The preclinical years of osteopathic medical school are intense. In your first year, you’re balancing lectures, exams, and a huge volume of foundational science.
As your second year progresses, your focus shifts to preparing for COMLEX Level 1, the first major board exam for DO students. It evaluates whether you have the foundational medical knowledge and osteopathic principles required to progress to clinical training.
For many medical students, this transition feels overwhelming. You’re no longer just studying for exams, but for a test that plays a major role in your residency application and future career.
The good news is that with the right strategy, resources, and timeline, COMLEX Level 1 is absolutely manageable. I successfully took the exam and overshot my target score. In this guide, I’ll walk you through what to expect, the best study resources, and the most common mistakes to avoid so you can approach your study period with confidence.
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COMLEX Level 1 Overview
COMLEX Level 1 is a one-day, computer‑based exam administered by the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners (NBOME). It is split into eight 60-minute blocks for a total of 8 hours of testing time. The exam currently consists of 352 multiple-choice, single-best-answer questions.
Test content is organized according to the COMLEX-USA blueprint, which defines the following competency domains:
- Osteopathic medical knowledge
- Osteopathic patient care
- Osteopathic principles and practice
- Communication skills
- Systems-based practice
- Practice-based learning and improvement
- Professionalism and ethics
Level 1 integrates foundational biomedical sciences with osteopathic principles and practice, assessing your ability to apply that knowledge in the context of patient interactions.
Test-takers receive scheduled break time totaling 45-60 minutes, usually made up of two 10-minute breaks after the second and fourth blocks and a longer break midway through. COMLEX Level 1 is reported as pass/fail.
Build a Realistic Study Schedule
A structured study schedule is important to staying on top of COMLEX Level 1 material and avoiding burnout. Rather than trying to cram everything at once, pacing your prep over several months supports better retention and reduces stress as your test day approaches.
Start With Your Timeline
My first piece of advice is about time management and consistency. Grab a calendar, mark when your test date is, and write down the number of weeks until test day. From there, divide your study period into phases.
When I started preparing in January of my second year, I was already juggling lectures and exams, so the idea of adding board prep felt overwhelming. To make it manageable, I started with 30 to 60 minutes a day.
Early on, focus on light review while keeping up with class lectures. During the middle phase, gradually increase the number of practice questions and the amount of dedicated study time. Finally, in your dedicated period, shift to high-volume questions, rapid review, and practice exams. The key takeaway here is to set realistic daily study goals.
Set Daily Minimums
A daily baseline helps keep your momentum up without burning out. Start with a goal that feels doable, like 20 questions plus review. Anything beyond that can be treated as a bonus. This approach ensures that even on low-energy days, you’re making progress. It also helps build the habit of consistent study, so that over time, increasing your daily study load becomes natural.
Align Boards With Your Current Coursework
Whenever possible, try to sync your COMLEX Level 1 prep with the topics you’re already covering in class. For example, during your cardiology block, spend your board study time on the cardiology section in First Aid and related practice-style questions. Aligning boards with coursework doubles your efficiency, improves retention, and reduces the need to relearn material later. It also allows you to reinforce what you’re learning in real time.
Track Your Weaker Areas
As you progress through questions and review material, it’s important to track your weak areas. Keep a system to log missed questions, flag subjects where you struggle, and identify patterns, like consistently missing microbiology questions versus pharmacology. Revisiting these topics more often than your weaker areas helps ensure that gaps in knowledge don’t hold you back.
Use a “Layering” Method
Instead of trying to learn everything at once, approach your study in layers over time. Start by reviewing topics you’re seeing for the first time in your lectures and using tools like First Aid. Then reinforce what you’ve learned by doing a few practice questions each week, focusing on understanding the reasoning behind each answer.
During your dedicated study period, focus on high-volume question practice and rapid review to solidify your knowledge. Seeing material multiple times over weeks and months improves retention and helps you feel more confident in what you already know.
Choose the Right Study Resources
There are a lot of products that are marketed for COMLEX Level 1 test prep. The most important advice I can offer is to choose two or three, and stick with them! Using too many resources can fragment your focus, while the right combination allows you to learn efficiently and reinforce key concepts.
Note: Many of the study strategies and resources you use for Level 1 also help prepare for COMLEX Level 2-CE and USMLE Step 2 CK. Building a strong foundation now reduces the need to relearn material later and gives you an advantage on your clinical rotations and medical licensing examinations.
Question Banks
Question banks, or QBanks, give you a chance to apply concepts, identify gaps in understanding, and get comfortable with how COMLEX frames its questions, including osteopathic scenarios. Here are my preferred options:
- COMBANK: Specifically designed for COMLEX, COMBANK includes osteopathic-focused questions and detailed rationales, making it a reliable primary resource.
