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Home PRC News

PME results August 2026: Professional Mechanical Engineers Technical Evaluation passers list

Dudu by Dudu
May 28, 2026
in PRC News
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A Filipino mechanical engineer in a hard hat stands in front of industrial equipment, representing the August 2026 PME Technical Evaluation results released by the PRC.
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TL;DR: The PRC released the August 2026 PME Technical Evaluation results on August 12, 2026. This batch covers 12 testing centers nationwide, from evaluations held between April 21 and August 6, 2026. Check the official passers list below. If your name is on it, your first move is to log into the PRC LERIS portal and book your registration appointment.

The Professional Regulation Commission released the results of the August 2026 Technical Evaluation for Professional Mechanical Engineers on August 12, 2026. Twelve testing centers are covered, spanning evaluations from Cagayan de Oro to the NCR, across four months of evaluation dates from April through August 2026.

The passers list is organized by testing center below. In addition, we cover what the PME actually is, the two evaluation stages, the three mistakes that get experienced engineers deferred, and what to do the moment you find your name on the list.

August 2026 PME Technical Evaluation: official results

The Board of Mechanical Engineering released the August 2026 batch results on August 12, 2026. This single release covers 12 evaluation batches held across the country from April 21 to August 6, 2026. The authenticated list is on the official PRC Mechanical Engineering page.

DetailInformation
Exam dates coveredApril 21 – August 6, 2026
Testing centersCDO, Cebu, Legazpi, Lucena, Calapan, Palawan, Pagadian, Koronadal, Rosales, Baguio, Iloilo, NCR
Result release dateAugust 12, 2026
Number of passers[NUMBER]
Online registration starts[DATE] (via LERIS portal)
Board ChairmanEngr. Rodulfo L. Tablante
Board MembersEngr. Manuel L. Paulino, Engr. Ramon F. Solis

For context on how other engineering boards handle results and registration, see the April 2026 Electrical Engineers board exam results. However, the post-registration steps are similar across all licensed professions.

PME passers list: August 12, 2026

The official PRC documents will be linked below the moment they are published on August 12, 2026. Bookmark this page and come back that day.

✅ Official results: released August 12, 2026

[NUMBER] engineers passed the August 2026 PME Technical Evaluation. Results cover 12 testing centers from April 21 to August 6, 2026.

Full official result (PDF)
List of passers (PDF)

PME vs regular ME board exam: what is the difference?

Many engineers search “PME board exam results” expecting something like the February Mechanical Engineers licensure exam. However, the PME is a different process entirely. It is not a written test you sit in an examination hall with hundreds of other engineers. Instead, it is a credential upgrade for licensed Registered Mechanical Engineers (RMEs) who have at least four years of active practice and want to advance to the highest tier of the profession.

FeatureRegistered ME (RME)Professional ME (PME)
How you qualifyPass the ME licensure examPass a Technical Evaluation
FormatWritten board examPortfolio defense + oral interview
Experience requiredNone (fresh grads eligible)At least 4 years of active practice
PQF levelLevel 6Level 7
Governing lawR.A. 8495R.A. 8495

The PME title is the highest credential in Philippine mechanical engineering. It tells the industry you can take independent, responsible charge of complex engineering work, not just that you passed an exam years ago.

RME vs PME: Two Different Credentials Registered ME (RME) Professional ME (PME) PQF Level 6 PQF Level 7 Written board exam Technical evaluation + oral defense No experience required 4+ years active practice required Thousands pass each cycle ~160 to 330 passers per cycle Entry-level professional credential Highest ME credential in the Philippines Step 1 of the engineering career path The peer defense. The career pinnacle.
You must hold a valid RME license for at least four years before applying for the PME Technical Evaluation.

First-level vs second-level: what each stage means

The PME Technical Evaluation has two distinct stages. You cannot skip to the second without clearing the first. Consequently, each stage requires a separate application, separate documents, and a separate slot with the Board of Mechanical Engineering.

StageWhat happensKey documents required
First-levelPRC evaluates your credentials, years of practice, and two proposed report titlesApplication form, Transcript of Records, CV, Certificate of Experience, two proposed TER titles with write-ups
Second-levelBoard conducts a full oral defense of your Technical Engineering ReportFive hard copies of TER plus three USB flash drives, Affidavit of Applicant, Affidavit of Competency, Certificate of Experience

Clearing the first level means the board accepted your credentials and approved your report topics. The second level, however, is the real test. The panel probes whether you can explain the engineering behind your own calculations. Most deferrals happen here, not at the document review stage. As a result, preparation for both stages must happen in parallel, not one after the other.

Three traps that get engineers deferred

The most common PME misconception is treating this like a board exam you can cram for. Senior RMEs with decades of experience still get deferred. However, they are almost never turned away for lack of technical knowledge. They are tripped up by three specific, avoidable mistakes.

The management trap in the Technical Engineering Report

Many senior RMEs have moved into managerial or supervisory roles. When they write their Technical Engineering Report (TER), they fill pages with project timelines, procurement wins, and team leadership highlights. The Board of Mechanical Engineering reviews hundreds of reports each cycle. As a result, a TER that reads like a project manager’s log stands out immediately and gets deferred.

Your report must show personal, unassisted mechanical engineering work. The board expects your own calculations, whether that is fluid dynamics, pump head sizing, HVAC thermal load analysis, or structural stress work, with explicit references to the Philippine Mechanical Engineering Code or relevant ASME standards. However, leadership accomplishments do not count as engineering work. The board reviews too many reports to miss the difference.

