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Best RACGP CCE Resources: Question Banks, Mock Exams and Study Groups

Last updated: November 2025

Best RACGP CCE Resources: Question Banks, Mock Exams and Study Groups

Last updated: November 2025

Untitled.png

Dr Shaun Tan, FRACGP, MD, BMSC
Medical Examiner | Associate Lecturer
Scored 90% on the AKT & Top 15th percentile in the KFP

You have worked incredibly hard to reach this point, looking forward to practising independently as a GP, making your own clinical decisions, and supporting your patients without oversight. But now, faced with the RACGP Clinical Competency Exam (CCE), you might find yourself awake at 2 am, worried about how you will pass this final hurdle.


Here is the truth: success in the RACGP CCE is not simply about luck or innate skill. Instead, it is about the careful selection of the right preparation resources, practising strategically, and finding structured support. Choosing wisely can transform your preparation from overwhelming uncertainty into confident mastery.


This guide provides practical strategies and clearly outlines the Best RACGP CCE Resources: Question Banks, Mock Exams and Study Groups. It will help you identify exactly what resources you need, why they are effective, and how they align with the latest RACGP exam guidelines, ensuring you approach the exam with confidence and clarity.

What to Look for in a CCE Resource

Selecting appropriate resources for the RACGP Clinical Competency Exam can make all the difference between a confident pass and avoidable pitfalls. Ideal resources must replicate exam conditions, reflect current guidelines, and offer meaningful practice and feedback.


Key elements of quality CCE resources:



Accurate Exam Simulation:


  • The RACGP CCE consists of 9 video based clinical scenarios, each lasting exactly 15 minutes, plus 5 minutes of preparation time beforehand [1].

  • Ensure your practice materials precisely reflect this structure, helping you master consultation timing and organisation.


Current Clinical Content:


  • The clinical information you use must always match the latest Australian guidelines, such as Therapeutic Guidelines, the Australian Immunisation Handbook, and PBS rules [5],[6],[7].

  • Outdated guidelines risk critical errors during the exam, leading to lost marks.


Credible Authors:


  • Ideal resources are authored or reviewed by FRACGP qualified educators or experienced RACGP examiners [4]

  • RACGP CCE preparation modules offer trusted examples that meet current examiner expectations [4].


Detailed Explanations:


  • Excellent resources emphasise clinical reasoning, patient centred care, and practical management strategies [2].

  • Look for explanations mapping directly to RACGP competency areas: communication, clinical management, and professionalism.


Meaningful Feedback:


  • Effective practice tools offer sample consultation scripts, scoring rubrics, or performance analytics to help identify strengths and areas for improvement.

  • Immediate feedback ensures rapid learning and focused improvement.

CCE Question Banks vs Written Exam Resources

Relying solely on written exam resources like AKT or KFP question banks is insufficient preparation for the practical demands of the RACGP Clinical Competency Exam. These exams assess entirely different skills.


  • Written exams like the AKT assess theoretical knowledge and factual recall. In the 2024.2 AKT exam cycle, for example, the pass rate was 82.15 percent across 829 candidates [3].

  • By contrast, the CCE requires real time reasoning and patient centred consultation skills. The 2024.1 CCE had a pass rate of 89.10 percent, reflecting its different assessment focus [2].


To maximise your effectiveness:


  • Initially use AKT and KFP resources to consolidate foundational medical knowledge.

  • Gradually transition to specific CCE practice tools, particularly resources simulating interactive consultations.

  • Combine written knowledge with realistic consultation practice to create a robust preparation strategy.

Study Groups for IMGs (How to Structure Sessions)

For International Medical Graduates, structured study groups are not just beneficial, they are critical. Study groups provide practical experience, emotional support, and vital exposure to Australian clinical norms and expectations.


How to effectively structure your IMG study groups:


Optimal Group Size:


  • Groups of 3 to 6 members balance personal attention with diverse peer feedback.


Consistent Structure:


  • Schedule regular weekly meetings. Each session should focus clearly on dedicated scenarios, clinical topics, or competency areas.


