By Renzo, CPL · March 8, 2026
IFR Exam Prep: The 10 Topics That Make or Break Your Score
The 10 Topics That Determine Your IFR Written Test Score
Not all topics on the Instrument Rating knowledge test are weighted equally. Some areas appear on nearly every version of the exam, and some generate the highest percentage of wrong answers. If you are short on study time -- or if you want to focus your effort where it matters most -- these are the 10 topics you cannot afford to get wrong.
For each topic, we cover three things: what it is, why the FAA tests it, and the one key thing you need to lock into memory.
1. Approach Plate Symbology
What It Is
Approach plates (officially called Instrument Approach Procedure charts) are the step-by-step instructions for flying an instrument approach to a runway. They pack an enormous amount of information into a small space using standardized symbols.
Why It Is Tested
Because misreading an approach plate in actual IMC can kill you. The FAA wants to verify that you can correctly extract critical information -- the final approach course, decision altitude, missed approach point, minimum visibility, and required equipment -- from any plate, even one you have never seen before.
The Key Thing to Memorize
Learn the minimums section layout. The bottom of every approach plate has a grid showing approach categories (A, B, C, D based on approach speed), straight-in minimums, and circling minimums. Each cell contains an altitude and a visibility value. Know that DA (Decision Altitude) is used for precision approaches and MDA (Minimum Descent Altitude) is for non-precision approaches. When the test shows you a plate and asks "What is the MDA for a Category A aircraft on a straight-in approach?" you need to find that number in under 30 seconds.
2. Holding Patterns
What It Is
A holding pattern is a racetrack-shaped maneuver flown at a specified fix when ATC needs you to wait. Standard holds use right turns. You need to know how to determine the correct entry (direct, teardrop, or parallel) based on your heading relative to the inbound holding course.
Why It Is Tested
Holding is one of the fundamental IFR skills, and it is one of the most common areas where students guess rather than reason through the answer. ATC can assign a hold at any time, and you need to be able to set it up correctly without hesitation.
The Key Thing to Memorize
The entry determination method. Visualize looking at the holding fix with the inbound course coming toward you. Draw a line 70 degrees from the inbound course on the holding side. This creates three sectors:
- If you are approaching from the direct sector (the largest area, generally on the inbound side): fly direct to the fix, turn outbound.
- If you are approaching from the teardrop sector (the narrow slice near the outbound course on the non-holding side): fly to the fix, turn 30 degrees into the holding side, fly outbound, then turn inbound.
- If you are approaching from the parallel sector (the remaining area on the outbound side): fly to the fix, turn to parallel the outbound course on the non-holding side, fly outbound, then turn back to intercept the inbound course.
Practice determining entries with at least 20 different scenarios. Speed and accuracy come only with repetition.
3. Alternate Airport Requirements (The 1-2-3 Rule)
What It Is
Under 14 CFR 91.169, you must file an alternate airport on your IFR flight plan if the weather at your destination does not meet certain minimums. The rule also specifies what weather the alternate itself must have.
Why It Is Tested
Because filing to a destination without an alternate when the weather is marginal is how pilots run out of options. This is a regulation the FAA considers safety-critical.
The Key Thing to Memorize
The 1-2-3 rule: From 1 hour before to 1 hour after your ETA, the destination must forecast a ceiling of at least 2,000 feet AGL and visibility of at least 3 statute miles. If not, file an alternate.
For the alternate itself, standard minimums are 6-2-8-2: 600 foot ceiling and 2 SM visibility if the alternate has a precision approach, or 800 foot ceiling and 2 SM visibility for a non-precision approach.
One more critical detail the test loves: you do not need to be able to get into your alternate. The alternate minimums are for planning purposes only. Once airborne, Part 91 pilots may attempt an approach regardless of reported weather.
4. IFR Weather Minimums and Reports
What It Is
Understanding METARs, TAFs, and weather charts is essential for IFR flight planning. The test presents raw weather data and asks you to interpret it -- determine flight category (VFR, MVFR, IFR, LIFR), identify hazards, and make go/no-go decisions.
Why It Is Tested
Weather is the leading cause of fatal GA accidents. The FAA dedicates more questions to weather than any other single topic because they want pilots who can read and act on weather information.
