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Maryland Maryland Police Written Examination Study Guide

State-specific prep for the Maryland Police Training and Standards Commission (MPTSC) exam β€” built by a former U.S. Secret Service Agent.

Maryland Law Enforcement Exam Overview

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Note: Maryland does not use a centralized POST exam. Individual agencies set their own requirements. Use the study materials below to prepare for common law enforcement written exam topics, and contact your target agency for their specific requirements.

POST Agency

Maryland Police Training and Standards Commission (MPTSC)

Official Website β†—

Exam Name

Maryland Police Written Examination

Format

Multiple choice; format varies β€” many use NTN or agency-specific exams

Passing Score

Varies by agency (typically 70%)

Exam Sections

Reading ComprehensionWritingReasoningSituational JudgmentMathematics

Agency Notes

Maryland does not mandate a single statewide written exam. Large agencies (MDSP, Baltimore City, Baltimore County, Montgomery County PD) use their own or NTN exams. Contact individual agencies for requirements.

What's Tested on the Maryland Exam

Every section of the Maryland Police Written Examination β€” and what you need to know about each.

01

Reading Comprehension

Passages followed by questions testing your ability to understand, recall, and apply written information β€” the most common section on all POST exams.

02

Writing

Core competency tested on the POST written exam. Demonstrates your knowledge and readiness for law enforcement work in this area.

03

Reasoning

Logical deduction and inductive reasoning: identifying patterns, drawing conclusions from incomplete information, and applying systematic thinking.

04

Situational Judgment

Scenario-based questions asking what you would do in common law enforcement situations. Tests judgment, ethics, and procedural knowledge.

05

Mathematics

Basic arithmetic, percentages, fractions, ratios, and sometimes basic algebra. Calculator not permitted.

Study Tips for the POST Exam

Five universal tips that apply to any POST exam, including the Maryland Police Written Examination.

1

Master Reading Comprehension

Reading comprehension is the highest-weighted section on most POST exams. Practice reading dense passages quickly and accurately β€” police reports, statutes, and procedural text. Aim for speed and retention, not just understanding.

2

Practice Math Fundamentals

Most POST exams include basic math: percentages, fractions, ratios, and simple algebra. You won't need calculus, but sloppy arithmetic under time pressure will cost you. Practice timed math drills until these are automatic.

3

Study Report Writing

Report writing questions test grammar, clarity, and sequence of events. Officers write reports every shift β€” the exam tests whether you can do it correctly. Practice writing clear, factual summaries in chronological order.

4

Practice Situational Judgment

"What would you do?" scenarios have no trick answers on law enforcement exams. The best answer is typically the one that prioritizes officer safety, follows legal procedure, and applies good judgment. Study the principles, not the answers.

5

Take Timed Practice Tests

Time pressure is real on test day. Most POST exams run 2–3 hours with 100+ questions β€” roughly 1.5–2 minutes per question. Practice under real time conditions so the clock doesn't rattle you when it counts.

Maryland Law Enforcement Hiring Process

Most Maryland agencies follow this sequence β€” though exact order varies by department.

01

Written Examination

Pass the POST written exam. This is your entry point β€” without a passing score, the rest of the process doesn't open up.

02

Physical Agility Test

Demonstrate physical fitness through agency-specific standards. Train consistently for 3–6 months before testing day.

03

Background Investigation

Comprehensive review of your history: criminal record, driving record, employment, references, financial history, and social media. Transparency is essential.

04

Psychological & Medical Evaluation

Psychological screening (MMPI, written exam, interview) plus a medical exam. These are pass/fail based on established standards.

05

Academy Training

Complete the state-mandated basic training academy. Minimum hours vary by state (400–800+ hours). Graduate to become a certified law enforcement officer.

* Exact process varies by agency. Contact your target Maryland department for their specific requirements.

Post-Academy

Certification Exam Prep

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Law Enforcement Certification

Certification requirements vary by state. Most states certify officers through academy completion. Check with your agency for specific requirements.

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Firefighter Certification β€” NFPA 1001

Firefighters in most states must pass the NFPA 1001 exam for official certification. Required for licensure in approximately 45 states.

Prepare for NFPA 1001 β†’
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EMS Certification β€” NREMT

NREMT certification is the national standard for EMTs. BadgePrep covers the NREMT EMT-Basic and Paramedic exams.

Prepare for NREMT β†’
BadgePrep Platform

Everything You Need to Pass the Maryland Exam

BadgePrep gives you everything you need to pass the Maryland Police Written Examination β€” built by someone who has sat on the other side of the badge.

  • βœ“State-specific study materials for Maryland
  • βœ“adaptive practice tests matched to Maryland Police Written Examination format
  • βœ“Memory games: license plates, suspect descriptions, addresses
  • βœ“Oral board and interview prep
  • βœ“Application tracker to manage your agencies
  • βœ“Hiring process timelines and checklists
Join the Waitlist β€” It's Free
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Maryland POST Exam Prep

Tailored to the Maryland Police Written Examination

Practice Questions500+
Study Modules7 Categories
Memory Games6 Games
Timed Mock ExamsIncluded
Get Early Access

Frequently Asked Questions β€” Maryland POST Exam

What is the Maryland Police Written Examination?+

The Maryland Police Written Examination is the law enforcement written entrance examination administered by the Maryland Police Training and Standards Commission (MPTSC). It assesses whether candidates have the cognitive skills required for effective law enforcement work in Maryland. Maryland does not mandate a single standardized written exam β€” individual agencies may use their own assessments or third-party testing services. Contact your target agency for their specific requirements.

What score do I need to pass the Maryland law enforcement exam?+

The official passing score for the Maryland Police Written Examination is Varies by agency (typically 70%). However, passing is not the same as being competitive. Many Maryland agencies will rank candidates by score and extend conditional offers to top performers first. Aim to score as high as possible β€” not just to pass.

How do I prepare for the Maryland police exam?+

Effective preparation for the Maryland Police Written Examination starts with understanding what's tested: Reading Comprehension, Writing, Reasoning, and 2 more sections.

Start with reading comprehension practice β€” it's the highest-weighted section on most POST exams. Follow with written expression and mathematics. Take timed practice tests under real conditions so time pressure doesn't catch you off guard.

BadgePrep offers state-specific study materials tailored to the Maryland Police Written Examination format, including practice questions built on official POST exam formats, timed mock exams, and memory training games. Join the waitlist for early access.

Physical Fitness Test

POST Physical Ability Test

View Full Fitness Plan β†’

Most Maryland law enforcement agencies use Cooper Institute standards at the 40th–50th percentile as their minimum physical fitness benchmark. The physical test is a hard gate β€” failing it ends your application immediately.

Push-Ups

29 min (male 20-29)

Sit-Ups

38 min (male 20-29)

1.5-Mile Run

Under 13:35 (male 20-29)

Sit-and-Reach

16.5" male / 19.3" female

Cooper 40th percentile defaults β€” verify with your specific agency. Train to 60th+ for a safe margin.

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Applying for 911 Dispatch in Maryland?

Most Maryland PSAPs use the CritiCall assessment. It tests typing speed, character string memory, call processing, map reading, and incident prioritization β€” skills you can only build by doing, not reading.

Practice CritiCall Skill Drills on BadgePrep β†’

Try a free practice question for Maryland

10 POST-style questions across all 5 exam categories. No login, no paywall.

Try 10 Free Questions β†’