How to Pass Salesforce Certifications
An opinionated, practical preparation guide. Built from what consistently works for candidates who pass on the first attempt — and from the patterns that cause people to fail their second and third.
Start By Reading the Exam Guide
This is the single highest-leverage move you can make, and it's the one most candidates skip. Every Salesforce certification has a publicly available exam guide on the Trailhead Credentials site. It's typically 6–10 pages long and tells you:
- The exact domains the exam covers and the percentage weight each domain carries.
- The recommended experience for candidates (often candid about whether the exam expects hands-on work).
- The passing score (usually somewhere between 62% and 68%).
- A list of example objectives per domain — not exhaustive, but representative.
If you spend 30 minutes with the exam guide before opening any other material, you'll save yourself days of mis-directed study. You'll know to weight your time toward the heavily weighted domains, and you'll know which Trailhead modules and documentation pages are off-topic. Candidates who skip this step routinely report after a failure that "the exam asked about X, which I didn't know was on the test." The exam guide almost certainly told them.
Build a Realistic Study Plan
A good study plan answers four questions:
- By when? Pick a target exam date. A specific date creates urgency and forces you to stop adding material.
- How many hours per week? Be honest. 6 hours a week is sustainable for most working adults. 15 is not.
- Which domains and in what order? Cover heavily-weighted domains first. Save light-weighted domains for the final week.
- What's the practice exam cadence? Plan a baseline practice exam in week one, a mid-prep one in the middle, and at least three or four full mocks in the final two weeks.
Resist the urge to plan around resources ("I'll watch this 12-hour video course"). Plan around outcomes ("I'll understand sharing rules well enough to score 75% on the security domain practice"). Resources are interchangeable; outcomes are the actual product.
Retrieval Practice Beats Re-Reading
One of the most robust findings in learning science: testing yourself on material produces dramatically better long-term retention than re-reading it. The act of pulling an answer out of memory — even when you get it wrong — strengthens the neural pathway far more than passive review. This is sometimes called the "testing effect" or "retrieval practice."
What this means for your study plan: spend 60–70% of your study time on practice questions, flashcards, and self-quizzing, and only 30–40% on passive reading or video. The intuition that you have to "fully understand" material before testing yourself on it is backwards — the testing itself is the most efficient way to learn.
Three specific applications:
- Take a baseline practice exam in week one before opening any study material. Your score will be terrible. That's fine — the point is to find your weak domains, not your score.
- Use flashcards in short, daily sessions. 10–15 minutes of flashcards every day produces better retention than two hours of flashcards once a week. Spaced repetition works because of the spacing.
- After reading a Trailhead module, close the tab and write down the key points from memory. Then check what you missed. The act of forced recall is what makes the material stick.
Learn to Read Scenario Questions
Salesforce loves scenario questions. They look like this:
The trick to scenario questions is to read the question stem before the answer choices, and identify the constraints. In the example above:
- "80 million account records" → this is a Large Data Volume problem; choices that don't address LDV are likely wrong.
- "Complex sharing requirements driven by territory hierarchy" → enterprise territory management features are relevant; pure sharing rules probably aren't enough.
- "Nightly integration that updates 200,000 records" → bulk API and indexing considerations are in scope.
- "Reports are timing out" → this is the actual problem to solve; the right answer addresses query performance, not just data load.
Now look at the choices. Eliminate any choice that doesn't address the actual problem (reports timing out). Eliminate any choice that ignores the LDV constraint. What remains is usually one or two choices, and you can pick between them based on which one matches Salesforce's recommended best practice.
Train this skill deliberately. On every practice question, before you look at the choices, write down (or just consciously identify): what's the question really asking, and what constraints does the stem impose?
Build in a Developer Edition Org
You can pass some Salesforce exams entirely on paper — AI Associate is the clearest example. You cannot pass Administrator, Platform App Builder, Platform Developer I, or any of the architect/consultant credentials without hands-on time in an actual Salesforce org. Trailhead Playgrounds and Developer Edition orgs are free; sign up for one and use it.
For Administrator preparation, build a small project — pick a domain you understand (say, gym membership tracking, or a band's tour management, or a vet clinic's patient records) and build:
- A custom object with appropriate fields, validation rules, and page layouts.
- Profiles and permission sets that give different user roles different access.
- An automation: a record-triggered flow or approval process.
- A report and a dashboard.
This exercise will hit roughly half the Administrator exam content directly, and the act of building will surface every "wait, how does this actually work?" question that the exam will ask.
For developer preparation, write Apex triggers, queueable Apex, and at least one Lightning Web Component. Practice deploying with the Salesforce CLI. The exam expects familiarity with the actual tooling, not just the concepts.
Use the Domain Breakdown to Target Your Weaknesses
The mock exams in this hub break your performance down by domain on the results page. After a baseline practice exam, that breakdown is your roadmap. Some patterns:
- One or two weak domains, the rest strong: Easy fix. Drill those domains specifically (use the Domain Drill feature), then retake the full exam. You'll usually be in passing range within one or two more passes.
- Three or more weak domains: Don't take another full mock yet. Pick the highest-weighted weak domain and study that material thoroughly — Trailhead, documentation, then drill questions. Move to the next domain. Only return to full mocks when you've cleaned up at least two of the weak areas.