Real Case Practice:


  • Regularly practise realistic CCE scenarios, rotating roles between candidate, patient, and observer.

  • Provide structured peer feedback aligned directly to RACGP competencies.


Local Australian Insight:


  • Include Australian trained GPs in your group to clarify local healthcare practices, cultural norms, referral patterns, and consultation expectations.


Flexibility via Technology:


  • If face to face sessions are impractical, online meetings via Zoom are highly effective and provide essential telehealth practice.


Structured study groups not only boost your exam performance but also significantly reduce stress and isolation, offering a vital lifeline during your exam preparation journey.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

1: What is the RACGP CCE format and timing?


The RACGP CCE comprises 9 video based clinical scenarios, each 15 minutes, with 5 minutes of preparation before each case. Delivery is via videoconference, so telehealth focused skills and camera ready consulting are essential [1].


2: When should I start preparing for the CCE if I am also sitting AKT or KFP?


Begin CCE practice early, in parallel with written exam study, then increase simulation volume after AKT or KFP. Use written resources to consolidate knowledge first, then shift toward consultation simulation and feedback loops as the exam approaches [3][4].


3: How do I choose the best CCE question bank for my needs?


Prioritise resources that mirror the exact CCE structure, include examiner style marking rubrics, and provide clear reasoning mapped to RACGP competencies. Confirm currency against Therapeutic Guidelines, PBS, and the Australian Immunisation Handbook, and look for transparent update notes on the provider page [4],[5],[6],[7].


4: How should an IMG structure a weekly study group for CCE success?


Form a group of 3 to 6 peers, schedule weekly sessions, rotate roles as candidate, patient, and observer, and debrief with a competency aligned rubric. Invite at least 1 Australian trained GP to help with local referral pathways, communication norms, and system navigation, and use Zoom to practise video etiquette that will be required on exam day [1].


5: What does effective video practice look like for the CCE?


Rehearse full length consults with strict timing, record each session, and review for structure, clarity, and patient centred communication. Focus on safety netting, shared decision making, and concise summaries, which align with examiner expectations shown in RACGP preparation resources [4].

How to Know if a CCE Resource is Up to Date

Using outdated resources can sabotage your RACGP Clinical Competency Exam preparation. Resources must explicitly match current exam standards, competencies, and clinical guidelines to ensure accurate preparation.


Key checks for resource currency:


Explicitly Check Publication Dates:


  • After the transition from OSCE to CCE format in 2021, ensure all resources clearly reference the new format. The 2024.2 CCE had a pass rate of 89.12 percent with 672 of 754 candidates passing [1].


Match Competency Expectations:


  • Resources must reflect the current competency breakdown: communication 26 percent, clinical management 23 percent, diagnosis 15 percent, and preventive care 8 percent [1].


Official Guideline Cross Check:


  • Verify content against authoritative Australian references, such as Therapeutic Guidelines, RACGP Red Book, and PBS regulations [5,6,7].


Recent Candidate Feedback:


  • Prioritise resources positively reviewed by candidates who successfully sat their exams in the most recent 2024 and 2025 cycles.


Maintaining rigorous checks ensures every study hour directly contributes to exam success.

The Value of Video and Recorded CCE Consultations

Since the RACGP Clinical Competency Exam is conducted entirely online via videoconferencing, video practice is crucial. It prepares you thoroughly for the telehealth focused exam environment.


Familiarise Yourself with Telehealth:


  • Practising video consultations regularly prepares you to manage practical aspects such as camera angle, eye contact, note taking, and maintaining empathy virtually [1].

  • Comfort with telehealth prevents unnecessary stress on exam day.


Model Expert Consultations:


  • Watching successful recorded consultations provided by RACGP shows how competent candidates manage time, structure consultations, and handle communication effectively [4].

  • You learn precisely what examiners expect in terms of patient interaction and clinical reasoning.


Self Review and Improvement:


  • Recording and reviewing your practice sessions reveals subtle errors or oversights not obvious in real time.

  • Regular video review is a powerful self improvement tool, particularly regarding communication skills.


