Practice questions for the Florida Community Association Manager (CAM) exam, one at a time, with instant feedback and a per-topic score so you can see exactly which content areas need more work. The first 5 questions are free.
This is a free Florida CAM practice test for the Community Association Manager exam — exam-style questions and answers, one at a time, with instant feedback and a statute-referenced explanation on every question. Filter by content area and watch your per-topic score, so you know exactly which subjects still need work before exam day.
The real exam is 100 scored questions in 3 hours, closed book, and you need 75% to pass. Practicing the way the state actually asks questions — then reading which statute each answer comes from — is the most reliable way to walk in confident.
Use the filter chips to drill a single one of the five official content areas, or practice all 308 questions mixed together. Spend the most time where the exam is heaviest — Procedure (25%) and Budget (25%) together are half the exam.
Active recall — answering a question, then checking the statute-referenced explanation — locks the material in far better than re-reading the Condo Act. Because the CAM exam is closed book, you need the law in your head, and every question here trains exactly that recall.
The first 5 questions are free with no account. Full access opens all 308 practice questions and the timed 100-question simulation. To learn an area in depth, switch to the Florida CAM study guide, or read how hard the CAM exam really is.
The free quiz includes 5 sample questions so you can see the format and difficulty. Full access unlocks all 308 practice questions across every content area, plus topic filters and the timed exam simulation.
The Florida CAM exam requires 75% to pass — 75 of 100 questions. Aim to consistently score 80%+ in practice across all content areas before you schedule your exam.
No. These are original practice questions written to cover the same topics tested on the DBPR CAM exam, designed to build real understanding of the statutes rather than memorization.