The Key Thing to Memorize
Flight category definitions:
| Category | Ceiling | Visibility |
|---|---|---|
| VFR | Greater than 3,000 feet | Greater than 5 SM |
| MVFR (Marginal VFR) | 1,000 to 3,000 feet | 3 to 5 SM |
| IFR | 500 to below 1,000 feet | 1 to below 3 SM |
| LIFR (Low IFR) | Below 500 feet | Below 1 SM |
Also memorize METAR decode basics: wind format (dddss or dddssGgg), visibility in SM, sky condition codes (FEW/SCT/BKN/OVC + altitude in hundreds of feet AGL), and temperature/dewpoint.
5. Lost Communication Procedures
What It Is
14 CFR 91.185 tells you exactly what to do if your radio fails during IFR flight. It specifies what route to fly, what altitude to maintain, and when to begin an approach.
Why It Is Tested
Because a communication failure in IMC is one of the highest-stress emergencies a pilot can face, and there is no one to ask for help. You must know the rules cold before it happens.
The Key Thing to Memorize
Route -- AVE-F: Fly the route that is Assigned, Vectored, Expected, or Filed (in that priority order, use the first one that applies).
Altitude -- highest of MEA: At each point along the route, fly the highest of the Minimum en route altitude, the altitude Expected by ATC, or the altitude Assigned by ATC.
When to descend and approach: Begin descent from the arrival fix at the EFC time (if you received one) or your filed ETA (if you did not). This is where the test gets tricky -- know the difference between EFC and ETA and which one applies.
6. DME Arcs
What It Is
A DME arc is a curved path at a constant distance from a NAVAID, used to transition from the en route environment to a final approach course. You fly the arc by maintaining a constant DME distance while your radial changes.
Why It Is Tested
DME arcs combine navigation skills, spatial awareness, and procedure reading into a single maneuver. They test whether you can visualize your position relative to a NAVAID and manage a curved flight path under IFR.
The Key Thing to Memorize
The lead radial concept. When flying a DME arc to intercept a final approach course, you need to begin your turn before you reach the desired radial. The standard lead is approximately 0.5% of your groundspeed (in NM). At 120 knots groundspeed, lead by about 0.6 NM. In practice on the test, look for the published lead radial on the approach plate -- it will be depicted as the point where the arc transitions to the final approach course.
Also remember: to stay on a DME arc, turn 10-20 degrees toward the NAVAID each time you drift 0.5 NM outside the arc, and 10-20 degrees away when you drift inside.
7. SID/STAR Reading
What It Is
Standard Instrument Departures (SIDs) and Standard Terminal Arrival Routes (STARs) are published procedures for transitioning between the terminal and en route environments. The test expects you to read these charts and extract altitude restrictions, speed restrictions, and routing.
Why It Is Tested
SIDs and STARs are used at nearly every busy airport. Misreading an altitude restriction on a SID or STAR can put you in conflict with other traffic or terrain.
The Key Thing to Memorize
The altitude restriction symbols:
| Symbol | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Line above number | At or below | At or below 10,000 |
| Line below number | At or above | At or above 5,000 |
| Lines above and below | At exactly | Cross at exactly 8,000 |
| No line (just the number) | Recommended/expected | Expect 6,000 |
When ATC gives you "descend via the STAR," you must comply with all published altitude and speed restrictions. If ATC gives you a specific altitude (such as "descend and maintain 6,000"), that overrides the published restrictions -- but only for altitude, not for speed.
8. Icing Regulations and Effects
What It Is
Airframe icing is one of the most dangerous hazards in IFR flight. The test covers icing types, when they form, regulatory requirements for flight in known icing, and the performance effects of ice accumulation.
Why It Is Tested
Icing causes accidents every year. The FAA wants to ensure that IFR pilots understand when icing is likely, what it does to the aircraft, and when it is illegal to fly into known icing conditions.
The Key Thing to Memorize
The three icing types and their temperature ranges:
- Clear ice: Forms in temperatures just below freezing (0 to -10 degrees C) in large supercooled water droplets. Most dangerous -- heavy, hard to remove, disrupts airflow significantly.
- Rime ice: Forms in colder temperatures (-10 to -20 degrees C) with small droplets. Rough, milky appearance. Easier to remove than clear ice.
