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Build a PMI-SP plan around current eligibility sets, scheduling education hours, Pearson VUE scheduling, the 170-question exam, 210-minute timing, and the five scheduling content domains.
PMI-SP preparation should cover the full scheduling lifecycle, not just CPM formulas. We help candidates verify project scheduling experience and education hours, study schedule strategy, planning, monitoring and controlling, closeout, and stakeholder communications, then practice schedule model and reporting scenarios.
Use PMI's current certification path as the checklist: confirm eligibility, document scheduling experience and education, complete the application, schedule through Pearson VUE, study by domain weight, and maintain 30 PDUs.
Current PMI materials list 170 questions and 210 minutes, with 150 scored and 20 unscored items.
Schedule Strategy, Planning and Development, Monitoring and Controlling, Closeout, and Communications anchor the exam.
PMI lists 40 scheduling education hours for the secondary-degree path and 30 hours for four-year or GAC-accredited degree paths.
PMI-SP holders need 30 PDUs in each three-year cycle to maintain the credential.
PMI-SP goes deeper than general project management scheduling. HiraEdu maps the exam content outline to schedule strategy, model development, logic, resources, baselines, monitoring, recovery, closeout, and communications so candidates study the full scheduling lifecycle.
Candidates practice creating and analyzing schedules with activities, sequences, dependencies, constraints, assumptions, durations, calendars, resources, critical path, float, schedule risk, baseline approval, and stakeholder review cycles.
The largest domain focuses on monitoring and controlling. Practice scenarios cover status updates, variance thresholds, forecast changes, corrective actions, change requests, schedule compression, progress reporting, and communicating schedule risk to stakeholders.
Use this PMI-SP (Scheduling Professional) exam help page for exam-specific context, then compare the broader online exam help services page or contact HiraEdu if you need a direct handoff. This page stays focused on PMI-SP (Scheduling Professional) while the linked service pages cover broader exam support options.
PMI's Scheduling Professional certification demonstrates specialized ability to develop, maintain, analyze, and communicate project schedules. Current PMI materials list 170 multiple-choice questions, 210 minutes of exam time, 150 scored questions, 20 unscored pretest questions, Pearson VUE test-center delivery, and five schedule-focused content domains.
HiraEdu prepares PMI-SP candidates around the current exam content outline and PMI scheduling references. Study work covers Schedule Strategy, Schedule Planning and Development, Schedule Monitoring and Controlling, Schedule Closeout, and Stakeholder Communications Management. Candidates practice schedule model design, work breakdown alignment, activities, dependencies, leads and lags, critical path, resource calendars, constraints, baselines, earned schedule concepts, variance thresholds, forecasting, recovery plans, change control, closeout lessons learned, and maintaining the credential with 30 PDUs.
Current PMI materials list 170 multiple-choice questions and 210 minutes of exam time.
PMI states that the exam includes 150 scored questions and 20 unscored pretest questions.
The PMI-SP domains are Schedule Strategy, Schedule Planning and Development, Schedule Monitoring and Controlling, Schedule Closeout, and Stakeholder Communications Management.
PMI points candidates toward the PMBOK Guide and Practice Standard for Scheduling, along with the current PMI-SP exam content outline.
PMI-SP holders need 30 professional development units in each three-year cycle to maintain the certification.
Check PMI's current education, scheduling experience, scheduling education hours, audit, and scheduling requirements.
Plan study across schedule strategy, planning and development, monitoring and controlling, closeout, and communications.
Practice critical path, float, dependencies, constraints, calendars, resources, baselines, variance, forecasting, and recovery.
Use timed scenarios on schedule model decisions, stakeholder reporting, change control, closeout, and corrective action.
Use the guide to self-serve, or talk to a coordinator if you need help mapping timelines, official requirements, or troubleshooting day-of logistics.
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