Taking the CPB® exam

Take the CPB exam and become a Certified Professional Biller.

The CPB exam is a test of medical billing proficiency consisting of 135 multiple-choice questions that assess several areas of knowledge. The questions require an understanding of the types of insurance plans; local and national coverage determinations (LCDs and NCDs); healthcare regulations such as HIPAA, the False Claims Act, the Fair Debt Collections Act, and Stark Law; the life cycle of a medical claim; denial resolution; medical coding; and more.

Who should take the CPB exam?

After you’ve trained with AAPC to become a medical biller — or if you have substantial medical billing experience — you should take the opportunity to gain certification by registering for the CPB exam.

What to expect on exam day

The exam has a total of 135 questions to be answered in four hours. People often wonder if the CPB exam is hard. We'll say this: If you have taken the training course, studied, and are familiar with your CPT®, ICD-10-CM, and HCPCS Level II code books, the test will be demanding, but not difficult.

Here's a quick overview of what you can expect:

Before you begin the test, take a moment, and breathe. You have prepared for this. You have your code books by your side and know how to use them. This is your opportunity to demonstrate your billing expertise.

You'll have 4 hours to finish the exam, giving you approximately 1.7 minutes to answer each of the 135 multiple-choice questions. You can save time by reading the answer choices before reading each question and by saving the more difficult questions for last. It’s important to answer every question, even if you aren’t sure. Your best guess is better than no answer at all.

The questions assess several areas of knowledge, many of which are presented as scenarios to test application of knowledge about types of insurance plans; local and national coverage determinations (LCDs and NCDs); healthcare regulations such as HIPAA, the False Claims Act, the Fair Debt Collections Act, and Stark Law; the life cycle of a medical claim; denial resolution; medical coding; and more. The exam includes 34 cases that test the ability to read and apply policies. Source documents are provided for the examinee to review.

You will be able to reference approved medical code books during the exam — the AMA's CPT® Professional Edition, as well as your choice of ICD-10-CM and HCPCS Level II code books. To be clear, these are the only code books you are allowed to use.

Live Remote Proctored exam

Our *Live Remote Proctored (LRP) exam is taken on a computer at home and proctored remotely by Examity® via an external webcam. 

After purchasing your exam voucher, you’ll receive a Notice to Schedule email from Meazure Learning. When you are ready to schedule your exam, you may select one of our two electronic testing options (LRP or Testing Center) at the time of registration for a date and time convenient to you. For step-by-step instruction on scheduling your exam as well as guidelines and policies for each exam format, watch our exam video tutorial.

On the day of an LRP exam, you will log into your Meazure Learning account, then connect with your Examity proctor to complete a security check and take your exam. A valid, government-issued photo ID is required. Temporary, copies, paper or digital IDs are not permitted.

*Live Remote Proctored exams are available in the US, Bahamas & Jamaica only.

Equipment required: A reliable high-speed internet connection, a computer, working speakers and microphone, and an external webcam that can be positioned to show your face, hands, keyboard, and the area around the keyboard (about 10 inches).
Location: Taken at home in a closed room with window coverings, free from distraction or interruption.
Exam format: 135 multiple-choice questions delivered in one sitting
Time allowed: 4 hours
Proctor to examinee ratio: 1 to 2
Cancellation and rescheduling policy: 

  • Within 24 hours prior to exam: cancellation and rescheduling is unavailable. If you do not show for your exam time, you will be considered a "no-show." Your exam attempt will be forfeited and a new voucher must be purchased (or a 2nd attempt used, if available) to reschedule.

  • 24 hours or more prior to exam: you may reschedule or cancel with no applicable fee.

Availability: Schedule now

Testing center exam

Our testing center exam is taken on a computer, in-person, at one of Meazure Learning testing sites and is proctored by testing center personnel.

After purchasing your exam voucher, you’ll receive a Notice to Schedule email from Meazure Learning. When you are ready to schedule your exam, you may select one of our two electronic testing options (LRP or Testing Center) at the time of registration for a date and time convenient to you. For step-by-step instruction on scheduling your exam as well as guidelines and policies for each exam format, watch our exam video tutorial. .

Plan to arrive at your test center location 15 minutes early. A valid, government-issued photo ID is required. Temporary, copies, paper or digital IDs are not permitted.

