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Articles · The EPSO EU Knowledge Test, Explained

The EPSO EU Knowledge Test, Explained

A scored test on the EU's institutions, treaties and procedures — what it covers, the traps it is built on, and how to train for it so every mark feeds into your ranking.

Updated June 2026 · EPSO preparation · ~7 min read

The EU Knowledge test is the part of the EPSO AD-5 competition where preparation pays back most predictably: unlike reasoning, the material is finite, written down in the Treaties, and largely stable from year to year. Because every correct answer feeds into your ranking rather than a pass/fail gate, the candidates who consistently score well here tend to sit at the top of the reserve list.

The test is short, dense, and built around a small family of recurring traps. Knowing what those traps look like is just as important as memorising the institutions and treaty articles themselves.

What it tests

The EU Knowledge test measures your factual command of how the European Union is built and how it acts. Questions are short, direct, and almost always have a precise legal or historical anchor — a treaty article, an institution's mandate, a date, a numerical threshold. There is no passage to interpret: you either know the answer or you do not. The scope is consistent across recent EPSO competitions:

The format at a glance

In the current EPSO AD-5 format, the EU Knowledge test is a multiple-choice test of fixed length and timing, taken on screen alongside the other reasoning components.

ElementDetail
Questions30
Duration35 minutes
Scoring0 to 30
Pass markNo separate pass mark — score feeds into the ranking
LanguageAny of the 24 official EU languages

That works out to a little over a minute per question. Because there is no passage to read, speed is rarely the bottleneck — precision is.

The recurring traps

EU Knowledge questions look factual on the surface, but the distractors are not random. They are built around a small set of confusable pairs that recur from one competition to the next:

Train your EU Knowledge

Realistic EPSO-style questions on institutions, treaties and procedures, with explanations for every answer. See the traps before they catch you.

Start practising → First set free · no cost

How to prepare

EU Knowledge rewards a different kind of study to reasoning. Where verbal and numerical reward timed practice and pattern recognition, EU Knowledge rewards organised memorisation around a small consolidated set of sources: the TEU, the TFEU, the Charter, and a one-page institutional summary you maintain yourself. Read the actual treaty articles, not summaries of summaries — the precise wording of Article 17(7) TEU or Article 16(4) TEU is what the distractors are built against.

The most effective routine is to alternate active recall — answering practice questions under time pressure — with focused review of the topics where you got things wrong. Build a personal "confusion list" of the items you keep mixing up: the three Councils, the seven institutions, the two CJEU courts, the treaty dates. Review it weekly. By the time you sit the test, those confusions should feel automatic.

One practical tip: when you see an option mentioning a date, a body or a treaty article, slow down for half a second and ask which of the standard trap families is being baited. If you can name the trap, you are unlikely to fall for it.

Go deeper on EU Knowledge

A 19-chapter EU Knowledge series covering institutions, treaties, procedures and policies — with an audio guide, slide deck, infographic and report for every chapter. Chapter 1 is free; the full set comes with Premium.

Open EU Knowledge → Audios · slides · infographics · reports

Worked examples

Three examples taken directly from our practice bank, in the exact EPSO EU Knowledge format — a single direct question, four options, only one correct. Read the question, pick your answer, then reveal the explanation — paying close attention to which trap each distractor is built around.

Example 1 — Institution confusion
Question. Who are the members of the European Council under Article 15(2) TEU?
Show answer
Answer: D. Under Article 15(2) TEU, the European Council consists of the Heads of State or Government of the Member States, together with its own President and the President of the Commission. The High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy takes part in its work but is not a member and does not vote.

Why each distractor fails:
A — foreign ministers sit in the Foreign Affairs Council, a configuration of the Council of the EU, not in the European Council. Classic institutional-layer swap.
B — the College of Commissioners is the Commission, not the European Council; only the Commission President sits with the European Council.
C — permanent ambassadors form COREPER, which prepares Council of the EU work; they have no seat in the European Council.
Takeaway: whenever a question names a "Council", check which of the three you are dealing with — Council of the EU (ministers, legislator), European Council (HoSG, strategy) or Council of Europe (not an EU body at all). Each distractor moves a real EU figure one institutional layer up or down.
Example 2 — Treaty date trap
Question. Which 1951 treaty established the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC)?
Show answer
Answer: C. The Treaty of Paris was signed on 18 April 1951 by France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, and entered into force on 23 July 1952. It pooled coal and steel production under a supranational High Authority — the institutional ancestor of today's European Commission — and was concluded for a fixed term of 50 years, expiring in 2002 when its competences were absorbed by the European Community.

Why each distractor fails:
A — the Treaty of Maastricht is a real treaty (1992) but created the European Union and its three-pillar structure, not the ECSC.
B — the Treaty of Rome (1957) created the EEC and Euratom, six years after the ECSC.
D — the Treaty of Brussels (1965), also called the Merger Treaty, fused the executive bodies of the three Communities into a single Commission and Council.
Takeaway: every treaty distractor is itself a real treaty, picked specifically to bait you if you misremember the date or the substance. Lock the signature year and the entry-into-force year together as a pair (1951 / 1952 for Paris, 2007 / 2009 for Lisbon, 1992 / 1993 for Maastricht).
Example 3 — Who proposes vs who elects
Question. Under Article 17(7) TEU, who proposes and who elects the Commission President?
Show answer
Answer: A. Under Article 17(7) TEU, the European Council proposes a candidate by qualified majority, taking account of the European Parliament elections and after appropriate consultations, and the European Parliament then elects that candidate by a majority of its component members. If the candidate fails to obtain the required majority, the European Council must propose a new candidate within one month. This is the legal basis behind the Spitzenkandidat practice developed since 2014, although that practice is not itself enshrined in the Treaties.

Why each distractor fails:
B — wrong institution (Council of the EU, not European Council) and wrong threshold (unanimity instead of QMV). Two trap families combined.
C — the Parliament does not nominate; it can only elect a candidate proposed by the European Council. Common "who initiates vs who decides" inversion.
D — the Council of the EU (the sectoral ministers' body) has no role in this procedure; the institution involved is the European Council. The distractor also inverts the roles, making the European Council elect.
Takeaway: almost every institutional-procedure question turns on a two-step verb pair (proposes / elects, initiates / adopts, nominates / appoints) and on which exact "Council" is involved. Read both halves of the option before deciding.

These examples are written in the exact style of our Set 1–4 practice bank — same stem length, same four-option format, same trap classification used in the explanations. They are not official EPSO questions.

Frequently asked questions

How many EU Knowledge questions are in the EPSO AD-5 test?

Thirty questions in 35 minutes, scored from 0 to 30. There is no separate pass mark for EU knowledge, but the score feeds directly into your ranking.

Does EU Knowledge count towards my ranking?

Yes, fully. EU knowledge is one of the scored components of the EPSO AD-5 competition and every correct answer contributes to your final position on the ranking list.

What is the most common mistake?

Mixing up institutions — especially the Council of the EU, the Council of Europe and the European Council — or confusing the signature date of a treaty with the date it entered into force.

The fastest way to lock in the institutions, the treaty dates and the voting thresholds is to practise under realistic, timed conditions. The first set is free.