VTNE Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)
Pass your VTNE exam on the first attempt. Practice questions with detailed answer explanations, hints, and instant scoring.

The vtne — Veterinary Technician National Examination — is required for veterinary technician licensure in all 50 US states. Administered by the AAVSB (American Association of Veterinary State Boards), the VTNE tests clinical knowledge and practical skills across nine content domains. This page provides a free downloadable VTNE practice test PDF covering question types from every domain on the current exam blueprint. Printing and completing the PDF under timed conditions helps you develop the pacing and recall habits that matter most on exam day.
Working through paper-based practice questions engages different cognitive pathways than answering questions on a screen. The act of physically marking answers, crossing out eliminated options, and annotating questions with reasoning notes builds a more durable memory trace. Use the PDF to identify knowledge gaps, then target those gaps with focused domain review before your testing date.
VTNE Exam Format and Structure
The VTNE contains 200 total questions, of which 150 are scored and 50 are unscored pretest items embedded throughout the exam. You will not be able to distinguish pretest items from scored questions during testing, so treat every question as though it counts. The total testing time is 4 hours. Scores are reported on a scaled range of 200 to 900, and the national passing score is 425. Individual states set their own passing requirements, which may differ from the national threshold — check your state's veterinary licensing board for the specific passing standard that applies to your license application.
The Nine VTNE Content Domains
Pharmacy and Pharmacology
Pharmacy questions make up a significant portion of the VTNE and are among the most calculation-intensive on the exam. You must know drug classification by mechanism and use: analgesics divide into NSAIDs (carprofen, meloxicam, aspirin — noting that aspirin is contraindicated in cats) and opioids (morphine, butorphanol, buprenorphine — agonist vs. partial agonist vs. antagonist). Antibiotics are tested by class — penicillins, cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones (avoid in young animals due to cartilage effects), tetracyclines, and aminoglycosides (nephrotoxic, require monitoring). Anesthetic agents include pre-anesthetic medications (acepromazine, dexmedetomidine), induction agents (propofol, ketamine, alfaxalone), and inhalant maintenance agents (isoflurane, sevoflurane — minimum alveolar concentration values). Dosage calculation questions require you to apply the formula dose (mg/kg) × body weight (kg) = total dose (mg), then convert to volume using concentration (mg/mL). Know how to calculate CRIs (constant rate infusions) and fluid therapy rates. Controlled substance scheduling under the DEA and record-keeping requirements for Schedule II through V drugs are also tested.
Surgical Nursing
Surgical nursing questions test instrument identification, sterile technique, and perioperative patient care. You must identify instruments by name and function: hemostats (Kelly, Crile, Carmalt — used for clamping vessels and tissue), needle holders (Mayo-Hegar, Olsen-Hegar), tissue forceps (thumb vs. tissue vs. Allis), retractors (Senn, Army-Navy, Balfour for abdominal surgery), and scissors (Mayo for cutting suture; Metzenbaum for delicate tissue dissection). Sterile gloving technique — open vs. closed gloving, identifying breaks in sterile field — is tested through scenario questions. Suture material classification covers absorbable (chromic gut, polyglycolic acid, poliglecaprone) vs. non-absorbable (nylon, polypropylene, stainless steel) and monofilament vs. multifilament. Common suture patterns tested include simple interrupted, simple continuous, cruciate, Ford interlocking, and Lembert.
Dentistry
Dental questions require knowledge of species-specific tooth anatomy, dental charting, disease staging, and radiographic technique. The modified Triadan system assigns a three-digit number to each tooth: the first digit indicates the quadrant (1–4 for permanent teeth, 5–8 for deciduous), and the second and third digits indicate the tooth position within that quadrant. You must apply Triadan numbers to identify specific teeth in both dogs and cats. Canine permanent dentition totals 42 teeth; feline permanent dentition totals 30 teeth. Periodontal disease staging (Stage 1 through Stage 4 according to the American Veterinary Dental College) is tested — Stage 1 is gingivitis only with no attachment loss; Stage 4 involves severe attachment loss with potential systemic involvement. Dental radiography questions cover positioning for periapical views using the bisecting angle technique and parallel technique, identifying normal vs. abnormal radiographic findings, and radiation safety during dental procedures.
