Pass the New 128-Question Citizenship Test.
Free, bilingual practice for the U.S. naturalization civics test. Officer-style questions, spaced-repetition flashcards, and state-specific answers — built for the way the interview actually works.
If USCIS received your Form N-400 on or after October 20, 2025, you take the 2025 civics test: 128 study questions, 20 asked at the interview, 12 correct to pass.
Not sure? Your USCIS interview notice tells you which test applies.
How it works
Pick your test
Tell us when you filed Form N-400 and we'll steer you to the right 128-question or 100-question bank.
Study like the officer will ask
Oral-style practice, flashcards you can flip out loud, and vocabulary lists for the reading and writing portion.
Track mastery, walk in ready
Progress is saved on your device. Take a full simulated interview anytime — we'll stop early at pass or fail like the real thing.
Free tools
Common questions
Which citizenship test will I take — the 2008 or the 2025 version?
It depends on when you filed Form N-400. If USCIS received your naturalization application on or after October 20, 2025, you take the 2025 civics test (128 questions). If you filed before October 20, 2025, you take the 2008 civics test (100 questions). Your interview notice will confirm which version applies. Our practice tools cover both.
How many questions are on the new 2025 citizenship test?
The 2025 test has a study bank of 128 questions. At your interview, the USCIS officer asks you up to 20 questions from that bank, and you must answer 12 correctly to pass. The officer stops early once you reach 12 correct — or 9 incorrect.
How is the 2025 test different from the old one?
Three big changes: the study bank grew from 100 to 128 questions, the number of questions asked doubled from 10 to 20, and the passing requirement rose from 6 correct to 12 correct. The test is oral (not multiple choice) — the officer reads the questions aloud and you answer in your own words.
What happens if I fail the civics test?
You get a second chance. USCIS will reschedule you to retake the failed portion, generally 60–90 days after your first interview. If you fail the retest, your application is denied — but you can reapply.
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