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Home PRC News

August 2026 Mechanical Engineers and Certified Plant Mechanics Board Exam Results

Dudu by Dudu
June 6, 2026
in PRC News
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A Filipino mechanical engineer in a hard hat standing inside an industrial power plant, representing the August 2026 ME and CPM board exam results.
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TL;DR: The PRC released the August 2026 mechanical engineering board exam results on August 12, 2026. Both the Mechanical Engineer (ME) and Certified Plant Mechanic (CPM) exams are covered. Exams ran August 7 to 9 across 14 testing centers. To find your ME board exam result fast, skip the LERIS login and download the PDF list directly from prc.gov.ph. This post covers exam subjects, the GWA formula, historical pass rates, what to do if you failed, and what career paths open once you pass.

✅ Official results: released August 12, 2026

Mechanical Engineers: [NUMBER] out of [NUMBER] examinees passed.

Certified Plant Mechanics: [NUMBER] out of [NUMBER] examinees passed.

Full official result (PDF)
List of passers (PDF)
Mechanical EngineersCertified Plant Mechanics
Total examinees[NUMBER][NUMBER]
Total passers[NUMBER][NUMBER]
Passing rate[RATE]%[RATE]%
Exam datesAugust 7, 8, 9, 2026
Result releaseAugust 12, 2026
Online registration starts[DATE][DATE]

The August 2026 ME and CPM board exams wrapped up on August 9 at 14 testing centers across the Philippines. Results came out on August 12, right on the PRC’s announced timeline. For all PRC board exam results released this year, see our PRC board exam results page.

Whether you just sat for the exam, are considering a retake in February, or want to know what comes next after your license, this guide covers all of it.

When are the August 2026 mechanical engineering board exam results coming out?

The August 2026 mechanical engineering board exam results came out on August 12, 2026, three working days after the final exam on August 9. This matches the PRC’s standard release window of three to five working days after the last exam day.

DetailInformation
Exam datesAugust 7, 8, 9, 2026 (Friday to Sunday)
Result releaseAugust 12, 2026
Testing centers14 centers nationwide
Governing lawRepublic Act No. 8495

Results come out in two separate waves. The first wave is a static PDF list published on prc.gov.ph. It shows all passers by name, the top 10 topnotchers, and school performance summaries. This drops within three to five working days after the last exam.

The second wave is the LERIS database update at online.prc.gov.ph. This is where your individual subject grades appear. However, it takes three to seven additional days after the PDF before the portal reflects updated records. Do not try to verify your GWA on day one. The server will be overloaded and your profile will not yet show new data.

August 2026 exam at a glance

Both the Mechanical Engineer and Certified Plant Mechanic licensure exams ran on the same three days at the same 14 testing centers. They are graded and announced separately but share one release schedule.

DetailInformation
Exam datesAugust 7, 8, 9, 2026
Testing centersNCR, Baguio, Butuan, Cagayan de Oro, Cebu, Davao, Iloilo, Legazpi, Lucena, Pampanga, Rosales, Tacloban, Tuguegarao, Zamboanga
Application periodMay 8 to July 8, 2026
Result releaseAugust 12, 2026
Administered byPRC Board of Mechanical Engineering

The exams fall under Republic Act No. 8495, also known as the Philippine Mechanical Engineering Act of 1998. This law defines the scope of practice, the examination structure, and the penalties for unauthorized engineering work.

What subjects does each exam cover?

These two exams test completely different skill sets. The ME exam emphasizes design theory, system analysis, and advanced mathematics, while the CPM exam focuses on hands-on plant operation, safety regulations, and mechanical troubleshooting. Studying one set of notes for the other exam is one of the most reliable ways to fail.

Mechanical Engineer (ME) exam subjects

The ME board exam covers three subjects. Each subject runs on a separate day of the three-day exam weekend, so time management across all three days matters.

SubjectWeightCoverage
Industrial and Power Plant Engineering35%Thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, refrigeration, heat transfer, power plant operations (steam, geothermal, hydro)
Mathematics, Engineering Economics and Basic Sciences35%Calculus, differential equations, physics, chemistry, engineering economy, RA 8495 provisions
Machine Design, Materials and Shop Practice30%Kinematics, stress analysis, material properties, gears, bearings, springs, machining fundamentals

Certified Plant Mechanic (CPM) exam subjects

The CPM exam covers the daily reality of a plant floor. Questions test whether you can be trusted on live machinery without supervision, so expect practical scenarios rather than theoretical derivations.

SubjectWeightCoverage
Elements of Power Plant Machinery35%Boilers, steam turbines, gas turbines, internal combustion engines, pumps, compressors
Engineering Science35%Mechanics, forces, pressure, heat transfer, fluid flow, workplace safety regulations
Shop Machinery30%Lathes, milling machines, welding equipment, power transmission, lubrication systems

The passing standard is identical for both exams: a General Weighted Average (GWA) of at least 70%, and no single subject below 50%. Both rules apply independently.

