The firearm competency test is the assessment every South African must pass before applying for a firearm licence. It is set out under the Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000, and it exists for one simple reason: to make sure that the person holding a firearm understands the law and can handle that firearm safely. There is no licence without competency first. That is the order, and it trips up thousands of applicants every year who try to skip ahead.
This free practice test covers everything the South African Police Service expects you to know. You will work through the Firearms Control Act, safe handling and storage, handgun and rifle knowledge, the legal use of force in self-defence, and the licensing process itself. Roughly 90,000 South Africans search for help with firearm and learner-type knowledge tests every month, and most of them fail the first attempt because they memorise answers instead of understanding the rules. Our six topic quizzes, each with eight questions and a written explanation, fix that. Practising is completely free, you can do it on your phone, and there is no limit to how many times you retake a test.
Let us be honest about what this test really is. It is not a marksmanship contest. Nobody is measuring how tight your groupings are at the range, not at this stage anyway. The competency assessment is about your head, not your trigger finger. SAPS wants to know that you understand when you may and may not use a firearm, how to store it so a child or a thief cannot get to it, and what the Firearms Control Act actually demands of a licence holder. Get those things wrong in real life and you end up in court. Get them wrong in the test and you simply do not get your competency certificate.
The competency certificate is the gatekeeper. Once SAPS declares you competent, that certificate becomes the document you attach to your licence application. Without it, the application does not even get looked at. Competency is split into two parts: theory, which is what this practice test prepares you for, and a practical handling component done at an accredited training provider. The theory is built on unit standards registered with the South African Qualifications Authority, so the questions you face are standardised across the country, whether you sit them in Cape Town, Durban or Polokwane.
Most people underestimate how much law is involved. They expect questions about how a pistol works and instead get hit with questions about Section 13 licences, the duties of a responsible person, and what counts as proportionate force. That mismatch is exactly why first-time pass rates are so poor. If you walk in expecting a gun-knowledge quiz, the legal questions will catch you flat-footed.
So treat the Firearms Control Act as the spine of your preparation. Everything else hangs off it. The handling rules, the storage requirements, the self-defence principles, the licence categories, they all flow from that one piece of legislation. Read the Act, work through these quizzes, and read the explanations even when you answer correctly. Knowing why an answer is right is what carries you through the trick questions on test day.
The Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000 is the law that governs every firearm in South Africa, from licensing to storage to the rules around using one. The competency test leans heavily on it. You need to know that SAPS, through the Central Firearms Registry, issues both competency certificates and licences, that the minimum age is generally 21, and that possessing a firearm without a valid licence is a criminal offence carrying possible imprisonment. The Act also defines who qualifies as a fit and proper person, which is the standard SAPS uses to decide whether you can be trusted with a firearm at all.
Safe handling is built on a handful of unbreakable rules. Treat every firearm as if it is loaded. Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on the target. Never point the muzzle at anything you are not willing to destroy. Be sure of your target and what lies beyond it. These four habits prevent the vast majority of negligent discharges, and the test will check that you know them cold. Storage matters just as much: the Act requires firearms to be kept in a prescribed safe or strong-room that meets the SABS standard.
This is where applicants lose the most marks. The law of private defence allows you to use force only against an unlawful and imminent threat, and only force that is necessary and proportionate to that threat. You cannot use lethal force to protect property alone. You cannot shoot a fleeing attacker who no longer poses a danger. Warning shots are discouraged. After any defensive shooting you must report it to SAPS and cooperate. Understanding proportionality and imminence is the single most valuable thing you can take into the test.
The order is fixed: competency first, then the licence. A self-defence firearm is licensed under Section 13, which allows one handgun. Hunting and sport-shooting firearms fall under Section 16 and usually require association membership. Renewals must be applied for at least 90 days before expiry, and letting a competency certificate lapse can leave you in unlawful possession of your own firearm. Knowing which section applies to which purpose is a common exam question.
