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The FE/EIT Exam at a Glance

Test Overview

The Fundamentals of Engineering (FE) exam, otherwise known as the Engineer-in-Training (EIT) exam, is administered by the National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying and is required for any individual interested in becoming a professional engineer.  The FE exam covers subject matter taught in a typical EAC/ABET-accredited undergraduate engineering program and covers a comprehensive range of subjects in engineering.

Each exam is 8 hours long, with one 4-hour session in the morning and another in the afternoon. During the morning session, all examinees take a general exam common to all disciplines. During the afternoon session, examinees can opt to take a general exam or a discipline-specific (chemical, civil, electrical, environmental, industrial, or mechanical) exam.  Examinees must participate in both sessions on the same day. Both exams are closed book, and reference material is supplied.
The FE exam consists of 180 multiple-choice questions (120 questions in the general morning exam and 60 questions in the afternoon exam) and is held in conventional English and SI units.

The topics for the morning exam are weighted accordingly:

15% - Mathematics
10% - Engineering Mechanics (Statics & Dynamics) 
 9% - Electricity & Magnetism 
 9% - Chemistry
 8% - Engineering Economics 
 7% - Engineering Probability & Statistics 
 7% - Fluid Mechanics
 7% - Material Properties 
 7% - Strength of Materials
 7% - Computers
 7% - Ethics and Business Practices
 7% - Thermodynamics

Your Score

Examinees must earn a scaled score of 70 or higher to pass the FE exam.  Scores arrive approximately 8 weeks after the exam date however the schedule varies by state.

How to Register

The FE exam is given every April and October, and is typically taken by junior or senior college engineering students. Registration and requirements for taking the exam vary from state to state. Contact your state licensing board or visit els-examreg.org for rules and regulations for each state and to register for an exam.

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