Strengthen Communication Skills:


  • Communication skills accounted for 26% of the competencies assessed in the 2024.2 CCE [1].

  • Improving your consultation style through video practice directly boosts your exam performance.


Technical Preparation:


  • Practising with your actual video conferencing setup reduces cognitive load and prevents distracting technical issues on exam day.

If the thought of RACGP exam preparation feels overwhelming, Fellow Academy provides structured, evidence based resources to ease your anxiety. With high quality AKT and KFP question banks, concise exam notes, flashcards, free case packs, webinars, and practical study guides, Fellow Academy helps you study smarter and approach your exams with calm confidence.


Your goal of becoming an Australian GP is within reach. With the right resources, practice, and structured support, exam success and professional independence await you.

Disclaimer: This content is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or representative of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP). The strategies and approaches shared are based on personal experience and experiences of GP candidates who passed their exams. They are general guidance only, not official RACGP advice.

Disclaimer: This content is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or representative of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP). The strategies and approaches shared are based on personal experience and experiences of GP candidates who passed their exams. They are general guidance only, not official RACGP advice.

References

[1] Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. (2024). 2024.2 Clinical Competency Exam, Public exam report. East Melbourne, VIC, RACGP. https://www.racgp.org.au/FSDEDEV/media/documents/Education/Registrars/Fellowship%20Pathways/Exams/2024-2-CCE-Public-Exam-Report.pdf

[2] Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. (2024). 2024.1 Clinical Competency Exam, Public exam report. East Melbourne, VIC, RACGP. https://www.racgp.org.au/FSDEDEV/media/documents/Education/Registrars/Fellowship%20Pathways/Exams/2024-1-CCE-Public-Exam-Report.pdf

[3] Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. (2024). 2024.2 Applied Knowledge Test, Public exam report. East Melbourne, VIC, RACGP. https://www.racgp.org.au/FSDEDEV/media/documents/Education/Registrars/Fellowship%20Pathways/Exams/AKT-2024-2-Public-Exam-Report.pdf

[4] Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. (2025). Exam Support Program resources Updated page. East Melbourne, VIC, RACGP. https://www.racgp.org.au/education/fracgp-exams/racgp-exams/exam-support-program-resources

[5] Therapeutic Guidelines Limited. (2024). Therapeutic Guidelines Latest version. Melbourne, VIC, TGL. https://www.tg.org.au/

[6] Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care. (2025). Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme Home. Canberra, ACT, Commonwealth of Australia. https://www.pbs.gov.au/pbs/home

[7] Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care. (2025). The Australian Immunisation Handbook. Canberra, ACT, Commonwealth of Australia. https://immunisationhandbook.health.gov.au/

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AKT Exam Preparation: Study Strategies That Work

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AKT vs KFP: Which RACGP Exam Is Harder (and How to Prepare for Both)

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Trial Fellow Academy for Free

Complete the Form to Access 30 FREE KFP MSQs & AKTs + Invite to Our Free 2026.1 RACGP Exam Prep Webinar

Which exam are you sitting next?
AKT only
KFP only
Both AKT and KFP
Untitled.png

Dr Shaun Tan, FRACGP, MD, BMSC
Medical Examiner | Associate Lecturer
Scored 90% on the AKT & Top 15th percentile in the KFP

Summary

You have worked incredibly hard to reach this point, looking forward to practising independently as a GP, making your own clinical decisions, and supporting your patients without oversight. But now, faced with the RACGP Clinical Competency Exam (CCE), you might find yourself awake at 2 am, worried about how you will pass this final hurdle.


Here is the truth: success in the RACGP CCE is not simply about luck or innate skill. Instead, it is about the careful selection of the right preparation resources, practising strategically, and finding structured support. Choosing wisely can transform your preparation from overwhelming uncertainty into confident mastery.


This guide provides practical strategies and clearly outlines the Best RACGP CCE Resources: Question Banks, Mock Exams and Study Groups. It will help you identify exactly what resources you need, why they are effective, and how they align with the latest RACGP exam guidelines, ensuring you approach the exam with confidence and clarity.

