Exam in 14 days. Tight, but real for a retaker. This plan shows exactly what to cover, what to cut, and how each day looks.
14 days × 6h = 84 total hours — 70% of typical NCLEX-PN prep. All published topics still fit, just barely. Realistic for a retaker with prior exposure. Brutal for a first-attempt candidate — the page below tells you what to expect.
Typical NCLEX-PN prep runs ~120 hours over ~10 weeks at ~12 hours per week. This cram window gives you 84 total hours (14 days × 6 h/day). The plan below allocates ~75% to coverage and ~25% to review + at least one full mock — that ratio shifts later as the window tightens.
NCLEX-PN has 8 topic areas. With a 14-day window we keep the highest-weight + load-bearing topics and explicitly drop the rest. The cuts below are deliberate — you only pick those topics back up if you finish higher-priority material ahead of schedule.
Every published NCLEX-PN topic fits inside a 14-day window at this hours/day level. Tight, but no triage required. Lower-weight topics get fewer hours but stay on the schedule.
What a real 14-day NCLEX-PN cram plan actually looks like. Heavier topics get more time. Review starts at ~55% of the window. Final stretch is mock-driven. Adjust the start date below to align with your exam.
A visual preview of how exclam.ai compresses 8 NCLEX-PN topics into 14 days. Update the start date so the exam date aligns with your sitting.
Cover Coordinated Care (18–24%), Safety and Infection Prevention and Control (10–16%), Health Promotion and Maintenance (6–12%), Psychosocial Integrity (9–15%), Basic Care and Comfort (7–13%), Pharmacological Therapies (10–16%), Reduction of Risk Potential (9–15%), Physiological Adaptation (7–13%) in this week — paired because their individual weights are light or the intensive pace requires combining adjacent syllabus sections. Read each objective, flashcard the key formulas, and run one quiz across the group before moving on.
Full-length NCLEX-PN practice exams under timed conditions. Target one mock every 3–5 days. Same-day error review: for every question you miss, re-derive the solution from scratch. Taper in the final 3 days — light flashcards only.
Cram advice is dramatically different for first-attempt candidates and retakers. The plan above is the same; the playbook is not.
Saunders Comprehensive Review for NCLEX-PN is the canonical text — focus on Coordinated Care, Pharm, Reduction of Risk first.
Drill UWorld / Kaplan PN-specific QBank questions — RN QBanks include scope violations that throw PN candidates.
NGN drills 20 minutes daily — same items as NCLEX-RN, same format unfamiliarity to attack.
Practice mock exams at 85 questions minimum — your pacing has to be calibrated to the CAT format before exam day.
If you graduated 6+ months ago, double Coordinated Care time — supervision/delegation drift is the most common PN cram weakness.
Patterns that show up specifically when NCLEX-PN candidates compress the timeline. Worth scanning before you start your week.
Coordinated Care is the largest PN category (18–24%) and the most cram-friendly — assignment to UAP, supervision, reporting follow consistent patterns.
PN scope-of-practice items trap candidates who answered "RN-scoped" tasks correctly in school but forgot the PN limits — re-drill specifically on what an LPN/LVN can and cannot do without RN co-sign.
Pharmacology is narrower than NCLEX-RN — focus on PO, IM, SC, topical, inhaled routes. IV push is mostly out of PN scope; don't waste cram time there.
NGN format is the same as RN — bowtie, matrix, cloze. The format unfamiliarity is what tanks scores, not the clinical content.
Don't skip Psychosocial Integrity — 9–15% on PN and often the easiest cram win because therapeutic communication follows clear patterns.
Different window, different math, different cut list. Pick the duration that matches your real exam date.
Same Test Plan structure, same NGN format, narrower scope of practice. Cram time goes further on PN because the testable scope is smaller. 30 days is more realistic on PN than on RN for first-attempt candidates.
PN CAT can run 85–150 items. Cut-off below ~100 = clear pass or clear fail signal. If you tend to cut off early on practice CATs, your problem is consistency on early items — practice the first 30 items of a CAT under exam conditions.
Not a cram question. Your scope of practice (and license) determines which exam — they are not interchangeable. Career ladder LPNs typically take PN first, work, then re-school for RN later.
Topic names and weight bands are paraphrased from the public 2026 NCSBN NCLEX-PN Detailed Test Plan (public). Verify the current outline before your sitting.
2026 NCSBN NCLEX-PN Detailed Test Plan (public)Upload your NCLEX-PN materials, plug in your exam date, and exclam.ai builds the compressed plan automatically. Free to start.