Starter Simulator
Try 20 realistic questions before you commit to anything. No credit card.
- 20 High-Quality Questions
- Authentic Exam Interface
- Detailed Explanations
- Unlimited Retakes
- Full Question Bank
- Advanced Analytics
Built by PMs who've taken the NCLEX-PN and know what the real exam looks like. Start free with 20 scenario-based questions. No credit card. No filler.
Same interface, same question types — MCQ, drag-and-drop, hotspot. No surprises on test day.
Domain-level analytics across all 4 exam guide domains — so you spend your remaining study time on what actually matters.
Every answer explains the nursing reasoning behind it — written by certified instructors who passed this exam, not by marketers.
The free simulator gives you a real feel for the questions. When you're serious about passing on the first attempt, premium has everything you need.
Try 20 realistic questions before you commit to anything. No credit card.
Everything you need to pass on the first attempt. 700+ questions, full mock exams, domain-level analytics across all 4 exam guide domains.
The old NCLEX-PN exam was knowledge-based. You memorized definitions from the official nursing test plan, sat down, and answered questions about what a quality management plan is. That exam is gone. The current NCLEX-PN tests situational judgment — NCLEX gives you a scenario with a cloud professional mid-crisis and asks you to choose the best next action.
That shift is why so many people who studied hard still don't pass. They practiced recall, but the exam tested application. A good NCLEX-PN exam simulator has to reflect that. Every question in our bank is a scenario, not a definition. The answer choices are written to be close — two of them will look plausible to someone who understands the concept but hasn't internalized NCLEX's specific mindset on it.
The explanations are where the real learning happens. Not "option B is correct because it aligns with NCLEX principles" — that tells you nothing. Our explanations break down why the wrong answers are wrong, what principle eliminates each one, and what the scenario is actually testing.
The current NCLEX-PN is built around four domains from NCLEX's exam guide. Domain 1 (Cloud Concepts) is 24% of the exam. Domain 2 (Security and Compliance) is 30%. Domain 3 (Cloud Technology and Services) is 34% — the largest single domain. Domain 4 (Billing, Pricing, and Support) is 12%.
Domains 2 and 3 together are 64% of your score. Most candidates are comfortable with Cloud Concepts but feel underprepared when they hit Security and Compliance (30%) and the breadth of Cloud Technology and Services (34%) — from core compute, storage, and networking services to the nursing global infrastructure. Our simulator covers all four domains proportionally, so your practice sessions match the actual exam weighting.
The performance analytics after each session show your score by domain. If you're scoring 82% in Cloud Concepts but 54% in Security and Compliance, you know where to spend the next week. That's a much more efficient way to study than grinding through random questions and hoping you improve.
Start with the free 20 questions without looking anything up. Treat it like a diagnostic. When you review your results, don't just check which answers were right — read every explanation, including the ones you got right by process of elimination. That's where most of the learning is.
When you move to premium, use the domain-specific mini-exams before the full mock exams. Attack your weakest domain first. After two or three focused sessions on Security and Compliance or Cloud Technology and Services, go back to the full mock exam and check whether those scores moved. Most people see 10–15 point jumps in weak domains after targeted practice.
The NCLEX-PN exam uses two question types: multiple choice (one correct answer) and multiple response (two or more correct answers). Our simulator mirrors both formats so the interface itself is never a surprise on exam day. Practice reading each question carefully to spot how many answers it expects.
If you're new to NCLEX, start with NCLEX-PN. There are no prerequisites at all — no required degree, education hours, or work experience. That makes it one of the few NCLEX credentials that's genuinely accessible at the very start of a cloud career.
The NCLEX-RN also has no formal prerequisites, but NCLEX recommends around one year of hands-on experience and it's a noticeably harder, associate-level exam. If you're earlier in your journey, the NCLEX-PN is the right starting point, and the fundamentals you build carry directly into your NCLEX-RN prep later.
The NCLEX-PN exam is 65 questions with a 90-minute time limit, scored 100–1000 with a passing score of 700. It's the foundational entry point to nursing certification, and significantly less complex than the NCLEX-RN. Most candidates who prepare seriously with good practice questions pass on the first attempt.
"Passed the NCLEX-PN exam on first attempt with over 90 minutes to spare. Scored Above Target in every domain. NCLEXPeak's questions perfectly mimic the actual test format."
— Yolanda Eberhardt, NCLEX-PN Certified
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