U.S. History EOC — Practice Tests & Mock Exams

Colonial era through modern America. Government, economics, geography, culture. Covers TEKS §113.

Built for the Florida CAP Prep — also used by Algebra 1 students in 9 states and 5 countries
Full-Length EOC Mock Exam

55 questions · 160 min · 80% practice target

Free Practice (20)
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85%+ cold
You're likely ready for the official U.S. History End-of-Course (EOC) examination. Register with your counselor and take 1–2 full timed mocks to lock it in.
70–85%
Solid foundation, real prep needed. 4–6 weeks of timed mocks ($29.99 / 6 mo) with AI explanations on every wrong answer.
Under 70%
Concept-level gaps. Start with the Concept Lessons below, then return to practice once the underlying topic clicks.

Florida EOCs are scored on Achievement Levels 1–5; Level 3 (“Satisfactory”) or higher earns course credit through the Credit Acceleration Program (§1003.4295, F.S.). Confirm current details with your school counselor.

Also useful for EOC U.S. History EOC

The Florida EOC U.S. History EOC tests the same Florida standards standard our practice covers. The same purchase serves both EOC and EOC EOC preparation. How the overlap works →

Learn the Concepts

Visual lessons that build U.S. History from first principles — diagrams, worked examples, embedded practice.

Concept Lesson · 12 min· Florida standards 1A,2A,3A,4A,5A
U.S. History — Essential Timeline & Documents

Founding documents, key amendments, major eras, landmark court cases — every U.S. History CBE essential timeline event in one place.

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Concept Lesson · 9 min· Florida standards 1A,1B,2A,2B,2C
Colonial Foundations: The Three Regions and Why Geography Mattered

The 13 American colonies fell into three distinct regions — New England, Middle, Southern — each with a different climate, geography, and economy. Master these regions and the geographic features that shaped settlement.

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Concept Lesson · 9 min· Florida standards 3A,3B,3C,3D
Causes of the American Revolution: From Stamp Act to Lexington

The Revolution didn't start at Lexington — it built up through a decade of British acts and colonial protests. Master the chain of cause-and-effect from Stamp Act (1765) to the first shots (1775).

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Concept Lesson · 10 min· Florida standards 4A,4B,4C,4D
Founding Documents: Declaration, Articles, Constitution, Bill of Rights

Four documents define America's founding: Declaration of Independence (1776), Articles of Confederation (1781), Constitution (1787), Bill of Rights (1791). Know what each did and why each was needed.

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Concept Lesson · 9 min· Florida standards 5A,5B,5C
Westward Expansion: Louisiana Purchase to Manifest Destiny

Between 1803 and 1853, the US grew from 13 states clustered on the Atlantic to a continental nation. Master the four major land acquisitions and the ideology behind them.

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Concept Lesson · 10 min· Florida standards 6A,6B,6C,6D,6E
Civil War & Reconstruction: From Fort Sumter to the 13th Amendment

The Civil War (1861-1865) was the bloodiest conflict in American history. Master the causes, key battles, Lincoln's leadership, and the Reconstruction Amendments that followed.

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What's on the U.S. History EOC

Every Florida standards standard the official exam covers — and the exact topics our practice questions target.

SEMESTER EOCFlorida standards 1A–32B
  • 1A-6BHistory
  • 1A-6BHistory
  • 12A-14CGeography
  • 12A-14CGeography
  • 15A-16EEconomics
  • 15A-16EEconomics
  • 17A-19EGovernment
  • 17A-19EGovernment
  • 20A-22ECitizenship
  • 20A-22ECitizenship
  • 23A-25DCulture
  • 23A-25DCulture
  • 26A-28BScience, Technology, and Society
  • 26A-28BScience, Technology, and Society
  • 29A-32BSocial Study Skills
  • 29A-32BSocial Study Skills

U.S. History EOC — Common Questions

What time periods does the US History EOC cover?

The Florida US History EOC covers from Reconstruction (1877) through the present, organized into the eight Florida standards strands: Reconstruction era, Industrial Revolution, World War I and 1920s, Great Depression and World War II, Cold War, Civil Rights, late 20th century, and contemporary America.

How hard is the US History EOC?

It rewards specific factual knowledge — names, dates, court cases, legislation — combined with analysis of primary sources, charts, and political cartoons. Students who memorize key amendments, presidents, and Supreme Court cases AND practice document analysis tend to score well above the 70% threshold.

What kinds of questions are on the US History EOC?

Multiple-choice questions test direct recall, cause-and-effect, and document interpretation. Expect quotes from speeches, excerpts from court rulings, political cartoons, and statistical charts. About 25–30% of questions involve interpreting a primary source.

How many questions and how long is the US History EOC?

The exam runs about 3 hours with roughly 60 multiple-choice questions. Our mock exams use the same length, source-document style, and topic distribution to match the official EOC format.

What's the fastest way to prep for the US History EOC?

Prioritize the eras most heavily tested: Civil Rights, World War II, the Cold War, and contemporary America together account for over 50% of the exam. Use our Florida standards category analysis to find your weakest era, then drill it with targeted practice and timed full-length mocks.

Is the US History EOC easier than the AP exam?

Yes — the EOC tests Florida-required content at high school level, not college level. There's no DBQ essay; it's all multiple-choice. Most students who can pass an honors US History final can pass the EOC with focused Florida standards prep.

I'm not in Florida — does U.S. History prep here still apply?

Yes, with one caveat. U.S. History content — Reconstruction through contemporary America — is taught in every state's high school curriculum, so the content overlap is high. Our Florida standards strands closely mirror what's tested on state U.S. History EOCs, AP US History review, and SAT US History where applicable. The framing is around the Florida Florida standards strands; some states emphasize different historical analysis methodologies, so confirm specifics with your school.