Passing the FCC Amateur Radio License (Technician, General, Extra) is a milestone — but the journey to that milestone takes planning, not panic. This complete study guide gives you a week-by-week roadmap, breaks down every exam domain, and shows you exactly which topics to prioritize.
Whether you’re starting from zero or refreshing for a retake, this guide is built around one principle: active recall beats passive reading every time.
🗓️ Your 2-6-Week Study Plan
Weeks 1-2: Foundation
- Read the official candidate handbook end-to-end (60-90 min)
- Take a diagnostic practice test in the free app to identify your weakest 2-3 domains
- Begin daily 30-minute practice sessions focused on terminology and core concepts
- Master the highest-yield topics: frequency bands, modulation modes, antenna theory, Ohm’s law, FCC Part 97
Weeks 3-5: Domain Deep Dives
- Spend 3-4 days per domain, in order of weakness
- For each domain: read the chapter → take 20 practice questions → review wrong answers
- Build flashcards for any concept you miss twice
- Complete one 40-question mock test at the end of each week
Weeks 6-6: Integration & Mock Exams
- Take a full-length mock exam every 3-4 days
- Review every wrong answer — write the correct answer in your own words
- Drill weakest categories with the app’s filter feature
- Aim for 85%+ on mock exams before scheduling the real test
📚 All 8 Ham Radio Exam Domains Explained
1. Operating Procedures
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on Operating Procedures questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
2. Radio Wave Propagation
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on Radio Wave Propagation questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
3. Electrical Principles
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on Electrical Principles questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
4. Components & Circuits
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on Components & Circuits questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
5. Signals & Emissions
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on Signals & Emissions questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
6. Antennas
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on Antennas questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
7. RF Safety
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on RF Safety questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
8. Rules & Regulations
This domain typically accounts for 10-25% of the exam. Focus on understanding why procedures exist, not just memorizing steps. Use the free app’s category filter to drill specifically on Rules & Regulations questions until your score consistently exceeds 80%.
🎯 5 Sample Ham Radio Questions
Test where you stand right now:
Question 1
When may an amateur station send a message to a business?
Show Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: D — When neither the amateur nor their employer has a pecuniary interest in the communications
Explanation:
Question 2
Which of the following component package types have the least parasitic effects at frequencies above the HF range?
Show Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: D — Surface mount
Explanation:
Question 3
What is the purpose of C2 in the circuit shown in Figure E7 -2?
Show Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: D — It bypasses rectifier output ripple around D1
Explanation:
Question 4
What component changes 120 V AC power to a lower AC voltage for other uses?
Show Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: A — Transformer
Explanation:
Question 5
Which of the following precautions should be taken when measuring high voltages with a voltmeter?
Show Answer & Explanation
Correct Answer: D — Ensure that the voltmeter and its leads are rated for use at the voltages being measured
Explanation:
📋 Ham Radio Exam Quick Facts
🧠 The 5 Study Habits That Predict Ham Radio Success
- Active recall over passive reading. Re-reading notes feels productive but builds little long-term retention. Practice questions force your brain to retrieve information — the same skill the exam tests.
- Spaced repetition. Use the app’s flashcard feature daily. 15 minutes of spaced review beats 3 hours of cramming.
- Wrong-answer journaling. Keep a notebook of every question you miss with the correct reasoning. Re-read this notebook the morning of your exam.
- Mixed-domain practice. Don’t drill one domain in isolation for too long. The real exam shuffles domains — your practice should too.
- Mock exams under timed conditions. Sit at a desk, set a timer, no phone, no notes. Simulating the test environment dramatically reduces exam-day anxiety.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the best resource to study for the Ham Radio exam?
The official candidate handbook plus a question bank with at least 500+ questions. Our free Android app provides exactly that, with progress tracking and category filters.
How many practice questions should I do before the exam?
Aim for 800-1,500 unique practice questions before exam day. Less than that and you’re likely to encounter unfamiliar question styles on the real test.
Should I memorize formulas/facts, or focus on understanding?
Both — but understanding first. Memorizing without understanding fails when the exam rephrases a concept. Understanding without memorization fails when the exam asks for specific values. Use practice questions to test both.
How do I know if I’m ready to take the exam?
You’re ready when you can score 85%+ consistently on full-length mock exams across all domains. If your score swings wildly between mocks, you have weak spots that need more drilling.
🎯 Start Studying Today
The Ham Radio exam rewards consistency, not cramming. Commit to 30-60 minutes per day with our free app and you’ll walk into your testing center confident.