The FE Exam Does Not Have a Fixed Passing Score

This surprises most candidates: there is no set number of questions you must answer correctly to pass the FE exam. NCEES uses a process called scaled scoring, which adjusts for slight variations in exam difficulty between administrations.

The passing standard (called the "cut score") is determined by a panel of licensed professional engineers who evaluate the minimum competency required for a newly graduated engineer. This score is then converted to a scaled score.

How NCEES Calculates Your Score

The FE exam has 110 questions. NCEES scores your exam, then applies a statistical scaling process to convert your raw score to a scaled score. The passing scaled score is approximately 70 on a scale that typically runs from 1 to 150, but NCEES does not publish the exact conversion or the cut score publicly — it varies slightly by exam version and discipline.

What NCEES does tell you: you will receive a Pass or Fail result, along with a diagnostic report showing your performance by topic area. You will not see your exact score.

What Percentage Do You Need to Get Right?

Based on historical pass rate data and candidate reports, most engineers estimate that correctly answering approximately 50–60% of questions is sufficient to pass — though this varies by discipline and exam version. The FE is designed so that a minimally competent engineer can pass, not just expert-level candidates.

This means you do not need to get an A — consistent, broad competency across all topics matters more than perfection on any one area.

Pass Rates by Discipline

NCEES publishes annual pass rate data. First-attempt pass rates for recent graduates generally run:

  • FE Civil: ~74% (first-time takers)
  • FE Electrical & Computer: ~72%
  • FE Mechanical: ~74%
  • FE Chemical: ~72%
  • FE Other Disciplines: ~62%

Repeat takers pass at significantly lower rates — around 30–40%. This makes passing on your first attempt very important.

What the Diagnostic Report Tells You

If you fail, NCEES sends a diagnostic report showing which topic areas you performed in the bottom, middle, or top third of candidates. This helps you identify weak areas for your next attempt. Common weak areas for FE Electrical candidates include power systems, electromagnetics, and control systems.

How Long to Wait Before Retaking

NCEES allows you to take the FE up to three times per 12-month period, with a mandatory waiting period between attempts. After three consecutive failures, you must wait 12 months before trying again.

Study Strategy to Pass on Your First Attempt

  • Use the official NCEES FE Reference Handbook extensively during practice — it is the only reference allowed during the exam
  • Take at least one full-length timed practice exam under real conditions
  • Focus on high-weight topics for your discipline — check the NCEES exam specifications
  • Do not neglect your weakest topics — broad competency matters more than depth in one area