NBPME Part 1 study timeline — how far out should you actually start?

by derek_v 97 views5 replies
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derek_vOP
May 25, 2026

Started my Part 1 prep about 14 weeks before the exam date and still felt rushed the last two weeks. Most of my classmates who passed on the first try said they started between 12 and 16 weeks out, so that range seems about right. If you're working through rotations at the same time, push toward the 16-week end.

The basic sciences block is the heaviest lift. Anatomy and physiology together probably took up 40% of my total study time. Biochemistry was manageable once I stopped trying to memorize pathways and started understanding the logic behind them. Microbiology was lighter than expected.

Practice exams were the best predictor of my actual score. I averaged 68% across four full-length practice tests and ended up with a 71% on the real thing. The variance was low, which tells me the practice material is decent quality.

Podiatric-specific content shows up more than you'd expect for Part 1. Don't neglect lower extremity anatomy or the biomechanics material — questions on those sections are usually worth a few extra points over the general med school average.

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priya_s
May 27, 2026

Biochem was harder for me than anatomy, which is the opposite of most people. Depends a lot on your undergrad background. Be honest with yourself about where you're weakest before you build your schedule.

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fatima_y
May 28, 2026

14 weeks is solid. I started at 10 and passed but it was stressful the last month. Wouldn't recommend it if you have any choice in the timing.

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rashid_c
May 28, 2026

The clinical correlation questions at the end of each section surprised me. Part 1 is supposed to be basic science but there's more application-level stuff than I expected. Don't study in pure isolation mode.

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StudyBuddy_A
June 12, 2026

Quick update since this thread helped me set my own timeline. I started about 13 weeks out and just took a full-length practice test this morning, pulled a 78 which is the first time I've cleared my pass threshold so I'm feeling a lot better than I did three weeks ago. I'm still juggling rotations like you mentioned, and honestly that's the part that eats your study hours alive, so I'd lean toward the 16 week end if you're doing both. The thing that moved my score wasn't more content review, it was hammering practice questions and actually reading why I got stuff wrong.

One resource that helped me drill weak spots was this free set of free epa lead safe renovation practices questions, and working through those plus a couple of timed mocks made a real difference. I'm planning to sit the real exam in about four weeks. If my next practice score holds I'll go, if it dips I've got buffer to push it a week. Build in that wiggle room. You don't want rotations forcing your hand on a date you're not ready for.

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StudyBuddy_A
June 12, 2026

I failed my first attempt, so take this for what it's worth. Started at 14 weeks too, but my problem wasn't the timeline. It was how I studied. First time around I just read through everything once and did a ton of passive review, highlighting and rereading notes, and I felt productive but I wasn't actually testing myself. The exam exposed that fast.

Second time I started at 13 weeks but flipped the whole approach. I did practice questions from week one instead of saving them for the end, and I reviewed every single one I got wrong until I understood why. Honestly the question count mattered more than the calendar for me. So yeah, 12 to 16 weeks is fine, but if you spend those weeks just reading you'll feel exactly as rushed as you would in eight. Test yourself early and don't wait to feel ready.

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