Taking my AME next week and looking for last-minute tips from people who've been through it. I feel like I've covered the content, but exam-day strategy is something the study guides don't really address.
A few specific things I'm wondering about: how strict is the time management, and should I flag and skip difficult exam prep questions rather than spending too long on them? Any patterns in how the questions are ordered?
I've been running through the ame technology & digital tools timed to simulate real conditions, and my pacing feels okay. I also did a final review of aviation medical examiner certification for the sections I was least confident about. But I know practice conditions are never exactly like the real thing.
Day-before strategy: do you review notes, do a light practice session, or rest completely? I've heard conflicting advice on this.
For the people asking about study timelines: I studied 82 minutes per day for 12 weeks working full time. It's absolutely doable without burning out. The key is consistency — missing days hurts more than extending your timeline.
For the people asking about study timelines: I studied 83 minutes per day for 14 weeks working full time. It's absolutely doable without burning out. The key is consistency — missing days hurts more than extending your timeline.
Late to this thread but wanted to add — the practice test section trips up more people than any other part. If you're scoring below 70% there in practice, treat it as your only focus for at least a week before moving on. Breadth at the expense of depth in that area is a common mistake.
I took mine about six months ago while working full time, so I get it. Honestly the time pressure wasn't as bad as I expected, but I'd still say flag the ones you're unsure about and keep moving -- don't sit there grinding on one question for five minutes when there are easier points waiting further down. I studied in 20-30 minute chunks before work and on lunch breaks mostly, and that actually worked better than long weekend cramming sessions because the material stayed fresher.
The one thing nobody mentioned to me was how mentally draining the last third of the test gets even when you know the content. Bring water if they allow it, and don't skip breakfast. You've done the work, so trust that. Second-guessing yourself on stuff you actually know is what kills people's scores more than gaps in knowledge.
Honestly, I almost bailed two days before mine because I convinced myself I hadn't studied the right stuff. Kept second-guessing every answer in my practice sets. What helped me most was going back to basics the night before -- I used the free ame aviation medical standards regulations questions just to rebuild my confidence, not to cram new material. That shift in mindset was everything.
On exam day, time management wasn't as brutal as I feared but you do need to trust your first instinct and move on. If you're flagging questions, don't let them eat your brain space -- mark it and go, come back with fresh eyes. The stuff I stressed about most ended up being the stuff I knew cold. You've got this.
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