National Strength and Conditioning (NSCA-CPT)

Get NSCA-CPT Certified with the Least Amount of Studying – Complete Study Guide and Practice Test

About the Exam

The exam is 3 hours long and divided into 2 formats, multiple-choice and Video.

This exam is administered by the National Strength and Conditioning Association.

There are 4 components of Multiple Choice questions as follows:

Assessment and Consultation: includes appraisal of general health, initial interview, review of medical history, fitness evaluation, weight and nutrition.

Fitness Program Planning: design, adaptation, setting goals and special populations.

Techniques: free weights, machines, including cardiovascular, and non-machine exercise

Safety, Legal and Emergency
Video Tape Section

The Video tape segment has thirty-five questions on techniques, fitness testing protocols and functional anatomy.

 

Exam Content

Consultation & Assessment    20%   28 questions

Program Planning   35%   49 questions

Technique   35%   49 questions

Safety, Legal and Emergency   10%   14 questions

 

Pass the NSCA with the Least amount of Studying

 

If you are preparing for this exam, we can help!

We recommend the NSCA study guide. Complete study package prepared by dedicated professionals. We have done all the work for you! Includes sample questions.

NSCA-CPT Study Guide & Practice Test

 

 

 

 

NSCA Flash Cards & Practice Test Questions

The best way to study for a Content Driven exam is to memorize as much as possible and know the exam material inside out.

Repetition is the key and nothing beats flash cards for memorizing and learning course material fast and thoroughly.

Our full time staff of exam experts and researchers have gone through ALL the material and refined, distilled and reduced everything down to 250+ concepts that you absolutely must know to ACE this tough test.

NSCA-CPT Flash Cards & Practice Test Questions

 

 

The Test Preparation web site is a service to visitors interested in the NSCA-CPT and is not affiliated in any way with the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA).