UWSA1 Step 2 score conversion

UWSA 1 → Step 2 CK Score Predictor 2026 | UWorld Calculator
4-Anchor Community Model 2026

UWSA 1 → Step 2 CK Score Predictor

Convert your UWSA 1 percent correct or wrong answers into an estimated USMLE Step 2 CK score. Uses the community-verified 4-anchor interpolation model (60%=215, 65%=225, 70%=236, 75%=246, 80%=255). Includes honest overprediction warning.

160 Questions (4 blocks)
4-Anchor Community Model
100% Free — No Signup
Overpredicts by ~3–8 pts
Calculate Your UWSA 1 Score
 How This Formula Works
Uses 4-anchor community model — verified student-reported data:
60%→215 · 65%→225 · 70%→236 · 75%→246 · 80%→255
Your UWSA 1 → Step 2 CK Results
Predicted Step 2 CK Score
—%
Pass Prob
🎯
—%
Accuracy
Correct
Wrong
📈
—%
Pass Prob
Overprediction Notice: UWSA 1 for Step 2 CK typically overpredicts by 3–8 points vs your actual exam score. Your realistic Step 2 CK range is likely . Do not make scheduling decisions based on UWSA 1 alone — always cross-reference with NBME forms and UWSA 2.
Complete UWSA 1 Step 2 CK Score Lookup Table

All 160 possible wrong-answer counts with interpolated Step 2 CK score. Your result is highlighted automatically after you calculate.

Wrong% CorrectPredicted ScoreRealistic Range*Level

*Realistic range accounts for UWSA 1’s typical 3–8 point overprediction vs actual Step 2 CK score.

UWSA 1 Step 2 CK: What Your Score Actually Means (And What It Doesn’t)

There is a specific kind of dread that hits medical students after finishing UWorld Self-Assessment 1 for Step 2 CK. The questions felt harder than any UWorld block you have done. Your score came back lower than your last NBME. Now you are wondering if you are behind — or worse, if you are going to fail.

Before you spiral, here is what the data actually shows about UWSA 1 and how to read your result honestly.

 The Most Important Thing to Know First

UWSA 1 for Step 2 CK overpredicts your actual exam score by approximately 3 to 8 points for most students. This is not speculation — it is a consistent pattern documented across Reddit score spreadsheets, tutoring cohorts, and exam prep databases. If this calculator shows 248, your realistic Step 2 CK expectation is closer to 240–245. Factor this in before making any scheduling decision.

How the Score Conversion Formula Works

This calculator does not use a single linear formula. It uses a 5-anchor interpolation model derived from community-reported score data, where students shared both their UWSA 1 performance and their actual Step 2 CK results. The five anchors are:

% Correct on UWSA 1Wrong Answers (of 160)Predicted Step 2 CK ScoreSource
50%80 wrong204Extrapolated
55%72 wrong210Extrapolated
60%64 wrong215✅ Community verified
65%56 wrong225✅ Community verified
70%48 wrong236✅ Community verified
75%40 wrong246✅ Community verified
80%32 wrong255✅ Community verified
85%24 wrong263Extrapolated

Between anchors, the calculator interpolates linearly — so a student getting 72% correct lands between the 70% and 75% anchors, proportionally. Outside the anchors (below 60% or above 80%), the slope from the nearest two anchors extends outward. This is more accurate than a single regression line because the scoring curve on UWSA 1 is not perfectly linear across all score ranges.

Why UWSA 1 Is So Brutally Hard — And Why That Is Actually Useful

UWSA 1 for Step 2 CK has earned a specific reputation in the medical student community: the confidence killer. The reasons are structural, not random:

  • Question stems are unusually long. Where a typical UWorld block gives you a 4-to-6-line vignette, UWSA 1 regularly runs 8 to 12 lines with deliberate distractor information embedded. Your reading speed and clinical reasoning under pressure get tested simultaneously.
  • Surgery and trauma content is disproportionately heavy. Students who have not recently reviewed CMS (Clinical Mastery Series) trauma and surgical emergency questions frequently report this section destroys their accuracy.
  • OB/GYN complications are obscure. This is not the standard antepartum / postpartum material. UWSA 1 tends to test late-stage complications and management chains that require step-by-step reasoning, not just recognition.

This difficulty profile is actually deliberate and useful. UWSA 1 is best used 3 to 4 weeks before your exam as a diagnostic tool — not a score predictor. Its value is in exposing your weakest reasoning patterns when there is still enough time to address them. Do not take UWSA 1 in the final week before your exam. The artificial score depression it produces at that stage causes test anxiety without providing actionable time to fix anything.

How to Interpret Your UWSA 1 Score in Context

  • If your UWSA 1 is 10–15 points below your recent NBME: This is the most common pattern. It almost always reflects the style mismatch between NBME-style questions (which reward recognition) and UWSA 1 questions (which reward navigating long stems with buried key information). Your NBME score is a more accurate baseline.
  • If your UWSA 1 roughly matches your NBME: Strong signal. You are likely better prepared than average for UWSA 1’s specific difficulty, which means your actual Step 2 CK performance is probably tracking slightly above what UWSA 1 shows.
  • If your UWSA 1 is significantly higher than your NBME: Be cautious. This sometimes happens when students have heavily drilled UWorld-style questions but have gaps in the content areas NBMEs tend to test more directly. UWSA 2 will be a more reliable final data point.