- Mixed ice: Combination of clear and rime. Forms in the overlap zone.
Regulatory key point: Under Part 91, you may not fly in known icing conditions unless your aircraft is equipped and certified for it. "Known icing" means conditions where icing is reported or certain to exist. "Forecast icing" alone may not constitute "known icing" -- this nuance appears frequently on the test.
9. Required Instruments (GRABCARD)
What It Is
14 CFR 91.205 specifies the instruments and equipment required for IFR flight. The standard mnemonic is GRABCARD (sometimes GRABCARD with slight variations depending on the instructor).
Why It Is Tested
If you depart IFR without a required instrument, you are in violation of the FARs. This is a straightforward regulatory question that the FAA considers foundational knowledge.
The Key Thing to Memorize
GRABCARD for IFR (in addition to VFR day and night requirements):
| Letter | Instrument |
|---|---|
| G | Generator or alternator (adequate electrical supply) |
| R | Radios (two-way communication and navigation appropriate for the route) |
| A | Altimeter (sensitive, adjustable) |
| B | Ball (slip-skid indicator / inclinometer) |
| C | Clock (with hours, minutes, and seconds -- sweep second hand or digital) |
| A | Attitude indicator (artificial horizon) |
| R | Rate of turn indicator (turn coordinator or turn-and-slip indicator) |
| D | Directional gyro (heading indicator) |
Some versions add DME for flight at or above FL240 when VOR navigation is required, and a transponder with Mode C for certain airspace. Know both the core GRABCARD list and these additional requirements.
10. GPS and RNAV Approaches
What It Is
GPS-based RNAV approaches have become the most common approach type in the United States. The test covers the different types (LNAV, LNAV/VNAV, LPV), equipment requirements, and the minimums associated with each.
Why It Is Tested
Because GPS approaches are the present and future of instrument flying. The FAA needs to verify that pilots understand the differences between approach types, especially since minimums vary significantly based on which type you are flying.
The Key Thing to Memorize
The approach type hierarchy:
| Approach Type | Vertical Guidance | Typical DA/MDA | Equipment Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| LPV | Yes (precision-like) | Lowest (often 200-250 ft) | WAAS GPS |
| LNAV/VNAV | Yes (advisory or baro-aided) | Medium (often 300-400 ft) | WAAS GPS or baro-aided GPS |
| LNAV | No | Highest (often 400-600 ft) | Basic IFR GPS |
| LP | No vertical, enhanced lateral | Similar to LNAV | WAAS GPS |
Critical distinction: LPV approaches have a DA (Decision Altitude) like an ILS because they provide vertical guidance. LNAV approaches have an MDA (Minimum Descent Altitude) because they do not provide vertical guidance -- you descend to the MDA and level off. This difference affects how you fly the approach and is a common test question.
Also know: WAAS GPS units will automatically display the best available approach type. If WAAS is available, you get LPV. If not, the unit steps down to LNAV/VNAV or LNAV. The minimums you use must match the approach type your equipment is actually providing.
How to Use This List
These 10 topics are your high-priority study targets. Here is how to integrate them into your study plan:
- Take a diagnostic practice test first. See which of these 10 topics you already understand and which need work.
- Study the weakest topics first. Prioritize the ones where you scored lowest.
- Use active recall. After studying a topic, close your materials and try to explain the key points from memory. If you cannot, study it again.
- Practice with real charts. For approach plates, SIDs, STARs, and DME arcs, pull up actual charts and practice extracting information.
- Take targeted quizzes. Focus your practice questions on these specific areas rather than doing random question sets.
- Return to the full question bank. Once you are solid on these 10, expand your study to cover the full range of test topics.
The Bottom Line
The FAA Instrument Rating written test is passable with focused preparation, but it rewards depth over breadth. Master these 10 topics thoroughly and you will have the foundation for a strong score. Get lazy on any of them and they will drag your score down.
Remember: the goal is not just to pass the written test. These topics represent the core knowledge you need to fly safely in IMC. The approach plate reading, weather interpretation, and lost comm procedures you study today will keep you alive when you are in the clouds for real.
*Build your IFR knowledge with our [instrument rating practice questions](/instrument-rating). Our quiz engine focuses on the high-yield topics that matter most for your written test and checkride.*
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