Where to Find Florida Bar Practice MCQs (Free and Paid)
The Florida multiple-choice rewards practice, but Florida-specific questions are harder to find than MBE questions, and the good ones are not always cheap. This is an honest map of where Florida practice questions actually come from, what each source is good for, and how to assemble enough practice without spending more than you need. Prices change, so confirm current pricing with each provider before you buy.
Start with the free official questions
The Florida Board of Bar Examiners study guides. The Board publishes study guides that include a set of sample Florida multiple-choice questions, free at floridabarexam.org. Every taker should do all of them, because they come straight from the examiners and reflect the real style. The catch is volume: there are only a few dozen sample questions, so they confirm the format but cannot be your whole practice bank. Use them first, then build from there.
Free flashcard sets. User-made Florida bar flashcard decks circulate on sites like Quizlet. They cost nothing and can be useful for rule review, but quality is uneven and they are not a substitute for explained practice questions. Verify anything you learn from a stranger's deck against an authoritative source.
The paid question banks and books
Once you have exhausted the free samples, you are looking at paid sources for real volume. The main categories:
Standalone Florida question banks. Several companies sell dedicated Florida multiple-choice banks with several hundred questions and explanations. Bar Exam Masters, for example, advertises a bank of over 650 simulated Florida multiple-choice questions across the Part A multiple-choice subjects, listed at $269.99 to $289.99 at the time of writing. AmeriBar markets a comparable Florida multiple-choice question bank. These are purpose-built for the Florida session.
Question books. Print collections of past-style Florida questions exist, such as the Celebration Bar Review volumes sold on Amazon. They are a low-tech option, though they lack the adaptive review and instant explanations of an online bank.
Full bar courses. Barbri, Themis, and Kaplan include Florida question banks within their full programs. If you are enrolled in one, use the Florida questions it provides. Takers' experiences with the depth of course-provided Florida multiple-choice practice vary, which is a common reason people add a Florida-specific supplement.
Specialist video and tutoring resources. Tools like the What's the Issue lecture series and various Florida tutors focus on teaching the subjects rather than providing a large question bank. They pair well with a question source but are not one themselves.
How to compare sources
When you weigh a paid option, three things matter more than the marketing:
Number of Florida-specific questions. MBE volume does not count here. You want questions written on Florida law across every tested subject.
Explanations on every question. On a "know it or you don't" section, the explanation is where the learning happens. A bank without thorough explanations is just an answer key.
Total cost against what you already have. If your course already includes solid Florida questions, you may only need to top up. If it does not, a focused Florida supplement is usually cheaper than buying a second course.
Building a budget set
A sensible, low-cost stack for most takers: do every free official sample, keep your main course as the multistate spine, and add one affordable Florida-specific question source with explanations for the volume and the Florida-only subjects. That covers the format, the baseline, and the Florida layer without paying for a second full program.
Where Rule the Bar fits
Rule the Bar is built to be that affordable Florida layer. It is a study supplement, not a full bar course, and it pairs a bank of exam-realistic Florida multiple-choice questions, each with a written explanation, with every Florida rule statement, so you can both practice and learn the rule behind each miss in one place. Plans start at $69, the rules-and-questions bundle is $149, and access runs until you pass, which keeps it usable across more than one administration if you need it. It is designed to sit alongside whatever main course you already have.
Frequently asked questions
Are there free Florida bar multiple-choice practice questions?
Yes. The Florida Board of Bar Examiners publishes study guides with a limited set of sample Florida multiple-choice questions, free at floridabarexam.org. Do all of them, but there are only a few dozen, so treat them as a starting point.
What is the best paid source of Florida MCQs?
It depends on your budget and study style. Compare options on the number of Florida-specific questions, whether each has a written explanation, and total cost, and remember a supplement is meant to add to your main course, not replace it.
How many Florida practice questions do I need?
More than the official samples alone. Many takers do several hundred across the multiple-choice subjects, with thorough review of each. Quality of review matters more than raw count.