RBT Exam Prep: Cost, Test Day & Practice
Full RBT exam prep guide: $50 Pearson fee, 75 questions, 90 minutes, competency assessment, ABA Rocks vs BACB resources, and retake rules.

Studying for the RBT exam is one of those tasks that looks straightforward on paper and gets surprisingly tangled once you actually sit down with the BACB handbook. The Registered Behavior Technician credential is the entry point into applied behavior analysis work, and it carries real weight with employers, clinics, and school districts. Sound RBT exam prep is what separates candidates who pass on the first attempt from those who burn through retake fees and lose months of momentum.
Here is the short version of what you are signing up for. The RBT examination has 75 multiple-choice questions, only 10 of which are unscored pilot items, and you get 90 minutes to finish. It is delivered by Pearson VUE at a proctored testing center or via online proctoring, and the credential is awarded by the BACB once you pass. You cannot just register and show up though. Before Pearson lets you book a seat, you need 40 hours of approved training, an initial competency assessment signed off by a BCBA or qualified assessor, and a clean criminal background check.
This guide walks through every realistic part of RBT exam preparation, from cost to question format to study tools. Whether you are leaning on ABA Rocks practice tests, the official BACB task list, or a study guide like Mometrix, you will leave with a clear picture of what to do next, when to do it, and how to avoid the small administrative slips that delay otherwise well-prepared candidates by weeks at a time.
RBT Exam at a Glance
Let's talk money first, because the RBT exam cost is one of the most common questions candidates ask. The Pearson VUE seat fee is $50, which you pay directly to Pearson when you book your appointment. That fee is separate from the BACB application fee, which currently sits at $50 as well — so most candidates are looking at $100 minimum just for the official side of things.
Add the 40-hour training course (anywhere from free through your employer to around $200 for self-paced online programs) and your total out-of-pocket lands somewhere between $100 and $400, depending on whether the clinic you work for picks up the training tab.
The RBT certification exam itself runs the same regardless of where you take it. Pearson VUE testing centers are scattered across pretty much every US metro, and the online-proctored option lets you sit the exam from home if your space meets their requirements (a quiet room, a working webcam, a clean desk). Where to take the RBT exam usually comes down to internet stability and how much you trust your home environment to stay distraction-free for an hour and a half.
The Pearson RBT exam interface is identical in both delivery modes, so you don't gain or lose any test-taking advantage by choosing one over the other — it's purely a logistics call.
One detail candidates routinely miss: the $50 Pearson seat fee is not refundable if you no-show. You can reschedule for free as long as you do it more than 24 hours before your appointment, but anything inside that window forfeits the seat. Most candidates who lose money on RBT exam prep lose it here, not on the study materials. Lock in your appointment, set two reminders, and treat the date like a flight you cannot miss.

Quick Eligibility Check
You qualify to register for the RBT exam once you have: completed an approved 40-hour training, passed an initial competency assessment supervised by a BCBA, submitted a background check, and received your BACB Gateway approval email with a Pearson VUE authorization code. Without all four, Pearson cannot book your seat — no exceptions.
The path to sitting the exam involves four distinct gates, and they have to be cleared in order. First, you complete the 40-hour training. This covers the entire RBT Task List 2nd Edition: measurement, assessment, skill acquisition, behavior reduction, documentation and reporting, and professional conduct. Most candidates finish the training in two to three weeks of evening study, although intensive programs compress it into a single week. The training does not have to come from a BACB-approved provider, but your trainer must be a BCBA, BCaBA, or board-eligible.
Second comes the RBT competency assessment, sometimes called the RBT competency test by candidates, although BACB officially calls it an assessment. A BCBA observes you performing core skills — preference assessments, discrete trial teaching, data collection, naturalistic teaching procedures — and signs off that you can do them at a reasonable level. This is the step most candidates underestimate. The assessment usually takes 90 to 120 minutes and requires you to demonstrate the skills live, not just talk through them.
Third, you submit your BACB application along with the criminal background check. The BACB reviews your file, confirms your trainer's credentials, and (assuming nothing is missing) issues a Gateway account approval. You will then receive a Pearson VUE authorization code by email. Fourth and finally, you log into the Pearson site, plug in your code, and schedule your exam slot.
The Path to Sitting the Exam
Submit BACB application, criminal background check, and 40-hour training certificate. Approval takes 7-10 business days before you receive the Pearson VUE authorization code.
Approved coursework covering the entire RBT Task List 2nd Edition. Must be delivered by a BCBA, BCaBA, or board-eligible trainer. Self-paced or live options available.
