A flexible plan around your interview date
Cover all 128 questions by category, 5–10 a day. Understand each answer, don’t just memorize.
Drill weak questions and use today’s review. Start weekly mock interviews to practice out loud.
Mock interview every day or two; re-confirm changing answers; rest well before interview day.
If your interview is soon
Short on time? Prioritize the mock interview (20 questions, 12 to pass) and your weak questions. Take a mock, review every miss, repeat. That tight loop surfaces exactly what you don’t know yet.
Don’t forget the changing answers
Some answers depend on the date or your location — the President, Vice President, Speaker, Chief Justice, your governor, your U.S. senators and representative, and your state capital. Civics128 flags these and shows when they were last verified, but you must confirm the current official answer for your state at uscis.gov before your interview.
Common questions
How many questions should I study per day?
Learning 5–10 new questions a day, plus reviewing your weak ones, is a sustainable pace. Consistency beats cramming — short daily sessions help the answers stick for the oral interview.
How should I prepare in the last week before my interview?
Shift from learning new material to full review: take a mock interview every day or two, drill your weak questions, and re-confirm any answers that change over time (current officials and your state/district) at uscis.gov.
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Civics128 is an independent study tool and is not affiliated with USCIS. For study purposes only — not legal advice.