:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] A Technician license is a radio in your pocket that talks to satellites, repeaters, and other operators worldwide. :INFO What the Technician License Gives You The FCC Technician class license is the entry level of amateur (ham) radio in the US. It requires passing a 35-question multiple choice exam drawn from a publicly available pool of questions. No Morse code required. The license grants access to all amateur frequencies above 50 MHz — primarily VHF (144 MHz) and UHF (430 MHz) — plus some HF (shortwave) privileges. Valid for 10 years. :COUNTER.half 35 Questions | :COUNTER.half 482 Questions :PATH Get the Question Pool and Begin Studying The entire question pool with correct answers is public — nothing is hidden. | :INFO Get the Question Pool and Begin Studying The NCVEC publishes the complete Technician question pool at ncvec.org — every question on your actual exam comes from this pool, with the correct answer shown. Study with HamStudy.org (free, tracks what you get wrong) or Ham Radio Prep (paid, structured course). Most people pass in 2 to 4 weeks studying 20 to 30 minutes per day. :PATH Take Practice Exams Until You Score 85% or Higher The real exam is 35 of the same questions — consistency matters. | :INFO Take Practice Exams Until You Score 85% or Higher HamStudy.org generates randomized practice exams from the real question pool. Aim for a consistent 85%+ on practice exams before testing — this gives you a comfortable buffer above the 74% passing threshold. If you miss questions consistently in one category (antenna theory, electrical principles), focus review there. :PATH Find and Register for an Exam Session VE (Volunteer Examiner) sessions happen locally and online. | :INFO Find and Register for an Exam Session The ARRL exam search at arrl.org/find-an-amateur-radio-license-exam-session lists local in-person sessions. HamStudy.org/sessions lists online remote proctored sessions available any day. Online exams require a webcam and the ability to rotate to show your environment. Bring government ID and $15 to $25 exam fee. :CHECKLIST Exam Day Checklist [ ] Government-issued photo ID [ ] $15 to $25 exam fee (check the specific session's fee) [ ] A simple non-scientific calculator (if permitted — most sessions allow) [ ] FCC registration number (FRN) — get free at fcc.gov before the exam :NOTE Your License Appears in the FCC Database After passing, the VE team submits your information to the FCC. Your license and call sign appear in the FCC amateur radio database (search at arrl.org/fcc-license-grants) within 1 to 3 business days. You can legally operate as soon as your call sign appears in the database — you do not need a physical paper license. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The question pool is public. The answers are public. The exam is the same questions. Go study. :LINK https://www.arrl.org/getting-your-technician-license ARRL — Getting Your Technician License: Complete Guide