Live skill demonstration supervised by a BCBA. Includes preference assessments, discrete trial teaching, data collection, and procedural integrity checks. Typically 90-120 minutes.
Six task list domains plus an ethics overlay. Measurement and Behavior Reduction together account for the largest share of scored questions on the certification exam.
The RBT exam questions are pulled directly from the RBT Task List 2nd Edition, and they distribute across six core domains. You will see roughly 12 questions on measurement, 8 on assessment, 24 on skill acquisition, 12 on behavior reduction, 10 on documentation and reporting, and 9 on professional conduct and scope of practice. Memorizing the rough percentages helps you allocate study time — skill acquisition alone is almost a third of the exam, so spending a disproportionate share of your prep there usually pays off.
Question style is consistent throughout. Each item is a single best-answer multiple choice with four options. Many questions are scenario-based — you will read a short vignette about a client and a behavior, and pick the response that demonstrates correct procedural knowledge. The exam is not heavy on memorization of definitions in isolation; it leans more on application.
Knowing what continuous measurement means is not enough. You need to know which scenarios call for partial-interval recording versus whole-interval recording, why an RBT switches from a most-to-least prompting hierarchy to a least-to-most one, and when a tantrum during a tabled task is reinforced by escape versus attention.
The other thing that catches candidates off-guard is the ethics overlay. Although professional conduct is its own domain on paper, ethics questions appear inside skill acquisition and behavior reduction scenarios too. A scenario that looks like a discrete trial teaching question might actually be testing whether you recognize that the RBT in the vignette is operating outside their scope of practice. Always read the question stem twice — the first read for the procedure, the second for ethics implications. Many candidates who fail miss exactly these embedded ethics traps because they read once, locked in their answer, and moved on.

RBT Exam Content Domains
Covers continuous and discontinuous measurement procedures: frequency, rate, duration, latency, IRT, percent correct, trials to criterion, partial-interval, whole-interval, and momentary time sampling. Expect scenario questions where you choose the most appropriate measurement method based on the behavior's characteristics (rate, dimension, observability). Also includes permanent product recording and data graphing on equal-interval line graphs.
Once your application is approved and the exam date is on the calendar, the next 30 to 45 days should be structured study, not panic cramming. The best RBT exam review schedules layer three activities: re-reading the RBT Task List with the BACB ethics code beside it, drilling practice questions in timed sets, and getting a peer or BCBA to quiz you out loud on scenarios. The third piece is the one most candidates skip and the one that maps closest to how the actual exam tests you.
Practice tests are the single highest-leverage tool in RBT test prep. Aim to complete at least 500 practice questions across your study window, mixing topic-locked sets early on with full 75-question simulated exams in the final two weeks. The first time you take a full simulated exam, do not look up answers, do not pause the timer, and do not check your phone. Score it cold and let the result tell you which domains need another pass.
A study schedule that consistently works for full-time RBTs already on the job looks like this: weeks one and two, read one task list domain per evening alongside a short topic-locked quiz of 20 questions; weeks three and four, mixed-domain quizzes of 40 questions every other night, with a full 75-question simulated exam each weekend; final week, one timed simulation midweek and a focused review of the two weakest domains right up to test day. The point isn't to grind hours but to space the review so retrieval is happening throughout — not just on Sunday night with cold pizza.
The RBT competency assessment (BACB) is a separate hands-on evaluation done with a BCBA before you can apply to sit the exam. It is not the Pearson VUE exam. Failing the competency assessment means more supervision, not more retake fees — but you cannot take the certification exam until it is signed off.
Test day itself runs predictably, which is one of the few things in this process that should not surprise you. Arrive at the Pearson VUE center 30 minutes early with two forms of valid ID, one of them photographic. Lockers are provided for personal items — no phone, no smart watch, no notes, no water bottle on the desk.
The proctor walks you through palm-vein scanning (or signature verification at smaller centers), confirms your identity, and seats you at a numbered workstation. You'll be given scratch paper or a small dry-erase board and a pencil; some centers use only digital scratch tools. Either way, you cannot bring your own notes in.
If you are testing at home via online proctoring, the setup is more involved. Pearson's OnVUE software does a system check 30 minutes before your appointment, a proctor verifies your room with a webcam pan, and you have to keep your face in frame the entire time. Bathroom breaks are not permitted during the 90 minutes.
Most candidates who fail online proctoring fail because of room setup violations, not because of the questions. Clear your desk completely — even a stray coffee mug or a closed laptop on the floor can trigger a flag. Disable every notification on every device in the room before the check-in call starts.
The exam is computer-delivered. You can flag questions for review, navigate back and forth, and change answers up to the moment you hit submit. Once you submit, the result appears on screen within about 60 seconds. A pass means you walk out certified pending BACB final confirmation (usually email within 24 hours). A fail means you wait seven days minimum, pay another $50, and rebook.
