NCLEX-RN Full Length Practice Test
Full Length Test (150 Questions) with realistic clinical decision-making—result after exam, detailed answer review, and pass–fail performance analysis to help you improve faster.
150 Questions
Realistic NCLEX-style
Result After Exam
Answer Review
Pass–Fail Analysis
What You Get
These full-length NCLEX-RN practice exams are built to help you develop stamina, pacing, and safe decision-making across mixed client-needs categories—just like the real exam experience.
Exam-Length Practice
Train endurance and time management with a full 150-question set.
Performance Feedback
See your result after finishing, then review answers to fix weak areas.
NCLEX Thinking
Focus on safety, prioritization, delegation, and clinical judgment patterns.
1
NCLEX-RN Full-Length Practice Test – 1
A complete 150-question mixed exam to build real test stamina and decision-making.
150 Questions
Result & Review
Pass–Fail Analysis
2
NCLEX-RN Full-Length Practice Test – 2
Another 150-question mixed set to reinforce weak areas and strengthen judgment.
150 Questions
Result & Review
Pass–Fail Analysis
Need the complete NCLEX-RN resource hub?
Explore full-length exams, domain-wise practice tests, NGN case studies, topic-wise drills, PDFs, and more—organized in one place.
How to use full-length NCLEX practice tests effectively
- Simulate exam conditions: Sit for one uninterrupted block, avoid looking up answers, and pace yourself.
- Review in a “safety-first” order: Why is the correct option safest? What harm could the wrong options cause?
- Track patterns (not just topics): Missed priorities, delegation errors, medication safety, isolation mistakes, lab interpretation, and sepsis/shock recognition.
- Retest with intention: After review, drill weak domains/topics, then return to another full-length exam.
What these tests help you master
- Prioritization and triage (unstable vs stable, acute vs chronic, safety threats first)
- Delegation and scope of practice (RN vs LPN/LVN vs UAP)
- Medication safety and monitoring (high-alert meds, adverse effects, calculations)
- Clinical judgment under pressure (recognize cues, act safely, evaluate outcomes)
Tip: Take Test 1 first, review deeply, then take Test 2 after targeted remediation—this is the fastest way to see measurable improvement.