- Failing across the board: Stop taking practice exams and study the material. Practice exams are diagnostic, not curative — taking five mocks in a row when you're failing all of them just trains you to recognize the questions you keep getting wrong, not to actually understand the underlying material.
When You're Ready: Set a Confidence Margin
The common candidate failure pattern: pass one practice exam at 68% when the threshold is 65%, schedule the real exam for next week, fail the real exam at 62%. Practice exam scores are not deterministic predictors of real exam scores — they have noise, both up and down.
A safer rule of thumb: consistently score at least 5 percentage points above the pass threshold across multiple practice exams before scheduling the real thing. If the threshold is 65%, you want to be hitting 70%+ consistently. If you've passed one practice exam by a point, that's encouraging, not conclusive.
Make the practice exams you're scoring against meaningful: take them under realistic conditions. No paused timer. No looking up answers. No phone. The first time you fail to maintain that discipline is the day your practice scores stop being useful.
Exam Day
The day before
Light review only. Don't try to learn new material the day before — you won't retain it, and you'll add stress. Stick to:
- Flashcards for vocabulary, governor limits, and feature comparisons.
- A quick re-read of the exam guide to make sure you remember which domains are weighted.
- One pass through any specific topics you've struggled with repeatedly.
If you're taking the exam online (Webassessor proctored), test your environment the day before, not the morning of. Confirm webcam, microphone, room scan area, lighting, and a reliable internet connection. Have your government-issued photo ID at the desk.
The morning of
Eat something. Hydrate, but not so much that you'll regret it during a 105-minute exam with no breaks. Close every application except your browser. If you wear a smart watch, put it in another room — proctors will flag it. Put your phone face-down out of arm's reach.
Pacing during the exam
For a 60-question, 105-minute exam (the typical format):
- First pass (target: 60 minutes): Answer everything you're confident about. Flag anything you're uncertain on, but commit to a best guess answer even on flagged questions — never leave anything blank.
- Second pass (target: 30 minutes): Work through flagged questions. Read them more carefully — the question stem usually contains a constraint you missed the first time.
- Final 15 minutes: Spot-check questions you flagged for re-review. Resist the urge to change answers without a clear new reason — your gut read on a first pass is usually right unless you've genuinely spotted something new.
The "two answers both look right" trap
You'll see this on almost every exam: two answer choices both look correct. Some heuristics for picking between them:
- Which one matches Salesforce's documented best practice? Often one choice is "technically works" and the other is "what Salesforce recommends." The exam wants the recommendation.
- Which one satisfies all constraints in the stem? One of the two choices usually violates a subtle constraint (cost, scale, user license, security model).
- Which one is declarative vs. code? When both work, Salesforce typically wants the declarative option (flows, validation rules) over code (Apex triggers, custom code), unless the scenario explicitly requires something declarative can't do.
- Is one choice an absolute statement? "Always," "never," and "only" are often wrong on Salesforce exams. The platform has too many exceptions for absolute statements to hold.
After the Exam
If you passed
Congratulations. Take an evening off. Then:
- Update your Trailblazer profile and LinkedIn within a week — momentum matters.
- Add a reminder to complete the next maintenance module when Salesforce announces the next release. Lapsed certifications are surprisingly common.
- Decide on your next credential, and start the cycle again with the exam guide.
If you failed
Failure is fine. Most working Salesforce architects have failed at least one exam. Three concrete next steps:
- Read the domain breakdown on your score report carefully. Don't generalize ("I'm bad at security") — identify the specific topics within the weak domain (e.g., "I keep missing questions on territory hierarchy and sharing rules").
- Schedule a retake about two to four weeks out. Soon enough to keep momentum; far enough to actually fix the weak spots.
- Avoid the "study harder" trap. If your first preparation didn't work, more of the same will likely not work either. Change the mix — add hands-on time if you were paper-studying, add deliberate scenario-question practice if you were just reading, add a focused video course if you've been bouncing between resources without depth.
Maintaining Your Certifications
Each Salesforce release (Spring, Summer, Winter — three a year), Salesforce publishes free maintenance modules on Trailhead for each active certification. They're short — typically 30 minutes — and they cover the new features in that release that intersect with the exam content. Completing the maintenance module within the grace period keeps your certification active; missing it causes the certification to lapse.
The Trailblazer Me profile shows which maintenance modules are open for you and when they're due. Set a calendar reminder for the first week of each release announcement (typically February for Spring, June for Summer, October for Winter) so you don't miss a window. Reinstating a lapsed credential requires retaking the full exam — at the full exam fee — which is a frustrating outcome for what would have been 90 minutes of free training.
A Final Word on Honest Practice
Do not study from "exam dumps" — sites or PDFs claiming to be leaked real exam questions. Three reasons:
- It violates the Salesforce Certification Agreement you sign when you create your Webassessor account, and Salesforce can revoke your credentials permanently if they find out you used one.
- The dumps are often out of date. Salesforce rotates exam questions regularly. A dump from 18 months ago is full of questions on features that no longer exist.
- Memorizing answers doesn't teach you the material. Even if you pass that way, you'll struggle in the role the certification is supposed to qualify you for — and your team will notice.
Use original practice material (like the questions on this site), real Trailhead content, and hands-on time in a developer org. Your future self, doing actual Salesforce work in a real role, will thank you.