Laboratory Procedures
The laboratory domain is broad and detail-oriented. Complete blood count (CBC) interpretation requires knowledge of normal reference ranges for multiple species, what the packed cell volume (PCV) indicates about red blood cell mass, how to perform a WBC differential (identify neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils, and band cells on a blood smear), and how to recognize common abnormalities (left shift, toxic neutrophils, spherocytes, Heinz bodies). Serum chemistry panels include interpretation of liver markers (ALT, ALP, bilirubin), kidney markers (BUN, creatinine, SDMA), glucose, total protein, albumin, and electrolytes. Urinalysis interpretation covers specific gravity measurement by refractometer, urine dipstick findings, and sediment examination — identifying casts, crystals (struvite, calcium oxalate, ammonium biurate), bacteria, and red and white blood cells under microscopy. Fecal flotation technique using zinc sulfate or sodium nitrate solution and correct identification of common intestinal parasites (Toxocara, Ancylostoma, Giardia, Isospora) are tested. Blood smear preparation using the push-pull technique and correct staining with Diff-Quik are also included.
Animal Care and Nursing
Animal care questions cover species-specific husbandry and nursing protocols. Normal vital sign ranges for dogs (temperature 100.5–102.5°F, heart rate 60–160 bpm depending on size, respiratory rate 10–30 breaths/min), cats (100.5–102.5°F, 160–240 bpm, 20–30 breaths/min), rabbits, ferrets, birds, and reptiles are tested. Nutritional requirements include life-stage feeding guidelines, caloric density calculation, and identification of ingredients contraindicated for specific species (e.g., grapes/raisins, xylitol, onions for dogs; lily toxicity for cats). Bandaging techniques include the Robert Jones bandage for orthopedic support, the modified Ehmer sling for hip luxation, the Velpeau sling for forelimb support, and wound care bandaging layers (primary, secondary, tertiary). Wound classification (clean, contaminated, infected) and wound management principles including lavage, debridement, and closure timing are covered.
Diagnostic Imaging
Diagnostic imaging questions address both x-ray safety and radiographic technique. Radiation safety principles include the ALARA principle (as low as reasonably achievable), correct use of dosimetry badges (worn at collar level outside lead apron), lead PPE requirements (apron, gloves, thyroid shield), and the requirement that pregnant employees must not manually restrain patients during radiography. Positioning questions test standard views: VD (ventrodorsal) and DV (dorsoventral) for thorax and abdomen, lateral and CrCd (craniocaudal) for limbs, and OFA hip positioning for hip dysplasia screening. Film quality assessment — identifying overexposed (too dark), underexposed (too light), and positioning errors — is tested through image-based questions. Ultrasound basics include transducer selection by frequency (higher frequency = better resolution but less penetration depth), patient preparation (clipping and coupling gel), and normal sonographic appearance of liver, spleen, kidney, and bladder.
Anesthesia and Analgesia
Anesthesia is one of the highest-yield domains on the VTNE. Pre-anesthetic assessment covers ASA classification (I through V), identifying conditions that increase anesthetic risk (brachycephalic conformation, cardiac disease, hepatic or renal compromise, geriatric age), and pre-anesthetic bloodwork interpretation. Induction technique questions address mask vs. IV vs. chamber induction, correct endotracheal tube selection and placement verification, and cuff inflation protocols. Monitoring parameters tested include end-tidal CO2 (ETCO2 — normal 35–45 mmHg; elevated indicates hypoventilation), pulse oximetry (SpO2 — target above 95%), blood pressure (systolic target above 90 mmHg; hypotension defined as MAP below 60 mmHg), mucous membrane color and capillary refill time, and depth of anesthesia assessment using jaw tone, eye position, and pedal withdrawal reflex. Recovery monitoring includes extubation timing (when swallowing reflex returns), temperature management to prevent hypothermia, and pain assessment using validated scales.
Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
Emergency questions are scenario-based and test rapid decision-making. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation in small animals follows the RECOVER guidelines: confirm unresponsiveness and absence of breathing, begin chest compressions at 100–120 per minute at one-third to one-half of chest width, deliver ventilations via ET tube at a ratio of 30 compressions to 2 breaths for single-rescuer CPR. Drug administration during CPR includes epinephrine (0.01 mg/kg IV every other cycle), atropine (0.04 mg/kg IV for asystole or PEA), and vasopressin. Shock recognition questions require you to identify types (hypovolemic, distributive/septic, cardiogenic, obstructive) by clinical signs: hypovolemic shock presents with tachycardia, pale mucous membranes, prolonged CRT, weak pulses, and cold extremities. Oxygen therapy methods — flow-by, face mask, oxygen cage, nasal cannula, tracheostomy oxygen — and their appropriate applications are tested. Triage prioritization questions ask you to rank multiple patients by urgency using emergency triage categories.
