The PMP exam is 230 minutes for 180 questions. That is 76 seconds per question on paper. In practice, with two breaks and a tutorial screen, you have closer to 70 seconds per question if you want any review buffer.
Knowing the material gets you to the exam center. The plan in this article gets you out of the exam center with PASS on the screen.
The Night Before
Do not study new material. Anything you learn the night before will not be retained well enough to help, and it will eat into the sleep you actually need.
What to do instead:
- Review your one-page formula sheet (EVM, PERT, three-point estimate, EAC variants). If you have not built one, read the EVM cheat sheet and the EAC formulas guide and write the formulas by hand once.
- Pack your bag: ID, confirmation email, water bottle (for the locker, not the desk), a snack, comfortable layers because exam centers run cold.
- Set two alarms.
- Sleep at your normal time. Do not "go to bed early," that almost always backfires.
If you are taking the exam online at home, do the room scan and tech check the day before, not the morning of.
The Morning Of
Eat a normal breakfast with protein. Skip experimental foods. This is not the day for a new caffeine dose either. Match what you drink before practice exams, because caffeine spikes mess with focus halfway through a 4-hour test.
Arrive 30 minutes early. Use the bathroom right before you sit down even if you do not feel like you need to. The first break is 90+ minutes away.
Bring a sweater. Almost every Prometric center is too cold.
The Clock Budget
The exam splits into three sections of 60 questions each, with an optional 10-minute break after section 1 and after section 2. Section breaks do not count against your 230 minutes.
Here is the pacing target you should walk in with:
| Section | Question range | Target time | Time per question |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Q1 to Q60 | 75 min | 75 sec |
| Break 1 | 10 min | ||
| 2 | Q61 to Q120 | 75 min | 75 sec |
| Break 2 | 10 min | ||
| 3 | Q121 to Q180 | 75 min | 75 sec |
| Buffer | review flags | 5 min |
If you finish a section in 70 minutes, do not rush into the break. Use the extra 5 minutes to revisit your flagged questions in that section before you move on. Once you click to advance, you cannot go back.
Read that line again. Once you click to advance to the next section, you cannot go back to flag or change questions in the previous section. This is the rule that catches the most candidates off guard.
The 90-Second Rule
If you have not picked an answer in 90 seconds, you will not pick a better one in 5 minutes.
What to do at 90 seconds:
- Eliminate any answer you know is wrong.
- Pick the best of what is left.
- Flag the question.
- Move on.
Coming back later with a fresh brain almost always works better than grinding the same question into the floor. Candidates who pass tend to flag 15 to 30 questions per section. Candidates who fail tend to flag 3 to 5 because they refuse to leave a question without "solving" it.
The flag button is your friend. Use it.
When to Flag vs. When to Commit
Flag a question if any of these are true:
- You are deciding between two answers and cannot tell why one is better.
- The question feels like it is testing a topic you know you are weak on.
- You did the math twice and got different numbers.
- The stem is long and you suspect you missed a detail.
Commit (do not flag) if:
- You are confident in the answer.
- The question is short, situational, and your gut answer matches your reasoning.
- You eliminated 2 of 4 choices and the remaining pick lines up with PMI's "what does a good PM do next" logic.
Flagging everything you are unsure about is fine. Coming back to 25 flagged questions in section 1 with 8 minutes left is not.
The Break Strategy
You get two breaks. Use both. Even if you feel fine.
Why: cognitive load drops measurably after 60 questions. The 10 minutes resets your focus enough to claw back accuracy in section 2 and 3. Skipping the break is a flex that costs candidates 4 to 6 questions on the back half of the test.
What to do during the break:
- Walk to the bathroom. Move your legs.
- Drink water. Eat a small snack (banana, almonds, a square of dark chocolate).
- Do not review notes. The break is for your brain, not for cramming.
- Do not think about the questions you flagged. Reset.
If you are testing at home, get up and walk to a different room. Do not stay in the chair.
The Brain Freeze Protocol
You will hit a question at some point that feels like it was written in a different language. Your brain will go blank. Heart rate up. Eyes glaze.
Here is the 60-second reset:
- Close your eyes for 5 seconds. Breathe out longer than you breathe in.
- Read the last sentence of the stem first. That sentence almost always contains the actual question being asked.
- Read the answer choices before the rest of the stem. This primes your brain to look for what matters.
- Read the stem one more time, hunting for the words that match the answer choices.
If you still have nothing in 60 more seconds, flag it, pick the answer that sounds most like "what a senior PM would do," and move on.
For more on stem-reading under time pressure, see PMP situational questions: how to read the stem. The 4-pass method in that article was built for exam-day pressure.
Bias Patrol on Exam Day
Three biases hit hardest in the last 30 questions when you are tired:
- Anchoring. First answer that "looks right" gets picked even when a better answer is below it.
- Availability. A topic you studied last night feels more important than it is.
- Confirmation. You read the stem in a way that supports the answer you already half-picked.
If you catch yourself committing to an answer in under 10 seconds without reading all 4 choices, slow down. Read all four. The third or fourth choice is the right one more often than candidates expect.
For the deeper version of this, the 3 biases that fail PMP candidates breakdown is worth a re-read the week before exam.
The Last 15 Questions
If you are at question 165 with 10 minutes left, your strategy changes.
Stop reading every word. Pick a clear answer in under 30 seconds. If you cannot, guess and move on. A blind guess scores 25%. An unanswered question scores 0%.
Do not leave any question blank. There is no penalty for wrong answers on the PMP.
What to Do When You Finish
You will finish the last section either with time to spare or with the clock against you.
If you have 5+ minutes after question 180:
- Review only the questions you flagged in section 3.
- Do not change an answer unless you have a concrete reason. Most "I changed it at the last minute" stories end with the candidate changing right to wrong.
If you have less than 5 minutes:
- Make sure every question has an answer.
- Submit.
When the screen shows the result, read it twice. Then breathe.
The 7-Day Pre-Exam Checklist
| Day before exam | What to do |
|---|---|
| 7 | Last full mock exam. Score honestly. Review every miss. |
| 6 | Drill weakest domain only. 30 questions. |
| 5 | Drill second-weakest domain. 30 questions. |
| 4 | Read the PMP ECO cheat sheet. Make sure every task makes sense. |
| 3 | Half-day light review. Walk. Sleep early. |
| 2 | Pack bag. Confirm location. No new material. |
| 1 | Formula sheet review. Light walk. Normal bedtime. |
| 0 | Exam day. Trust the plan. |
One Sentence to Remember
When you sit down at the desk, the only sentence that matters is this:
"Speed on the easy ones buys time for the hard ones."
Most failures are not knowledge failures. They are pacing failures. Walk in with the clock budget above and you will finish with time to flag-review, which is where 4 to 8 points hide that you would otherwise leave on the table.
PassCoach.ai is in beta waitlist. First 100 signups get lifetime access for $99. Every practice question comes with per-option rationales, so you learn why each wrong answer is wrong, not just which letter was right. That is the difference between scoring 70% on Study Hall and walking out of Prometric with PASS on the screen.
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