- COMQUEST: This one allows you to filter by system, subject, or topic, making it ideal for targeted review of weaker areas. Its practice test mode also helps simulate timed blocks for endurance and pacing.
- UWorld/AMBOSS: These are geared toward USMLE prep but are widely used by dual-test takers for high-quality explanations and reasoning practice.
Content Review
Content review is best used to reinforce what you encounter in lectures and question banks rather than trying to cover everything at once. High-yield, targeted review helps you focus on areas most likely to appear on the exam. Here are two great resources:
- First Aid for the COMLEX: This review book is good for consolidating basic science knowledge and creating a central reference for key concepts.
- Anki flashcards: Pre-made or custom decks allow for spaced repetition, reinforcing material over time. Reviewing cards based on missed questions or weak subjects strengthens retention and ensures repeated exposure to challenging concepts.
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Practice Exams
Full-length and formative practice exams are essential for building stamina and refining your timing. They also help you pinpoint any remaining weak spots for more focused study in the weeks before your exam. Here are a few good options:
- Comprehensive Osteopathic Medical Self-Assessment Exam (COMSAE): This is the official self-assessment tool from the NBOME. Taking a timed COMSAE early in your prep provides a baseline and identifies areas to focus on.
- WelCOM: This one is also from the NBOME, but is intended as more of a low-stakes assessment. The series includes answers and rationales that help reinforce learning alongside the rest of your prep.
- NBME Practice Exams: Many students use these to assess general knowledge, but they don’t include OMM-specific content. These exams can help identify gaps in foundational sciences.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Being aware of these common mistakes can help you stay on track and approach test day with confidence:
- Starting too intensely can lead to burnout. Instead, set smaller, consistent daily goals and gradually increase your study time as you build a routine.
- Using too many resources at once can fragment your focus and slow progress. Sticking to two or three high-quality resources allows you to learn the material thoroughly.
- Cramming at the last minute is ineffective for your COMLEX Level 1 exam, which covers a large volume of material. Spaced repetition and layered review over several months are much more efficient for retention.
- Neglecting weaker areas can leave gaps in your knowledge, hurting your performance. Track missed questions and revisit challenging topics regularly.
- Ignoring OMM until the final weeks adds unnecessary stress. Osteopathic medicine principles are integrated throughout Level 1, so review them consistently.
- Over-prioritizing content review over practice questions can leave you underprepared for the way COMLEX questions are structured. Doing practice questions reinforces knowledge and helps develop your test-taking strategies.
- Skipping full-length practice exams can keep you from building the stamina and pacing skills needed for the actual test. Treat these exams as simulations to prepare for both timing and the mental endurance you’ll need on test day.
COMLEX Level 1 vs USMLE Step 1
COMLEX Level 1 and USMLE Step 1 both assess foundational medical knowledge, but there are a few key differences. COMLEX Level 1 is taken by DO students and integrates osteopathic principles and manipulative treatment (OMM) throughout the exam. Step 1, taken by MD students, focuses primarily on biomedical sciences.
In terms of difficulty, both exams are challenging. Many dual-test takers find that COMLEX Level 1 questions are longer and sometimes more clinically oriented than Step 1, but Step 1 has a reputation for higher intensity in pure memorization.
FAQs
COMLEX Level 1 is challenging, but first‑time pass rates are generally around 90% or above. The exam is pass/fail. Most DO students who stay consistent with their coursework and dedicated study time can pass without issue.
Unlike the MCAT, which tests general scientific knowledge and reasoning skills before medical school, COMLEX Level 1 requires you to apply osteopathic principles in a medical context. The difficulty comes from the volume of material and the need to integrate multiple subjects while thinking like a clinician.
The length of your study period depends on your coursework schedule and how consistently you can stick to daily prep. Many students start integrating COMLEX Level 1 review into their second-year schedule several months before dedicated board prep.
As your exam date approaches and your lecture workload decreases, you should gradually increase study time. During a dedicated study block, which typically lasts 4-6 weeks, students usually focus almost entirely on high-yield review, practice questions, and practice exams.
The key is to start early, stay consistent, and increase intensity in phases rather than trying to cram it all at once.
Bonus: Students who do well on Level 1 often find that the study habits and resources they used also make COMLEX Level 2-CE and COMAT shelf exams easier.Ace Your COMLEX Exams With MedSchoolCoach
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Jeanie Gribben, MD
Dr. Gribben is a graduate of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and a Merrill Presidential Scholar from Cornell University. She offers tutoring for Steps 1 and 2 and med school coursework, as well as advising support for medical students. She’s dedicated to personalized teaching strategies for student success.