Pain Management and Behavior
Pain assessment tools tested on the VTNE include the Glasgow Composite Pain Scale for dogs (assesses behavior, mobility, response to palpation, and vocalization on a numerical scale) and the Feline Grimace Scale (assesses orbital tightening, muzzle tension, ear position, whisker position, and head position). Pre-emptive analgesia — providing pain control before a painful stimulus occurs, such as before surgical incision — reduces total analgesic requirements and improves recovery outcomes; this concept appears in multiple question contexts. Multimodal analgesia combines agents with different mechanisms (opioids + NSAIDs + local anesthetics) to achieve better pain control at lower individual drug doses. Species behavioral differences relevant to pain recognition include the fact that prey species (rabbits, birds, reptiles) mask pain signs more effectively than predator species, making behavioral pain assessment in exotic patients especially challenging.
Pro Tip: Focus your VTNE study time on areas where you score lowest. Most exam questions test application of knowledge, not memorization.
How to Use the VTNE Practice Test PDF
Set a Four-Hour Timer for Full-Length Practice
The VTNE is a 4-hour exam, which means endurance is a real factor in performance. Complete the full PDF in a single timed session at least once before your exam date. This builds mental stamina and helps you identify whether your pacing causes accuracy to drop in the later sections of the test. If you notice a decline in accuracy after the two-hour mark, adjust your strategy — more frequent brief pauses for water and a deliberate slow-down to re-read questions carefully in the final hour.
Score by Domain
After completing the PDF, sort your incorrect answers by the nine content domains and calculate a percentage score for each. National performance data shows that candidates most often struggle with pharmacy dosage calculations and anesthesia monitoring parameters. If your domain scores follow that pattern, those areas warrant the most intensive review. Surgical nursing instrument identification and dental Triadan numbering are also high-frequency topics where flashcard memorization pays high dividends.
Memorize Drug Dosage Calculation Steps
Pharmacy calculation questions have fixed answer types — the calculation must yield the correct number or the question is wrong regardless of clinical reasoning. Practice the dosage formula until it is automatic: identify the dose in mg/kg, multiply by body weight in kg to get total mg, then divide by the drug concentration in mg/mL to get the volume to administer. Work at least 20 dosage problems under timed conditions before your exam date. Common stumbling points include converting pounds to kilograms (divide by 2.2) and converting drug concentrations expressed as percentages to mg/mL (multiply percent by 10).
Use Species-Specific Flashcards for Normal Values
Normal reference ranges for vital signs, CBC values, and urinalysis parameters differ meaningfully across species. A heart rate that is normal in a cat is a tachycardia in a large dog. Create a species comparison table covering temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, and key laboratory reference ranges for dogs, cats, rabbits, ferrets, birds, and reptiles. Review this table daily in the two weeks before your exam.

- ✓Download and print the VTNE practice test PDF
- ✓Complete the full PDF under a 4-hour timer to simulate real exam endurance
- ✓Score each of the nine content domains separately to identify weak areas
- ✓Memorize the dosage calculation formula: dose (mg/kg) × weight (kg) ÷ concentration (mg/mL)
- ✓Make flashcards for surgical instrument names, functions, and correct handling
- ✓Learn the modified Triadan tooth numbering system for both canine and feline dentitions
- ✓Review RECOVER CPR guidelines for dogs and cats including drug doses
- ✓Study normal vital sign reference ranges by species in a comparison table format
- ✓Review anesthesia monitoring parameters: ETCO2, SpO2, blood pressure, and CRT target values
- ✓Schedule your VTNE appointment after scoring 75%+ on two consecutive full-length practice sets
The VTNE covers an exceptionally broad range of clinical knowledge across nine distinct domains. Candidates who pass on their first attempt consistently report that structured domain-by-domain review — rather than unfocused reading — made the difference in their preparation. Download the free PDF, complete it under exam conditions, and use your domain scores to build a targeted study plan in the weeks leading up to your testing date. Focused, evidence-based preparation across all nine domains is the most reliable strategy for reaching the 425 scaled score threshold and earning your veterinary technician license.
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