Getting caught off-guard during the oral interview

Some applicants use report templates from the internet or let junior engineers assist with the data compilation. During the panel interview, a board examiner will point to a specific equation, variable, or safety factor in your report. Then they will ask: “Why did you design it this way, and what would happen to the system if we adjusted this variable?”

If you cannot answer that on the spot, the board will defer you. Know every equation and design decision in your Detailed Description of Projects cold. Not generally familiar. Cold.

The last-minute affidavit bottleneck

To clear the PRC application window, you need signed affidavits from active, licensed PMEs who can vouch for your engineering practice. Most applicants collect these signatures a few days before the deadline. At the PRC counter, they then discover that one endorser has an expired license or lacks a Certificate of Good Standing from the Philippine Society of Mechanical Engineers (PSME).

That single paperwork issue invalidates the entire application. As a result, you miss the current batch and wait for the next cycle. Verify your endorsers’ credentials at least three months before the deadline, not three days before.

On the question of deferrals versus failures: there is a persistent rumor that nobody actually fails the PME evaluation. Technically, the board rarely issues a permanent denial. But a deferral means overhauling your TER, filing additional documents, and starting a fresh application to the next cycle. That pushes your PME back by six to twelve months. For a senior engineer waiting on this credential, that is a real cost.

3 Traps That Cause PME Deferrals Trap 1: The TER Trap 2: The Interview Trap 3: The Affidavit Problem: Report reads like a manager’s log, not an engineer’s calculations Fix: Show personal ME work. Cite ASME and Philippine ME Code throughout. Problem: Cannot defend your own calculations live in the panel interview Fix: Know every equation and safety factor in your DDP by heart. Problem: PME endorser has an expired license or no PSME Good Standing cert Fix: Verify all endorsers 3 months before the application deadline.
Each trap is preventable with advance planning. Most deferrals happen at the second-level oral defense, not the document review stage.

What to do after you pass

Finding your name is only the first step. Three things need to happen before you can legally use the PME title.

StepActionWhere
1Register for your Certificate of Registration and PRC Professional IDPRC LERIS portal
2Attend the oath-taking ceremony at your assigned PRC regional officePRC regional office for your testing center
3Apply for PSME membershippsme.org.ph

Before heading to your PRC appointment, read our guide on what a PRC license is and what to bring on registration day. Specifically, it covers the required documents, fees, and the counter issues that slow down first-time registrants.

Historical PME passers data

The PRC does not publish a passing rate for the PME Technical Evaluation. This is not a standard board exam. Each applicant is evaluated individually, so the PRC only releases the total count of passers per cycle.

The four most recent evaluation batches, based on official PRC announcements, are shown below.

Evaluation batchNumber of passers
February 2026231
November 2025331
June 2025288
February 2025162

The numbers are small compared to regular licensure exams. That is expected. Each person on that list walked into a room and defended their own engineering work in front of a sitting board. No multiple choice. No guesswork. Either your calculations hold up under questioning, or they do not.

PME Passers by Evaluation Batch 0 100 200 300 162 Feb 2025 288 Jun 2025 331 Nov 2025 231 Feb 2026
PME passers per evaluation cycle, February 2025 to February 2026. Source: PRC official announcements.

Frequently asked questions about the August 2026 PME results

When were the August 2026 PME results released?

The PRC released the August 2026 PME Technical Evaluation results on August 12, 2026. Specifically, this covers evaluations held from April 21 to August 6, 2026 across 12 testing centers nationwide.

How many engineers typically pass the PME Technical Evaluation?

The PRC does not publish a passing rate. Based on recent batches, however, the number of passers per cycle ranges from 162 to 331. This reflects the individual nature of the evaluation. Each applicant defends their own engineering work in front of a panel of peers, so the results cannot be compared directly to a standardized board exam.

What is the difference between an RME and a PME in the Philippines?

An RME passed the standard written board exam. A PME is an RME with at least four years of active practice who passed a separate Technical Evaluation. The PME is the highest credential in Philippine mechanical engineering, governed by R.A. 8495. Additionally, the PME is classified as PQF Level 7, one level above the RME’s Level 6.

How do I check the official PME passers list?

The official list is posted on the PRC website and through the LERIS portal. WisePH, however, also posts direct links to the official Google Drive documents on this page as soon as the PRC publishes them. Check back on August 12, 2026.

What happens if I get deferred in the PME Technical Evaluation?

A deferral means the board found your documents or oral defense incomplete. As a result, you will need to revise your Technical Engineering Report, resubmit the required documents, and apply for the next available evaluation batch. This typically delays your PME credential by six to twelve months.

Next steps for PME passers

The moment you find your name, the logistics start. Do these three things before anything else.

Step 1: Register on the PRC LERIS portal. Log into the LERIS portal, verify your status, secure your online appointment, and pay the initial registration fee. However, slots fill quickly after results day, so move fast.

Step 2: Prepare your oath-taking documents. Do not show up at the PRC branch without the correct papers. Our guide on what a PRC license is and what to bring on registration day walks you through every document, fee, and counter requirement.

Step 3: Explore more PRC guides. We cover board exams, renewal schedules, and registration steps for dozens of professions. Browse our PRC professional license guides for everything you need at every stage of your career.

Similarly, you can check results from other engineering boards: the April 2026 Electrical Engineers board exam results and the March 2026 Civil Engineers licensure exam.

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