Equipment required: All computer equipment required is provided by testing center
Location: Taken at a testing center, often at a college or university
Exam format: 135 multiple-choice questions delivered in one sitting
Time allowed: 4 hours
Proctor to examinee ratio: Testing center personnel may vary
Cancellation and rescheduling policy: 

  • Within 48 hours prior to exam: cancellation or rescheduling is unavailable. If you do not show for your exam time, you will be considered a "no-show." Your exam attempt will be forfeited and a new voucher must be purchased (or a 2nd attempt used, if available) to reschedule.

  • 48 hours to fifteen (15) days prior to exam: a $25 fee applies to cancel or reschedule.

  • Fifteen (15) or more days prior to exam: no fee applies to cancel or reschedule.

Availability: Schedule now

Passing grades

An overall score of 70% or higher is required to pass the certification exam. For a passing score of 70%, you must get at least 95 questions correct. If you incorrectly answer more than 41 questions, you will not pass. If you don’t pass, you will be notified of the categories/areas of study with sub-scores of 65% or less to help you prepare for retesting.

All AAPC certification exams exclusively measure proficiencies relating to the one credential named in the exam. To earn additional credentials, you will be required to pass additional certification exams.

Your results will be shared with you online in your Account Dashboard under Courses and Exams. You can expect the results within 7-10 business days after taking the exam. Once you have passed, your certificate will be sent to you in the mail.

Materials allowed on the day of the exam

Approved code books

Current year books are highly recommended as code sets are updated annually. You may choose to utilize books from the preceding year, the current year, or a combination of both; however, only one copy of each book is allowed. 

Calculator

An online calculator is provided in the electronic testing platform. Physical calculators are not permitted.

Book notes

Handwritten notes are acceptable in the code books only if they pertain to daily coding activities. Long passages of information are not permitted on the blank pages. Questions from the study guides, practice exams, or the exam itself are prohibited. Altering, whiting out, painting, or printing over any pages within the code books (e.g., marketing pages, table of contents, reference pages, etc.) to supplement information is prohibited.

Book tabs

Tabs may be inserted, taped, pasted, glued, or stapled in the code books so long as the obvious intent of the tab is to earmark a page with words or numbers, not supplement information in the book.

NOTE: Electronic devices with an on/off switch (phones, tablets, etc.) are not allowed into the examination room. Failure to comply with this policy may result in disqualification of your exam.

Breakdown of the 135-question CPB exam

Passing the CPB exam requires you to correctly answer a minimum of 95 questions from the domains below. The CPB test will rely on a level of understanding that enables you to identify the domain.

Types of insurance (29 questions)
These questions will assess your knowledge of managed care, commercial payers, Medicare, Medigap, Medicaid, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, TRICARE/CHAMPUS, workers’ compensation, and third-party payers (automobile, liability, etc.).

Billing regulations (17 questions)
These questions will address accountable care organizations (ACOs), the National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI), local coverage determinizations (LCDs), national coverage determinations (NCDs), incident-to billing, global packages, unbundling, completion of the CMS-1500 and UB-04 forms, and payer payment policies.

HIPAA and compliance (7 questions)
This section will test your knowledge of HIPAA privacy, billing compliance, medical record retention, financial policies, and fraud and abuse.

Reimbursement and collections (19 questions)
This section will address RBRVs, payer and patient refunds, provider credentialing, accounts receivable, fair debt, patient statements, patient dismissal, professional courtesy, collection agencies, collections, bankruptcy, payment plans, preauthorizations, claim editing tools, and remittance advice.

Claims and billing (19 questions)
This section will test your knowledge on appeals, denials, claims tracking and follow-up, timely filing, demographics, superbill/encounter forms, retention of records, balance billing, telephone courtesy, electronic claim submission, clean claims, and auditing the billing process.

Coding (10 questions)
This section will assess your knowledge on CPT®, ICD-10-CM, and HCPCS Level II codes and modifiers.

Case analysis (34 questions)
In this section of the exam, source documents are provided for the examinee to review. Examinees will be provided with various policies and must be able to apply those policies. Documents provided include:

  • CMS-1500 claim forms

  • Payment policies

  • Local coverage determinations (LCD)

  • National coverage determinations (NCD)

  • Appeal letters

  • Preauthorizations

  • Accounts receivable reports

  • Claims follow-up reports