PMP Practice Tests 2026: How to Prepare for the PMP Exam
Complete PMP practice test guide for 2026: best PMP practice resources, how to use practice tests effectively, PMP exam format, and free PMP practice tests.

PMP Exam Format
The PMP exam consists of 180 questions — 175 scored questions and 5 unscored pretest questions that cannot be identified during the exam. The exam is computer-based and administered at Pearson VUE testing centers or through online proctored testing. The time limit is 230 minutes (3 hours and 50 minutes). There are two optional 10-minute breaks.
Question Types
The current PMP exam uses multiple question formats: Multiple-choice questions (one correct answer from four options) are the most common format; Multiple-response questions require selecting all correct answers from a list (candidates must select all correct options to receive full credit); Matching questions ask you to match items in one column to items in another (e.g., matching project situations to the appropriate project management response); Hot spot questions ask you to click on a specific element in a diagram or image; and Drag-and-drop questions require ordering or sorting items (e.g., ordering the steps in a process). Approximately 50% of questions involve predictive (waterfall) project management approaches and 50% involve agile or hybrid approaches — reflecting the current PMP Exam Content Outline (ECO).
PMP Exam Domains
The current PMP ECO defines three performance domains tested on the exam: People (42% of the exam) — team leadership, conflict management, servant leadership, stakeholder engagement, emotional intelligence, and team development; Process (50%) — project planning, execution, risk management, scope, schedule, budget, quality, communications, procurement, and adaptation; and Business Environment (8%) — benefits realization, organizational strategy, compliance, and external factors. Understanding the domain weighting guides effective preparation — the Process domain is the largest but the People domain is heavily weighted at 42%.

How to Use PMP Practice Tests Effectively
PMP practice tests are the single most valuable preparation tool for the PMP exam — but only when used correctly. Simply answering questions without systematic review is significantly less effective than strategic practice test use.
Start with Diagnostic Practice, Then Content Study
At the beginning of your PMP preparation, take a 60 to 90-question practice test without extensive review beforehand. This diagnostic gives you a baseline score and, more importantly, reveals which domains and topics need the most work. Use this diagnostic to prioritize your content study — if you consistently miss People domain questions (servant leadership, team development, conflict resolution), study those areas before moving to Process domain questions. Do not start with practice tests and treat them as your primary study method — practice tests reinforce and test understanding; they don't efficiently build it from scratch.
Review Every Question — Not Just Wrong Answers
The most common mistake PMP candidates make with practice tests is reviewing only the questions they got wrong. You should also review questions you got right — particularly if you were uncertain. For every question: read the official explanation for the correct answer; understand why each incorrect option is wrong (many PMP questions have two plausible-sounding options); and identify which PMI concept, framework, or principle the question is testing. This type of active review builds the PMI decision-making framework that the exam rewards — not just knowledge of facts.
Simulate Exam Conditions in the Final Weeks
In the final 2 to 3 weeks before your PMP exam, shift from topic-focused practice to full-exam simulation: take 180-question practice exams in a single sitting with the same breaks as the actual exam (two 10-minute breaks at the 60-question marks). Sitting for 3.5+ hours requires mental endurance that must be developed through practice. If you can only practice in 60-question blocks, your stamina on the actual 180-question exam may be insufficient — fatigue causes errors on questions you would normally answer correctly.

