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Overview

The practice question bank is the core of LearnATPL. Every question is mapped to a specific EASA ATPL subject and chapter, allowing you to drill exactly where you need it most.
The question bank covers all 14 EASA ATPL theory subjects. Paid plans unlock the full bank the free tier gives you a meaningful sample to get started.

How it works

Subject and chapter filtering

Before starting a session, you can narrow your practice to:
  • A single subject (e.g., Meteorology only)
  • A specific chapter within a subject (e.g., Icing and freezing level)
  • Multiple subjects at once for cross-discipline sessions
  • All subjects for a broad warm-up or late-stage revision

Session customisation

OptionDescription
Question countChoose how many questions per session (10, 25, 50, or custom)
ModeStandard (untimed) or Exam (timed, 75% pass mark)
Question orderSequential or randomised
Filter by weaknessShow only questions you’ve previously answered incorrectly

Answering questions

Each question is multiple choice with 4 options, matching the real EASA exam format. After submitting your answer you’ll see:
  • Whether you were correct
  • The correct answer if you were wrong
  • Your running score for the session
Use “Filter by weakness” mode to revisit every question you’ve ever got wrong. This is the fastest way to close gaps before an exam.

Progress tracking

Every answer you submit is logged. Your history is used to:
  • Update your per-subject accuracy score in the Analytics dashboard
  • Power the weak area detection that prioritises what to study next
  • Show your improvement trend over time

Question quality

All questions are written and reviewed to reflect the EASA ATPL theory syllabus. LearnATPL is not affiliated with EASA, and questions are not copied verbatim from the ECQB. They are original, syllabus-aligned questions designed to prepare you for the real exam format.
No third-party prep platform has access to the official EASA ECQB question bank. Be cautious of platforms claiming to offer “leaked” or “real” exam questions this is misleading and potentially a legal grey area.

Tips for effective practice

Random drilling feels productive but can mask real weaknesses. Use the chapter filter and weak area mode to practise intentionally.
The EASA pass mark is 75%, but you should be consistently hitting 80%+ in practice before booking the real exam. Build in a buffer.
15–30 minutes of daily focused practice outperforms a 3-hour marathon once a week. Spaced repetition works.
Don’t skip past incorrect answers. Read the correct answer and understand why it’s right before moving on.