I've been working in water treatment for about four years and signed up for the CWS exam through WQA. The study guide is honestly overwhelming — there's so much material that I'm not sure how to prioritize. I've been putting in about 90 minutes a night for the last six weeks and my practice scores are around 70–72%.
From what I understand the passing threshold is around 70%, so I might technically be ready, but I don't feel ready. The water chemistry portions feel solid after years of field work, but the business and sales ethics sections feel completely disconnected from anything I do day-to-day in a treatment plant.
A coworker who passed two years ago said the regulatory and standards questions — NSF limits, EPA MCLs, that sort of thing — are more heavily tested than the study guide suggests. Is that still true for the current exam version? The guide seems to skim those topics but there's a lot of possible depth there.
I'm thinking about booking the exam for late July to give myself another three weeks. Anyone who sat recently have a sense of how the questions are distributed across content domains?
Passed mine at 76% after nine weeks of study. Water chemistry was the easiest section for me too. The hardest part was the installation and service questions — very specific about bypass valve procedures and things I don't touch in my current role.
Three more weeks sounds right if you're at 70–72%. I wouldn't sit it until you're hitting 75%+ consistently on practice sets — there's enough variance on test day that you want a real buffer.
I work in residential water treatment so the business ethics and sales sections felt natural to me. If you're coming from a treatment plant background, spend extra time on point-of-use versus point-of-entry distinctions and the sales compliance material — it's not intuitive from that experience.
The regulatory section was definitely heavier than I anticipated. I'd say 20–25% of what I saw touched on NSF/ANSI standards or EPA MCLs in some way. Know your contaminant limits cold — they show up more as specific numbers than conceptual questions.
Honestly, the hardest section for me was water chemistry. I've been doing this job for years and thought I had it down, but the exam goes way deeper than what you use day-to-day on the floor. The calculations tripped me up more than I expected. I studied in chunks, maybe 30 minutes on lunch and an hour after the kids went to bed, so I couldn't always do long focused sessions. What helped was doing the same practice problems over and over until they felt automatic, not just reading through the material.
Equipment and system design was the other one I didn't give enough credit early on. It wasn't impossible, but there's a lot of specific terminology that looks familiar until you see it on a timed question and your brain goes blank. If I were starting over I'd spend the first two weeks just on those two sections and save the softer stuff like regulations for the end since it's easier to pick up fast. You've got six weeks of work in already, so trust that and don't try to cram everything equally in the final stretch.