reading/Vocabulary component and to practise timed writing under realistic conditions. Combine offline PDF work with the online practice tests for immediate feedback, and you will approach your official test date with an accurate assessment of your current performance level and a clear plan for closing any remaining gaps before you sit for your agency's hiring process.
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