What to Look for in a CCE Resource

Selecting appropriate resources for the RACGP Clinical Competency Exam can make all the difference between a confident pass and avoidable pitfalls. Ideal resources must replicate exam conditions, reflect current guidelines, and offer meaningful practice and feedback.


Key elements of quality CCE resources:



Accurate Exam Simulation:


  • The RACGP CCE consists of 9 video based clinical scenarios, each lasting exactly 15 minutes, plus 5 minutes of preparation time beforehand [1].

  • Ensure your practice materials precisely reflect this structure, helping you master consultation timing and organisation.


Current Clinical Content:


  • The clinical information you use must always match the latest Australian guidelines, such as Therapeutic Guidelines, the Australian Immunisation Handbook, and PBS rules [5],[6],[7].

  • Outdated guidelines risk critical errors during the exam, leading to lost marks.


Credible Authors:


  • Ideal resources are authored or reviewed by FRACGP qualified educators or experienced RACGP examiners [4]

  • RACGP CCE preparation modules offer trusted examples that meet current examiner expectations [4].


Detailed Explanations:


  • Excellent resources emphasise clinical reasoning, patient centred care, and practical management strategies [2].

  • Look for explanations mapping directly to RACGP competency areas: communication, clinical management, and professionalism.


Meaningful Feedback:


  • Effective practice tools offer sample consultation scripts, scoring rubrics, or performance analytics to help identify strengths and areas for improvement.

  • Immediate feedback ensures rapid learning and focused improvement.

CCE Question Banks vs Written Exam Resources

Relying solely on written exam resources like AKT or KFP question banks is insufficient preparation for the practical demands of the RACGP Clinical Competency Exam. These exams assess entirely different skills.


  • Written exams like the AKT assess theoretical knowledge and factual recall. In the 2024.2 AKT exam cycle, for example, the pass rate was 82.15 percent across 829 candidates [3].

  • By contrast, the CCE requires real time reasoning and patient centred consultation skills. The 2024.1 CCE had a pass rate of 89.10 percent, reflecting its different assessment focus [2].


To maximise your effectiveness:


  • Initially use AKT and KFP resources to consolidate foundational medical knowledge.

  • Gradually transition to specific CCE practice tools, particularly resources simulating interactive consultations.

  • Combine written knowledge with realistic consultation practice to create a robust preparation strategy.

Study Groups for IMGs (How to Structure Sessions)

For International Medical Graduates, structured study groups are not just beneficial, they are critical. Study groups provide practical experience, emotional support, and vital exposure to Australian clinical norms and expectations.


How to effectively structure your IMG study groups:


Optimal Group Size:


  • Groups of 3 to 6 members balance personal attention with diverse peer feedback.


Consistent Structure:


  • Schedule regular weekly meetings. Each session should focus clearly on dedicated scenarios, clinical topics, or competency areas.


Real Case Practice:


  • Regularly practise realistic CCE scenarios, rotating roles between candidate, patient, and observer.

  • Provide structured peer feedback aligned directly to RACGP competencies.


Local Australian Insight:


  • Include Australian trained GPs in your group to clarify local healthcare practices, cultural norms, referral patterns, and consultation expectations.


Flexibility via Technology:


  • If face to face sessions are impractical, online meetings via Zoom are highly effective and provide essential telehealth practice.


Structured study groups not only boost your exam performance but also significantly reduce stress and isolation, offering a vital lifeline during your exam preparation journey.

Tools That Make Active Recall Easy

Digital tools simplify the process of integrating active recall and spaced repetition into your RACGP exam preparation.
 

  • Brainscape: Uses adaptive algorithms to determine when you should review each flashcard based on your confidence level.

  • Anki: Allows custom deck creation for topics like PBS rules or emergency management.

  • Quizlet: Offers collaborative decks for study groups.
     

Using these tools allows you to:
 

  • Review flashcards during commutes or between patients.

  • Automatically revisit topics you’re struggling with.

  • Track progress and identify weak areas.
     

These platforms bring structure to your study plan, ensuring regular reinforcement and better recall.
 
(For time management strategies, see our AKT Study Planner.)