Pace yourself early — most candidates who run out of time get stuck on the first 20 questions, second-guessing scenario interpretations. Trust your first read on scenario questions, flag anything you genuinely can't decide, and use the remaining time at the end for flagged items only.

RBT Exam Prep Essentials
- ✓Complete the full 40-hour training and download the certificate before applying.
- ✓Pass the RBT competency assessment with a BCBA who has supervised you live.
- ✓Take at least three full-length 75-question timed practice exams.
- ✓Review the BACB ethics code for RBTs (separate document from the task list).
- ✓Drill scenario-based questions on differential reinforcement and prompting hierarchies.
- ✓Confirm Pearson VUE appointment details (location, time, ID requirements) 48 hours before.
- ✓Get 7+ hours of sleep the night before — fatigue tanks scenario interpretation accuracy.
The market for RBT exam prep tools has expanded fast over the last few years, and three names come up in almost every conversation: ABA Rocks, the official BACB resources, and Mometrix. They are not interchangeable, and the right choice depends on how you study, what you already know, and how much you are willing to spend.
ABA Rocks RBT exam content is popular for a reason — the question bank closely mirrors the scenario style of the actual exam, and the explanations cite specific task list items. The trade-off is the subscription cost and the fact that it covers questions but not foundational instruction.
The official BACB resources, by contrast, are free and authoritative but minimal. You get the task list itself, the ethics code, and the candidate handbook. No practice questions, no scenarios, no analytics — just the source material. Mometrix sits between the two: a printed study guide with chapter-by-chapter walkthroughs of every task list domain, plus a few hundred practice questions. It works well as a backbone read-through but lacks the volume of practice items that ABA Rocks delivers.
RBT Prep Tools Compared
- +ABA Rocks: large question bank with scenario-style items and detailed answer rationales tied to task list codes.
- +Official BACB resources: free, authoritative, and the only canonical source for what is actually on the exam.
- +Mometrix study guide: structured chapter-by-chapter explanations work well as a first read-through for beginners.
- +Combining all three covers content, application, and authority — most successful candidates use a mix.
- −ABA Rocks subscription costs add up if you delay scheduling — budget for 60 days of access minimum.
- −BACB documents alone do not prepare you for exam scenarios — they assume prior coursework.
- −Mometrix's practice question volume is too small to be the sole source of drill material.
- −None of these replace live supervised practice with a BCBA on actual ABA procedures.
If you don't pass on the first try, the world doesn't end. About 20 percent of candidates retake the RBT exam at least once, and BACB allows up to eight attempts within a year of your application approval. The retake fee is $50 per attempt, and you must wait at least seven calendar days between attempts. Your score report will show domain-level performance, which is gold — it tells you exactly which task list areas to re-study before you book attempt two.
Renewal is the other piece candidates forget about. The RBT credential is annual. Every year you have to complete a renewal competency assessment with a BCBA, pay the $35 renewal fee, and document ongoing supervision (5 percent of hours worked, minimum two contacts per month). Miss the renewal window and the credential lapses — at which point you have to retake the entire exam. Setting a calendar reminder 60 days before your annual renewal is one of those tiny administrative habits that saves enormous headaches later.
Passing the RBT certification exam is less about being naturally gifted at behavior analysis and more about systematic preparation. Candidates who treat the 40-hour training as the start of study (not the end of it), who run timed practice tests cold, and who get a BCBA to drill them on scenario questions out loud tend to clear the exam on the first attempt. Candidates who try to cram from memorized definitions in the final week tend to retake.
The whole pipeline — application to credential in hand — typically runs six to ten weeks from the moment you finish your 40-hour training. Most of that time is administrative: waiting for BACB approval, scheduling Pearson VUE, sitting through the seven-day retake window if needed. Your active control over the timeline is concentrated in two places: how fast you complete the competency assessment after training, and how disciplined your study schedule is in the final 30 days. Get those two right and the credential is well within reach.
One last point worth making: the RBT credential is the entry door, not the destination. Most candidates who pass on the first attempt and stay in the field go on to either deepen their clinical hours toward BCaBA or BCBA eligibility, or specialize in a particular population — early intervention, school-based ABA, or adult day programs.
Treat RBT exam preparation as your first real exposure to the discipline of the field, not just a test to clear. The habits you build now — running data with integrity, knowing your scope of practice, asking the BCBA when something feels off — are the same habits that will carry you through every credential after this one. Start strong here, and everything downstream gets easier.
RBT Questions and Answers
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.