The US citizenship test evolves over time. USCIS periodically updates the civics questions, changes testing procedures, and adjusts fees. If you're preparing for your naturalization interview in 2025, here's what you need to know about the current state of the test.
Key 2025 Updates
The 2008 version of the civics test remains in use. Current officials have changed with recent elections. Application fees have been adjusted. Processing times vary by USCIS office. The test format (oral, 10 questions, 6 to pass) remains unchanged.
The Civics Test: What Changed and What Didn't
The 2008 Test Remains Current
USCIS redesigned the civics test in 2008, creating the current 100-question format. Despite periodic discussions about updating it, the 2008 version remains the official test as of 2025. The 100 questions and most answers haven't changed.
What Has Changed: Current Officials
Several civics questions ask about current government officials. These answers change with elections and appointments:
- Question 28: Name of the current President
- Question 29: Name of the current Vice President
- Question 40: Name of the current Chief Justice
- Question 43: Name of your state's Governor
- Question 46: Political party of the current President
- Question 47: Name of the current Speaker of the House
- Question 20: Name of your state's US Senators
- Question 23: Name of your US Representative
Always verify these answers on uscis.gov before your test. Using outdated names will count as incorrect answers.
Fee Changes
USCIS periodically adjusts naturalization application fees. As of 2025:
- N-400 application fee: Check uscis.gov for the current fee (approximately $710, which includes $640 filing fee + $85 biometrics fee, though biometrics fees have been waived in some periods)
- Fee waiver: Applicants with household income at or below 150% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines may qualify for a fee waiver (Form I-912)
- Reduced fee: Applicants with income between 150-200% of poverty guidelines may qualify for a reduced filing fee
Processing Times
Processing times for N-400 applications vary significantly by USCIS office. As of 2025, typical timelines are:
- Online filing to interview: 5-15 months depending on location
- Interview to oath ceremony: Same day to 3 months
- Total timeline: 6-18 months from filing to naturalization
You can check processing times for your specific USCIS office at egov.uscis.gov/processing-times.
The Proposed Redesigned Test
USCIS proposed a redesigned civics test in 2020 that would have changed the format significantly (more questions, written answers). However, this redesigned test was withdrawn in 2021, and the 2008 version was retained. As of 2025, there are no announced plans to redesign the test again.
This means you should study the current 100-question list. Don't waste time preparing for a hypothetical new test format that doesn't exist yet.
Online Filing
USCIS now strongly encourages online filing of the N-400 application. Benefits include:
- Faster processing compared to paper applications
- Ability to check status online in real time
- Electronic notifications for appointments and decisions
- Ability to upload supporting documents
Paper filing remains an option but generally results in longer processing times.
What to Do Now
- Study the current 100 questions from the official USCIS list
- Verify current officials on uscis.gov (President, VP, Speaker, Chief Justice, your state's officials)
- Check current fees before filing your application
- File online for faster processing
- Start studying early — don't wait until you receive your interview notice
The test format is stable, the questions are published, and the pass rate is high for applicants who prepare. There are no surprises if you study the right materials.