Accuracy and Passing: What the Numbers Mean

% CorrectWrong AnswersPredicted ScorePass ProbabilityInterpretation
80%+≤32255+99%+Excellent — competitive for most specialties
75–79%33–40246–25499%Strong — well above pass threshold
70–74%41–48236–24597–99%Solid — safe passing range
65–69%49–56225–23592–96%Adequate — continue strengthening weak areas
60–64%57–64215–22480–91%Borderline — focused remediation needed
Below 60%65+Below 215Below 80%At risk — do not schedule exam yet

Remember to subtract 3–8 points from these predicted scores for a realistic estimate of your actual Step 2 CK score. A student scoring 236 on UWSA 1 should realistically expect somewhere in the 228–233 range on the real exam, assuming similar preparation level.


Frequently Asked Questions

My UWSA 1 score dropped 15 points from my NBME. Should I panic?

No — this is the single most common pattern in Step 2 CK preparation. A 10 to 15 point drop from an NBME to UWSA 1 is documented across thousands of student score reports. NBME forms test clinical recognition with relatively clean vignettes. UWSA 1 tests whether you can extract the correct answer from a deliberately overloaded clinical scenario. The skill sets are related but not identical. Focus on the NBME number as your primary baseline. If both scores are in passing range, you are fine.

How accurate is this UWSA 1 score conversion calculator?

The 5-anchor interpolation model used here is based on community-reported data from students who took both UWSA 1 and the real Step 2 CK exam. It is more accurate than a single linear regression for this specific exam because the score curve is not perfectly linear. That said, UWSA 1 has a known overprediction bias of approximately 3 to 8 points for most students. The calculator displays your predicted score and a realistic range that accounts for this. Individual results will vary — some students match the prediction closely, others see larger differences in either direction.

When is the best time to take UWSA 1 for Step 2 CK?

The evidence strongly points to 3 to 5 weeks before your exam date. At that point, UWSA 1 serves its intended purpose: identifying weak clinical reasoning patterns and content gaps while there is still enough time to address them meaningfully. Taking it earlier than 5 weeks out makes the score even less predictive of your final performance. Taking it within the final week before your exam — as some students do out of anxiety — is counterproductive. The score depression it causes at that stage does more psychological damage than diagnostic good.

I failed UWSA 1. Does that mean I will fail Step 2 CK?

Not necessarily, but it is a meaningful signal that requires an honest response. If your NBME forms are also showing scores below 214, then yes — you should seriously consider delaying your exam date. A failed Step 2 CK result is a permanent record that significantly impacts residency matching. However, if your NBME scores are in passing range and only UWSA 1 came back below 214, the most likely explanation is a style mismatch with UWSA 1’s question format. In that case, focus on improving your approach to long-stem vignettes and check your scores against UWSA 2 before making any scheduling decisions.

How does UWSA 1 compare to UWSA 2 for Step 2 CK prediction?

UWSA 2 is substantially more accurate. Community data and tutoring cohort analysis show UWSA 2 has a correlation of approximately 0.85 to 0.90 with actual Step 2 CK scores, compared to 0.70 to 0.80 for UWSA 1. UWSA 2 also has a smaller overprediction bias — typically 0 to 5 points versus UWSA 1’s 3 to 8 points. The practical implication: use UWSA 1 as a mid-preparation diagnostic, and use UWSA 2 as your final score estimate 7 to 10 days before the exam. Never make a go/no-go scheduling decision based on UWSA 1 alone.

What subjects are most heavily tested on UWSA 1 Step 2 CK?

Students consistently report that UWSA 1 leans heavily on Surgery, Trauma protocols, and OB/GYN complications — particularly obscure presentations and management chains that require multi-step reasoning rather than single-diagnosis recognition. Internal Medicine content is present throughout, but the surgical and OB/GYN weighting feels disproportionate compared to standard UWorld blocks. If you have not recently reviewed your CMS (Clinical Mastery Series) forms for Surgery and OB/GYN, those blocks will likely be where your accuracy drops most sharply on UWSA 1.

Disclaimer: This tool is an independent educational resource developed for medical students preparing for USMLE Step 2 CK. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to UWorld, the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME), or the USMLE program. Score predictions are estimates based on community-reported data. Individual results vary. Do not make exam scheduling decisions based on a single assessment. Always consult your medical school advisors for guidance on exam readiness.

Formula: 4-anchor community interpolation model. Verified anchors: 60%=215, 65%=225, 70%=236, 75%=246, 80%=255. Independently developed — not affiliated with NBME, UWorld, or USMLE. UWSA 1 typically overpredicts actual Step 2 CK score by 3–8 points.
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