Best PMP Practice Test Resources
The quality of PMP practice tests varies significantly. The best resources closely mirror the current exam's scenario-based format and ECO alignment — avoiding older resources written for previous exam versions.
PMI Official Practice Exams
PMI (Project Management Institute) offers official PMP practice exams through the PMI certification portal at pmi.org. Official practice exams are written by the same team responsible for the actual exam and use the same format, including multiple-response and matching questions. PMI members (PMI annual membership is approximately $149) receive access to official practice exams as part of membership benefits. The official practice exams are the most accurate benchmark of your actual exam readiness — if you are scoring well on official PMI practice exams, you are prepared.
PrepCast PMP Simulator
The PM PrepCast PMP exam simulator is one of the most comprehensive third-party PMP practice tools — it includes 2,000+ questions aligned to the current ECO, full 180-question exam simulations, and detailed performance analytics by domain and process group. PrepCast is particularly valued for its question quality and explanation depth. PrepCast access costs approximately $139 to $179 for 90-day access. Many PMP candidates report that PrepCast question difficulty matches or exceeds the actual exam, making exam day feel more manageable.
Agile-Specific Practice Resources
Because approximately 50% of PMP questions involve agile or hybrid scenarios, dedicated agile practice is important. PMI's Agile Practice Guide (available free to PMI members as a digital download) is the primary reference for agile content on the PMP exam. Agile PrepCast (sister product to PM PrepCast) offers agile-focused question banks. When practicing with agile scenarios, focus on: Scrum ceremonies and roles; Kanban principles; servant leadership in agile teams; agile estimation techniques (story points, planning poker); velocity and sprint burndown; and when agile vs. predictive approaches are appropriate.
Strategies for PMP Scenario Questions
The PMP exam's scenario-based questions — presenting a project management situation and asking what a project manager should do — are distinctly different from knowledge recall questions. A specific set of strategies helps navigate these questions effectively.
Apply the PMI 'Right Answer' Framework
PMP scenario questions are designed around PMI's view of what a 'good' project manager does. PMI exam answers consistently prefer: proactive behavior over reactive; prevention over correction; communication and stakeholder engagement over unilateral action; team empowerment over directive management; following established processes over shortcuts; and addressing root causes over symptoms. When you see two reasonable-seeming options, the PMI-preferred answer is typically the more proactive, communicative, or process-oriented choice. This framework eliminates many wrong answers without needing to know every specific detail.
Identify What the Question Is Actually Asking
PMP scenario questions often include irrelevant details designed to distract. Before looking at answer choices: read the question stem carefully and identify what is being asked (what should the PM do next? What is the most appropriate response? What should have been done to prevent this?); identify the key project management concept being tested (this is usually implied by the situation described); and eliminate answers that don't directly address what was asked, even if they describe reasonable project management actions. Many wrong answers describe legitimate PM activities — they just don't answer the specific question asked.
Use Process of Elimination Deliberately
For PMP questions, aggressive elimination of clearly wrong answers is more reliable than trying to identify the definitively correct answer. Wrong PMP answers typically: describe reactive behavior when the question calls for proactive; propose escalation to senior management when team-level resolution is more appropriate; suggest skipping process steps; or involve the PM making decisions that should involve stakeholders or the team. When you can eliminate two options as inconsistent with PMI principles, your odds of selecting the correct answer from the remaining two are strong even if you are uncertain between them.

PMP Practice Test Readiness Benchmarks
Knowing when you are ready to schedule the actual PMP exam — based on practice test performance — prevents the costly experience of sitting for and failing the exam before you are adequately prepared.
Practice Score Targets
PMI does not publish the exact passing score for the PMP exam. Based on community reports and candidate experiences, a score of approximately 70 to 75% on practice exams correlates with passing the actual exam for most candidates. More useful than a single score target is consistency across multiple exams: if you are consistently scoring 70% or above on 180-question practice exams (from multiple different question banks, not the same bank repeatedly), you are likely prepared. If your scores are inconsistent — 75% one day and 55% the next — you have not yet built stable command of the material.
Domain-Level Readiness
Track your practice performance by domain (People, Process, Business Environment) in addition to overall score. A very high Process score combined with a very low People score may produce a passing overall percentage but result in failure on the actual exam due to domain-level weighting. Aim for at least 65 to 70% in each domain — not just a high overall average. Domain-level breakdowns are provided by most quality practice platforms (PMI official exams and PrepCast both provide domain analytics).
Simulate the Full 180-Question Exam Before Test Day
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.