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About ExamCanada.online

We build free practice tests and plain-language study guides for Canadian exams. No sign-up, no paywalls, no hidden upsell. This page explains how the site is built, why it exists, and what makes it different from the dozen other exam-prep sites you've probably already opened in other tabs.

Why this site exists

Most Canadian exam-prep sites fall into one of three buckets: paywalled platforms that charge $30+ for content drawn from a free government guide; ad-saturated quiz sites where the questions feel like they were generated by a script; or the official guides themselves, which are accurate but written like legislation. None of those work well for someone studying on a phone the night before a test.

ExamCanada.online started because the operator went through the BC Class 7 ICBC knowledge test as a newcomer and couldn't find a single free, mobile-first resource that just explained the rules clearly without trying to sell something. The first few pages were notes from that prep. The site grew from there into Ontario G1, Alberta Class 7, citizenship, and WHMIS as friends and family asked for similar resources for their exams.

How we build the content

Every page on this site starts from publicly available official source material — the ICBC Learn to Drive Smart guide for BC, the MTO Driver's Handbook for Ontario, the Alberta Driver's Guide, IRCC's Discover Canada for citizenship, and current WHMIS 2015 regulations. We don't reproduce official exam questions (those aren't public, and we wouldn't use them if they were). We write our own practice questions from the same source material the real exams are written from.

When we make claims about pass marks, fees, time limits, or eligibility rules, we link to the official source. When something is our opinion or framing — like which topic to study first, or how strict the marker tends to be — we say so. The detailed process is on our methodology page.

What we hand-verified

One of our citizenship users flagged a wrong answer on a Facebook group in late April 2026. That single report led to a full audit of every Canadian Citizenship Test question on the site — all 644 — against IRCC's Discover Canada. We found and corrected 370 wrong answers. The third-party question pool we'd originally imported from had silently defaulted the "correct" answer to the first option for ~99% of questions in some test pools.

That audit is the work behind the "every answer hand-verified against IRCC source material" line on the citizenship hub. It's also why we now ask users to flag any answer they think is wrong — that one Facebook screenshot did more for the quality of this site than weeks of automated testing would have. If you spot something wrong, the contact page goes to a real inbox.

What we are not

  • Not an official government site. Always confirm exam fees, eligibility, and booking details with the issuing authority (ICBC, MTO, IRCC, etc.).
  • Not a substitute for the official study guide. Our pages summarize and explain; the official guide is the source of truth. Read it.
  • Not a guarantee of passing. Practice tests build skill and confidence. The real exam is up to you on test day.
  • Not a paid course. Everything here is free, forever. We run a small ad on the site to cover hosting and a coffee fund. If that ever changes we'll say so on this page.
  • Not anonymous-by-design. We don't list operator names publicly, but we're reachable through the contact page and we own a small group of related Canadian sites — listed on the resources page.

How to use this site

Start with the hub page for your exam (e.g. BC Class 7, Ontario G1, citizenship). Read the study guide. Take a practice test. Look at where you scored lowest and study that topic specifically before retrying. The accuracy notice on every test page invites you to flag any answer you think is wrong — please do.

That's it. No accounts to create, no email to give, no upsell. If the site helps you pass your test, that's the only outcome we're aiming for.