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What Are the 34 CLEP Exams? Complete List 2026

A full 2026 list of all 34 CLEP exams, grouped by subject with a credit table and practical advice on how colleges apply them.

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Credit Pathways Researcher
📅 June 14, 2026
📖 10 min read
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About the Author
Vaibhav studied criminology and law, finished his bachelor's in three years by using credit-by-exam strategically, and has spent the last two years working alongside college advisors researching credit pathways. He writes from the student's side of the desk. Read more from Vaibhav K. →

34 CLEP exams cover everything from College Composition to French Language, and most of them can save you 3 credits at a time. That sounds small until you stack four exams and knock out 12 credits in one term, which is the same as four classes at many schools. The full set breaks into five big groups: composition and literature, world languages, history and social sciences, science and mathematics, and business. That split matters because colleges do not treat every exam the same way. A 3-credit exam can wipe out a general-education slot, while a language exam can land more credit if you score high enough. Many guides miss this part: the best exam is not the one with the easiest pass rate. It is the one your school will place in the right bucket. A student at Arizona State University, for example, can use several CLEP exams to clear lower-division requirements faster, but the exact fit depends on the degree plan. Use the list below as a filter, not a trivia sheet. Pick the exams that match your school’s catalog, your deadline, and the number of credits you still need.

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The 34 CLEP exams, grouped

The cleanest way to read the catalog: group the 34 exams by subject, then check the usual credit pattern. Most CLEP exams carry 3 semester credits, and language exams can reach 6, 8, or more at some schools if your score clears the school’s cutoff. Use the table to spot the fast wins first.

ExamSubjectCredits
College CompositionComposition3
College Composition ModularComposition3
Analyzing and Interpreting LiteratureLiterature3
American LiteratureLiterature3
Spanish LanguageWorld Languages3-6+ by score
French LanguageWorld Languages3-6+ by score
History of the United States IHistory3

That table shows the pattern, not every school rule. Schools like Arizona State University, Penn State, and many community colleges often post separate CLEP charts, and those charts tell you where each exam lands: general education, elective, or major prep.

Which CLEP subjects unlock the most credit

The biggest credit payoff usually comes from the broadest buckets: history and social sciences, business, and world languages. Those areas include multiple 3-credit exams, so a student who picks three well-matched tests can pick up 9 credits without touching the hard science labs or upper-level major classes. That is why catalog first, test second.

Reality check: Most prep guides spend too much time on the smallest details and too little on school rules. A 50 score and an 80 score both matter only if your college awards the same credit for both, so you should study to pass cleanly and stop there. If your target school posts a 3-credit award for Introductory Business Law, do not burn extra weeks chasing perfection.

A community-college transfer student with a fall registration deadline on August 1 has a different problem. Two exams in June and one in July can add 9 credits before the transcript deadline, but only if the school posts scores fast enough and accepts CLEP in the right slots. That student should check the registrar’s turnaround time before signing up for the third test.

The counterintuitive part: the flashiest exam is not always the smartest pick. A lot of students chase a subject they like and ignore the one that replaces a course they still need, which wastes both time and the $93 exam fee plus the test-center charge. Use the fee as a nudge to target the class that clears a real requirement, not a personal favorite.

Composition and literature usually work best for students who still need first-year writing or a humanities slot. World languages can be gold if a school awards 6 or 12 credits for Spanish, French, or German, but you should only aim that high if your transcript and placement history support it.

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How CLEP credits usually stack

Most CLEP exams award 3 semester credits, so the math stays simple: four passes can equal 12 credits, which often matches a full-time semester load. That makes CLEP useful for a student trying to stay on track for a May graduation or a fall transfer. Schools also split credit in different ways, so one exam might count as general education at one college and as elective credit at another.

What this means: Four 3-credit exams can replace 12 credits, which is a full semester at many schools. That is why a homeschool senior taking 3 CLEPs in one summer can finish general education work before fall classes start. The weak spot is simple: if the school caps CLEP at 30 credits, you need a plan that mixes exam credit with regular coursework.

The exams students ask about most

A handful of CLEP exams get most of the attention because they fit big degree requirements and show up on lots of school charts. These are the ones that usually matter first when a student wants fast credit and a clean transfer path.

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Frequently Asked Questions about CLEP Exams

Final Thoughts on CLEP Exams

The smartest way to use CLEP is not to chase the whole catalog. It is to match 2 or 3 exams to a degree plan, check the school chart, and stop once the credit gap closes. That sounds boring. It also saves real money, because one 3-credit pass can replace a 15-week class at a public university, and four passes can equal 12 credits in a single term. The exam list works best when you read it like a map, not a menu. Composition and literature help with writing and humanities. World languages can carry extra credit. History, business, science, and math fill the rest. A student who starts with the easiest-looking test often wastes time if that test does not fit the transcript. Take the next step like a planner, not a gambler. Pick your school, pull its CLEP policy, circle the exams that match open requirements, and line them up in the order that gives you the fastest credit path.

How CLEP credits actually work

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