This FAQ answers common NREMT logistics questions in one place and links to deeper free resources. Administrative details can change, especially fees and policy wording, so verify current official requirements directly with the National Registry at nremt.org.
Start with the free NREMT study guide, then choose your level: EMT, Paramedic, AEMT, or EMR. For practice, use the free EMT, Paramedic, AEMT, and EMR tests. For exam mechanics, read how CAT works and the TEI guide.
EMT is computer-adaptive with 70 to 120 items, including 10 unscored items. Paramedic is computer-adaptive with 110 to 150 items. EMR is computer-adaptive. AEMT is the exception: a fixed-length linear exam with 135 items, 100 scored.
The EMT exam has a 2-hour limit. The Paramedic exam has a 3.5-hour limit. The AEMT exam has a 3.5-hour limit. Check nremt.org for current official scheduling details and candidate rules.
NREMT passing is based on an ability threshold, not a fixed percentage correct. Computer-adaptive exams estimate whether you are above or below the standard with high confidence. The CAT explainer covers why that is different from a classroom percentage score.
The National Registry sets the exam fee and it can change. Do not rely on an old dollar amount from a study page; check nremt.org for the current fee before you register.
Under current National Registry policy, candidates may retest after a short waiting period; after three unsuccessful attempts, official remediation is required before three further attempts, for six total. Confirm the current retest policy at nremt.org.
Results are typically posted within a couple of business days, but timing can vary. Use your official National Registry account and nremt.org for the authoritative status.
For EMT, 70 is the minimum and 120 is the maximum. A computer-adaptive exam stops when it has enough confidence, reaches the maximum, or time runs out. Question count alone does not tell you whether you passed. Read how the NREMT CAT works.
It can be hard because it tests judgment, scope, sequence, and prioritization under pressure. Realistic patient scenarios with plausible wrong answers are better preparation than easy recall-only quizzes. Start with the study guide and the free practice test for your level.
Technology-enhanced items can include multiple response, ordered response or build-list, option-box or drop-down choices, and clinical-judgment case scenarios. Practice the format as well as the content with the NREMT TEI explainer.
Use the free Impulse EMT, Paramedic, AEMT, and EMR practice tests, read the level guides and explainers, then try the Impulse app free during the open beta.
| Level | Format | Time and items |
|---|---|---|
| EMR | Computer-adaptive | Verify current administrative details at nremt.org. |
| EMT | Computer-adaptive | 70-120 items, 10 unscored, 2-hour limit. |
| AEMT | Fixed-length linear, not adaptive | 135 items, 100 scored, 3.5-hour limit. |
| Paramedic | Computer-adaptive | 110-150 items, 3.5-hour limit. |
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