Notice how the four areas overlap. Storage is both a handling rule and a legal duty under the Act. Self-defence is both a moral question and a strict legal test of proportionality. The competency assessment rewards people who see these connections rather than treating each topic as an isolated list of facts. When you practise below, try to link each answer back to the underlying principle in the Firearms Control Act.
There is a reason the law is written the way it is. South Africa has a long, painful history with violence, and the Firearms Control Act was deliberately designed to put a high bar in front of anyone who wants to own a firearm. That bar is competency. It is not there to frustrate you. It is there to make sure the person standing next to you at the range, or living next door to you with a pistol in the house, actually knows what they are doing. When you understand that the whole system exists to keep firearms in responsible hands, the questions stop feeling like arbitrary hoops and start making sense.
Keep one more thing in mind as you study. The competency you earn is tied to a specific category of firearm. Being declared competent to possess a handgun for self-defence does not automatically make you competent for a rifle or a shotgun used in hunting. Each firearm type has its own training and its own competency, which is why the practice quizzes on this page separate handgun knowledge from shotgun and rifle knowledge. Know which category you are applying for, and focus your study accordingly.
Each quiz above is short on purpose. Eight questions is enough to drill a single theme without turning study into a chore, and every question carries a written explanation so you learn from your mistakes immediately. Start with the Firearms Control Act basics, because that knowledge underpins everything else, then move into the practical handling topics, and finish with the self-defence and licensing quizzes where the trickiest legal questions live.
A practical word on the day itself. Bring your identity document, arrive early, and read each question twice. Competency questions are often worded to test whether you really understand a rule or just recognise a familiar phrase. The classic trap is the question that sounds reasonable on the surface, such as firing a warning shot or using force to recover a stolen phone, but is actually wrong in law. If you have done the self-defence quiz and read the explanations, those traps become obvious.
Pace yourself. There is no prize for finishing first, and rushing is how careless mistakes creep in. If a question stumps you, eliminate the answers you know are wrong before choosing between what is left. Often two of the four options are clearly incorrect, which turns a hard question into a coin flip you can win with a little reasoning. Trust the preparation you have done, and resist the urge to second-guess answers you were confident about a moment ago.
It also helps to know what happens after you pass. Your accredited training provider issues you with the competency training certificates, and SAPS then processes the competency certificate itself. Only once that is in hand do you submit the licence application for your specific firearm, together with your identity document, proof of address, fingerprints and a written motivation explaining why you need it. The whole process takes time, so the sooner you pass the theory, the sooner the rest of the chain can begin. Treat the competency test not as the finish line but as the first real step toward lawful firearm ownership.
Weighting matters when your study time is limited. The Firearms Control Act, safe handling and self-defence law carry the most questions and deserve the bulk of your attention. Firearm-specific knowledge about handguns, shotguns and rifles is important but more intuitive once you understand the basics of how each type works. If you only have a single evening, spend it on the Act and the self-defence quiz, because those two areas separate the people who pass from the people who come back for a second attempt.
That said, do not skip the firearm-specific topics entirely. A surprising number of applicants who breeze through the legal questions stumble on basic mechanical knowledge, such as the difference between a revolver and a semi-automatic pistol, what calibre means, or why you must only ever use ammunition that matches the markings on the firearm. These are not difficult concepts, but they are easy to overlook when your attention is fixed on the law. A balanced study session touches every one of the six topics at least once, even if the legal areas get the most time.
Finally, think about how you will actually remember all this. Cramming the night before rarely works for a test that mixes law, safety and mechanics. Space your practice out over several days, return to the quizzes you found hardest, and explain the tricky rules out loud to someone else. If you can teach the proportionality rule or the four safety rules to a friend in your own words, you have genuinely learned them, and that is exactly the depth of understanding the competency assessment is designed to reward.
Used properly, free practice tests are the most efficient way to prepare for the theory side of competency. They turn dry legislation into bite-sized, memorable questions and they show you exactly where your knowledge is thin before SAPS does. Just remember that the practical handling assessment is a separate hurdle handled by your accredited training provider, and that this site prepares the theory, not the live-fire component.