All PTCB Practice Tests
Start with a full-length exam to find your weak domains, then drill them with the section quizzes. Everything is free, timed, and randomized on every attempt.
90-Question Full PTCE Exam
MOST POPULARFull-length practice exam with 90 questions mirroring the real PTCE, with the same length, the same 1-hour-50-minute timer, and the same domain mix as the official 2026 content outline: Medications, Federal Requirements, Patient Safety, and Order Entry.
45-Question Practice Exam
NEW FOR 2026A half-length PTCE simulation for when you don't have two hours: 45 questions in 55 minutes, weighted to the same four domains as the real 2026 exam, randomized on every attempt.
Master the largest PTCE domain: 35% of the 2026 exam. 30 questions covering generic and brand names, drug classifications, interactions, side effects, indications, stability, and storage.
Pharmacy law without the state-by-state noise: 20 questions on DEA controlled-substance schedules and prescriptions, FDA recalls, REMS programs, DSCSA tracing, and hazardous handling, which is 18.75% of the 2026 exam.
The second-largest PTCE domain at 23.75%: 25 questions on high-alert and look-alike/sound-alike drugs, error-prevention strategies, event reporting, prescription error types, and infection prevention.
22.5% of the 2026 exam: 25 questions on sig code interpretation, days-supply math, NDC and lot numbers, administration equipment, and procedures for returns and expired stock.
Twenty calculation questions with fully worked, step-by-step solutions: unit conversions, ratio and proportion, percentage strength, dilutions and alligation, days supply, weight-based dosing, and drip rates.
Thirty questions on the most-dispensed medications in the US: brand ↔ generic matching, drug classes, and primary indications: the fastest way to bank points in the PTCE's biggest domain.
Twenty-five questions on the abbreviations every technician must translate instantly (dosing frequencies, routes, timing) plus the ISMP error-prone abbreviations that should never appear on a label.