How to Combine These Methods for Peak Performance

When you combine active recall with spaced repetition, the results are exponential. This combination, known as “spaced retrieval practice”, creates a continuous cycle of learning, forgetting, and relearning that strengthens memory.
 

  • Start early (at least 6–12 months before your exam).

  • Create flashcards for each guideline or high-yield topic.

  • Use Brainscape or Anki daily to review material in spaced cycles.

  • Schedule mock exams every 3–4 weeks to test your applied knowledge.
     

Research indicates spaced repetition can significantly increase long-term retention, with spaced learners achieving approximately 58% accuracy compared to 43% among traditional learners (p<0.001) [4].

 

By six months into this method, most candidates report not only improved recall but also better confidence under pressure. You’re no longer scrambling to remember—you’re retrieving information automatically.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

1: What is the RACGP CCE format and timing?


The RACGP CCE comprises 9 video based clinical scenarios, each 15 minutes, with 5 minutes of preparation before each case. Delivery is via videoconference, so telehealth focused skills and camera ready consulting are essential [1].


2: When should I start preparing for the CCE if I am also sitting AKT or KFP?


Begin CCE practice early, in parallel with written exam study, then increase simulation volume after AKT or KFP. Use written resources to consolidate knowledge first, then shift toward consultation simulation and feedback loops as the exam approaches [3][4].


3: How do I choose the best CCE question bank for my needs?


Prioritise resources that mirror the exact CCE structure, include examiner style marking rubrics, and provide clear reasoning mapped to RACGP competencies. Confirm currency against Therapeutic Guidelines, PBS, and the Australian Immunisation Handbook, and look for transparent update notes on the provider page [4],[5],[6],[7].


4: How should an IMG structure a weekly study group for CCE success?


Form a group of 3 to 6 peers, schedule weekly sessions, rotate roles as candidate, patient, and observer, and debrief with a competency aligned rubric. Invite at least 1 Australian trained GP to help with local referral pathways, communication norms, and system navigation, and use Zoom to practise video etiquette that will be required on exam day [1].


5: What does effective video practice look like for the CCE?


Rehearse full length consults with strict timing, record each session, and review for structure, clarity, and patient centred communication. Focus on safety netting, shared decision making, and concise summaries, which align with examiner expectations shown in RACGP preparation resources [4].

If you’re feeling overwhelmed by RACGP exam preparation, Fellow Academy offers high quality AKT and KFP questions, exam notes in concise and comprehensive format, and high yield, evidence based flashcards designed to help you study smarter and perform with confidence. You’ll also find free KFP case packs, webinars, and practical study resources to guide you every step of the way. 

Disclaimer: This content is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or representative of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP). The strategies and approaches shared are based on personal experience and the experiences of other GP candidates who successfully passed their exams. They are intended as general study guidance only and should not be taken as official RACGP advice.

References

  1. GP Supervisors Australia. (2025). Study Skills Guide for GP Registrars: Studying Smarter, Not Harder. GPSA.

  2. Carpenter, S. K., Pan, S. C., & Butler, A. C. (2022). The science of effective learning with spacing and retrieval practice. Nature Reviews Psychology, 1(10), 496–511.

  3. Durrani, S. F., Yousuf, N., Ali, R., et al. (2024). Effectiveness of spaced repetition for clinical problem solving amongst undergraduate medical students studying paediatrics in Pakistan. BMC Medical Education, 24(1), 676.

  4. Price, D. W., Wang, T., O’Neill, T. R., et al. (2025). The effect of spaced repetition on learning and knowledge transfer in a large cohort of practising physicians. Academic Medicine, 100(1), 94–102.

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RACGP Exam Mistakes: Common Pitfalls That Stop Candidates Passing the RACGP Exams

pexels-cottonbro-5722164.jpg

AKT Exam Preparation: Study Strategies That Work

pexels-mart-production-8076179.jpg

AKT vs KFP: Which RACGP Exam Is Harder (and How to Prepare for Both)

Rationales.png
Which exam are you sitting next?
AKT only
KFP only
Both AKT and KFP
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