
Pass Your RACGP Exams Without Breaking the Bank
Quality exam preparation shouldn't cost thousands. Get daily practice questions, full mock exams — all designed specifically for RACGP AKT and KFP candidates.
Everything You Need to Pass
Comprehensive preparation tools that actually work — no fluff, just results
Each question includes detailed explanations and references to current Australian guidelines.
- Choose questions from any specialty area (Cardiovascular, Respiratory, Paediatrics, etc.)
- Bookmark difficult questions for later review
- Track your progress across all domains
15 complete practice exams that mirror actual RACGP exam format and difficulty. Timed mode available for realistic practice.
- Same format and time limits as real AKT/KFP exams
- Detailed performance analytics and weak area identification
- Pause and resume exams on any device
Study on your phone during ward rounds, on your tablet at home, or on your computer. Your progress syncs automatically across all devices.
- Native iOS and Android apps (launching with full release)
- Dark mode for late-night study sessions
- Pick up where you left off on any device
Choose from any of the 35 units in the official RACGP syllabus. Focus on the topics you need.
- All 35 units aligned to the RACGP curriculum
- Focus on weak areas or revise entire topics
- Study at your own pace, unit by unit
See What You'll Get
Real exam-style questions with detailed explanations
Charlotte Quan, a 34-year-old primary school teacher with mild persistent asthma (budesonide/formoterol 200/6 µg bd; salbutamol pre-exercise only) presents for follow-up after her third ED visit in six months for regular-narrow-complex supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) terminated with intravenous adenosine. ECG between episodes is normal sinus rhythm 72 bpm; echocardiogram and thyroid/electrolytes are normal. Spirometry today: FEV₁ 82% predicted, FEV₁/FVC 0.78 with 9% post-bronchodilator reversibility. BP 118/76 mmHg, SpO₂ 98% RA. She is keen to continue preventive medication to avoid further attacks but is concerned because her father's asthma worsened on "heart tablets". She is otherwise well, takes no other regular medicines and plans pregnancy within 12 months.
Which of the following is the MOST appropriate GP management regarding long-term beta-blocker therapy for Charlotte's SVT?
Tap on an option to check the result and explanation.
Ursula Sefton, 83-year-old resident of a 120-bed aged-care facility, is reviewed during a GP visit. Over the last month she has developed widespread hyperkeratotic crusts on her hands, elbows, scalp and trunk with minimal pruritus. A skin scraping performed yesterday confirmed Sarcoptes scabiei var. hominis with a mite count >100 per low-power field. Two carers now report intensely itchy papules on their wrists. Ursula has type 2 diabetes, stage-3 CKD (eGFR 48 mL/min) and takes metformin, gliclazide and amlodipine. She is alert, afebrile and haemodynamically stable. No secondary bacterial infection is evident. The facility has a mix of high-care and dementia wings; bed occupancy is near capacity and there is limited spare accommodation. The Director of Nursing asks for an immediate management plan to control a potential outbreak.
Which of the following actions are MOST appropriate to control this crusted scabies outbreak? Select six (6) options.
Tap on options to select your answers, then check your answer.
How We Compare
More features, better value — without compromising on quality
| Platform | Questions | Mock Exams | Mobile App | Cost | Flexible pricing (Pay-as-you-go) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP Academy | 2150+ | 4 | ❌ | $2975 / 6 months | ❌ |
| PassGP | 2875+ | 14 | ✓ | $1495 / 6 months | ❌ |
| GP Ex | 1300+ | 6 | ❌ | $880 / 6 months | ❌ |
GP Study HubNEW | 3,000+ | 15 | ✓ | $49$99/ month | ✓ |
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