Start a realistic practice session
Our full mock uses the current published format: 24 multiple-choice questions and a 45-minute timer. You need 18 correct answers to reach the 75% practice threshold.
Start the 24-question mock test
This is an independent practice experience. Its questions are original, and its balanced topic selection is an editorial study choice. We do not claim that the official test uses the same topic distribution.
What happens during the mock
The timer begins when the questions load. You can move backwards and forwards, mark questions for review and change an answer before finishing. Answer explanations remain hidden until the practice has ended. This protects the value of the score as a genuine check of recall.
At 5 minutes remaining, the timer changes appearance and provides a restrained announcement for assistive technology. When time reaches zero, the practice is submitted automatically.
What your practice result includes
After finishing, you will see:
- correct, incorrect and unanswered totals;
- your percentage and whether it reaches the practice threshold;
- time used and average time per question;
- performance by editorial topic;
- explanations and factual source links;
- options to practise mistakes or begin a new test.
The result is always called a practice result. It is not an official result and cannot predict or guarantee the outcome of a booked test.
Before relying on a score
One strong result is encouraging, but it is a narrow sample. Use several attempts, revisit weak topics and study the current official handbook. The Practice Readiness label considers recent local activity, but deliberately avoids claiming a precise chance of passing.
Your answers and results stay in this browser. There is no account and no cross-device synchronisation. You can export or clear the local record from the privacy and progress page.
Other ways to practise
If you are still learning the material, begin with an untimed quick quiz or practice by topic. Use the full mock when you want to check pacing and unaided recall.