The ServSafe Manager certification exam is one of the most recognized food safety credentials in the United States. Administered by the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF), it certifies that food service managers and supervisors have the knowledge required to protect public health by preventing foodborne illness. The exam is accredited by the ANSI National Accreditation Board (ANAB), giving it national recognition and legal standing in most U.S. jurisdictions.
Food service managers, kitchen supervisors, restaurant owners, catering directors, and anyone responsible for overseeing food handling operations need this certification. Many state and local health departments require at least one ANAB-accredited certified food protection manager on staff at every food service establishment. ServSafe Manager is widely accepted to satisfy that requirement.
This printable practice test PDF gives you a representative sample of the types of questions you will encounter on the actual exam. Use it alongside the official ServSafe Manager textbook and our online practice tests to build confidence before test day.
The ServSafe Manager exam covers seven core domains. Understanding each domain is critical to passing — questions are distributed across all areas, and no single topic dominates the exam. Here is a detailed breakdown of what each domain covers and why it matters.
This foundational domain covers what foodborne illness is, how it spreads, and who is most at risk. You will need to understand the major foodborne pathogens — bacteria like Salmonella, E. coli O157:H7, Listeria monocytogenes, and Campylobacter; viruses like norovirus and hepatitis A; and parasites like Cryptosporidium. Questions test your ability to identify the most common causes of foodborne illness outbreaks and the conditions that allow pathogens to thrive. Managers must understand the concepts of time-temperature abuse, cross-contamination, and poor personal hygiene as the primary causes of unsafe food.
Contamination of food can be biological, chemical, or physical. Biological contamination — the most common — involves pathogens entering food through infected employees, raw meat, or pests. Chemical contamination includes cleaning agents, pesticides, or unsafe food-contact surfaces leaching into food. Physical contamination covers foreign objects like bone fragments, glass, metal shavings, or jewelry. This domain also addresses food allergens as a form of contamination, requiring managers to understand the FDA's nine major allergens and how cross-contact can trigger life-threatening allergic reactions. Allergen management — separate utensils, dedicated prep areas, and clear staff communication — is an increasingly prominent exam topic.
Personal hygiene is one of the most heavily tested areas on the ServSafe Manager exam. This domain covers proper handwashing technique (at least 20 seconds with soap and water, followed by a single-use towel), when to wash hands (after using the restroom, handling raw meat, touching the face, or returning from a break), and the importance of no bare-hand contact with ready-to-eat food. Managers must also know when to exclude or restrict sick employees. A food handler with jaundice, diagnosed norovirus, hepatitis A, Salmonella Typhi, Shiga toxin-producing E. coli, or Shigella must be excluded from the operation entirely until medically cleared. Understanding the difference between exclusion and restriction — and when each applies — is a common exam question.
Food safety must be maintained at every step of the food-handling process: purchasing, receiving, storing, preparing, cooking, holding, cooling, reheating, and serving. This domain is the most expansive and covers critical control points at each stage. Key concepts include: safe receiving temperatures (41°F or below for cold TCS food, 135°F or above for hot food); FIFO (First In, First Out) stock rotation; proper refrigerator storage order (ready-to-eat food on top, raw chicken on the bottom); minimum internal cooking temperatures (165°F for poultry, 155°F for ground beef, 145°F for whole cuts of beef/pork/fish); the two-stage cooling method (135°F to 70°F within 2 hours, then 70°F to 41°F within the next 4 hours); and proper hot and cold holding temperatures (above 135°F or below 41°F). The temperature danger zone — 41°F to 135°F — is central to this entire domain.
This domain focuses on proactive food safety systems rather than reactive responses. Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) is the primary framework. Managers must understand all seven HACCP principles: conduct a hazard analysis, identify critical control points (CCPs), establish critical limits, establish monitoring procedures, establish corrective actions, establish verification procedures, and establish record-keeping procedures. Questions also cover prerequisite programs (the foundational operational practices that support HACCP, such as pest control, employee hygiene, and equipment maintenance), active managerial control, and how to use a Food Safety Management System to prevent rather than respond to foodborne illness incidents.
A safe physical environment is essential to food safety. This domain covers the design and maintenance of food service facilities, including proper ventilation, lighting, plumbing, waste disposal, and handwashing station placement. Integrated Pest Management (IPM) is a major subtopic — managers must know how to deny pests entry (seal cracks, install door sweeps), eliminate harborage areas, identify signs of infestation, and work with licensed pest control operators (PCOs) rather than applying pesticides themselves. Equipment must be NSF-certified (National Sanitation Foundation), properly installed, and easy to clean. Utility connections, grease traps, and backflow prevention devices are also covered.
Cleaning (removing visible dirt and food residue) and sanitizing (reducing pathogens to safe levels) are distinct processes that must both occur on food-contact surfaces. This domain covers proper ware-washing methods (three-compartment sink procedure: wash in the first sink at 110°F minimum, rinse in the second, sanitize in the third using chemical sanitizer at the correct concentration), the proper concentration and contact time for chemical sanitizers (chlorine at 50–100 ppm, iodine at 12.5–25 ppm, quaternary ammonium at manufacturer specifications), and mechanical dishwasher requirements. Managers must also understand master cleaning schedules, the distinction between food-contact and non-food-contact surfaces, and how to test sanitizer concentration with test strips.
Beyond passing the exam, ServSafe Manager certification reflects a manager's commitment to regulatory compliance. The FDA Food Code — updated every four years — forms the basis of most state and local food safety regulations. Certified managers are expected to train staff, enforce hygiene policies, maintain temperature logs, conduct self-inspections, and cooperate with health department inspectors. In many jurisdictions, having a certified food protection manager on staff reduces liability and can positively affect health inspection scores.
Managers also bear responsibility for food defense — protecting the food supply from intentional contamination or tampering. While less common on the exam, awareness of this topic reflects the comprehensive nature of food safety management.
Print the PDF and work through the questions without looking at the answers first. Time yourself — aim to complete 90 questions within two hours to simulate real exam conditions. After finishing, review every incorrect answer and trace it back to the relevant domain in your ServSafe Manager textbook. Focus additional study time on domains where you scored below 75%.
For additional practice, visit our full online test bank with hundreds of practice questions organized by domain: ServSafe Manager practice tests. Online practice tests provide instant feedback and track your progress over time, making them an ideal complement to printable PDF review.