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July 14, 2026

Free CMA Practice Test: 510 Questions Across All 8 Domains

Take a free CMA practice test with 510 original questions covering all 8 AAMA exam domains. Timed, with explanations, no signup wall.

How to Use Free CMA Practice Tests Effectively

A practice test is only as useful as what you do after you finish it. The goal is not to memorize the questions you see. The goal is to use each test as a diagnostic, then close the gap before you sit down again. The study loop that works: take a timed full-length test, review every wrong answer with the explanation until you understand why the right answer is right and the others are wrong, identify the domain where you missed the most questions, spend focused study time on that domain, then take another full-length test to confirm the gap closed. Repeat. If you skip the review step, you are just guessing faster. If you skip the focused study step, you will keep missing the same domain forever. The 510-question bank at /cma/test is built for this loop. It covers all 8 AAMA content domains, every question has a written explanation, and the results screen shows a domain-by-domain breakdown so you can see exactly where you are weakest instead of just staring at a single score.

What to Look for in a Good CMA Practice Test

Not every free CMA practice test is worth your time. A few things separate the useful ones from the filler. First, coverage: the test should touch all 8 domains on the AAMA content outline — Medical Terminology, Anatomy and Physiology, Behavioral Science, Medical Law and Ethics, Pathophysiology, Clinical Patient Care, Administrative, and Pharmacology. If a free test skips Administrative or Behavioral Science, you are getting a fraction of the exam. Second, explanations: a score with no explanation teaches you nothing. Every question you get wrong should come with a written rationale. Third, timing: the real CMA exam is 200 questions in 3 hours. Practicing untimed builds a false sense of readiness. Fourth, no signup wall: you should be able to start a test without handing over an email address. One thing to be skeptical of: any site that advertises "official AAMA questions" is misrepresenting what they have. AAMA does not license its exam questions to third parties. Original questions written to the same content outline are the honest — and equally effective — version of the same product.

How many practice questions should I do before I am ready?

A reasonable floor is 300 or more practice questions with explanations, but the number is less important than the pattern. The benchmark that matters is scoring 80% or higher consistently across multiple full-length timed tests — not just once. One high score can be a lucky draw of easier questions. Three or four in a row means the knowledge is real. Domain consistency matters even more than the overall score. A 90% overall that hides a 55% in one domain is not readiness — it is a blind spot the real exam will find. Look at the domain breakdown after each test and only call yourself ready when no single domain is dragging.

Are free CMA practice tests as useful as AAMA official study materials?

They are useful in different ways, and the honest answer is that you should use both. AAMA official resources like the CMA content outline and official study guide are solid for content overview and confirming what is in scope. They are not exhaustive and do not give you high volumes of drill questions with explanations. That is where free practice tests earn their keep. Working through hundreds of questions with rationales builds pattern recognition that a shorter study guide cannot match — you start seeing how the exam phrases distractors and where it likes to trick you. Use AAMA materials to map the territory. Use practice tests to walk it repeatedly until it feels familiar.

How similar are practice test questions to the real CMA exam?

The domains are the same, the difficulty is in the same range, and the concepts tested overlap heavily. The wording is not identical — AAMA does not publish its real exam questions and does not license them to prep sites. That is actually fine for how you should be studying. If a practice test question tests the same concept as an exam question, mastering the concept transfers directly. If you tried to memorize the exact wording of practice questions, none of it would transfer, because the exam will ask about the same idea in different words. Study the concepts, not the sentences.

Put this knowledge to the test

Free CMA practice tests, study guides, and flashcards — all 8 exam topic areas.

Take a Free CMA Practice Test →