ME vs CPM: Exam Subject Weights Mechanical Engineer (ME) Industrial & Power Plant Engineering 35% Mathematics, Econ & Basic Sciences 35% Machine Design, Materials & Shop 30% Certified Plant Mechanic (CPM) Elements of Power Plant Machinery 35% Engineering Science 35% Shop Machinery 30% 35% subjects 30% subject Passing standard for both: GWA of 70%, no single subject below 50%
Subject weight breakdown for the August 2026 ME and CPM licensure exams.

How does the PRC calculate your board exam score?

To pass, you need a General Weighted Average (GWA) of at least 70% across all subjects, with no individual subject below 50%. Both rules apply at the same time. A strong GWA does not cancel out a subject score below 50%. Here is what that looks like in practice across three realistic scenarios.

Case 1: The unbalanced pass

A weak score in one subject does not automatically mean failure, as long as it stays above 50% and your stronger subjects pull the weighted average up.

SubjectRaw ScoreWeightWeighted Contribution
Mathematics78%35%27.30%
Power Plant (IPPE)74%35%25.90%
Machine Design (MDSP)56%30%16.80%
Final GWA70.00% (PASS)

Even though Machine Design came in at a weak 56%, it stayed above the 50% floor. The strong scores in the other two subjects pulled the final average to exactly 70%.

Case 2: Close but not enough

This is the scenario that trips up the most repeaters. Every individual score looks safe on paper, but because none of the subjects broke 70%, the total weighted average falls short.

SubjectRaw ScoreWeightWeighted Contribution
Mathematics68%35%23.80%
Power Plant (IPPE)70%35%24.50%
Machine Design (MDSP)66%30%19.80%
Final GWA68.10% (FAIL)

No single subject looks alarming, but the combined weight of three below-average scores is enough to pull the GWA below the threshold. This is why studying evenly across all subjects matters more than mastering your strongest one.

Case 3: Knocked out by the 50% floor

This is the most painful outcome in board exam grading. The examinee’s GWA is a comfortable pass, but one neglected subject triggers an automatic disqualification.

SubjectRaw ScoreWeightWeighted Contribution
Mathematics86%35%30.10%
Power Plant (IPPE)82%35%28.70%
Machine Design (MDSP)48%30%14.40%
Final GWA73.20% (FAIL: 50% floor rule)

A 73.20% GWA would normally be a comfortable pass, but the 48% in Machine Design instantly triggers the floor rule. The PRC system flags the sub-50% score and disqualifies the examinee regardless of the overall average. Defensive studying wins the board exam. Your weakest subject needs at least a safe 55% raw score to protect you from this outcome.

Three Ways the GWA Formula Plays Out Case 1: PASS Math: 78% x 35% = 27.30 IPPE: 74% x 35% = 25.90 MDSP: 56% x 30% = 16.80 GWA: 70.00% MDSP above 50% floor. All conditions met. Case 2: FAIL (GWA) Math: 68% x 35% = 23.80 IPPE: 70% x 35% = 24.50 MDSP: 66% x 30% = 19.80 GWA: 68.10% No subject below 50%, but average falls short. Case 3: FAIL (Floor) Math: 86% x 35% = 30.10 IPPE: 82% x 35% = 28.70 MDSP: 48% x 30% = 14.40 GWA: 73.20% MDSP below 50% floor. Auto-disqualified.
Three realistic GWA scenarios: a pass with an uneven score, a close miss, and an auto-fail triggered by the 50% floor rule.

Why the August mechanical engineering board exam has a lower passing rate

The August mechanical engineering board exam is not harder than February. The Board of Mechanical Engineering maintains a consistent level of difficulty across both cycles. However, the August passing rate is consistently 8 to 18 percentage points lower, and the reason is almost entirely about preparation time.

Exam CycleTotal ExamineesPassersPassing Rate
February 20266,2943,26451.86%
August 20253,8081,55440.81%
February 20256,3183,08948.89%
August 20243,4851,14432.83%

Most Philippine universities graduate their engineering batches between May and July. Graduates who choose the August window are working on a compressed runway of roughly six to ten weeks of formal review. In contrast, February batch candidates deliberately skip the immediate exam to give themselves six to eight months of preparation. February also draws a large pool of determined repeaters who have already seen the exam format once.

If you sat for the August 2026 exam, you were competing against a field that had significantly less preparation time than the average February cohort. A lower national passing rate does not reflect harder questions. It reflects who walked into the room and how long they had to prepare.

ME Board Exam Passing Rates: 2024-2026 0% 20% 40% 60% 32.83% Aug 2024 48.89% Feb 2025 40.81% Aug 2025 51.86% Feb 2026 February batch August batch
August batches consistently pass at lower rates than February batches, driven by shorter preparation windows rather than harder questions.

How to check your ME board exam result without crashing your browser

On the day the ME board exam results drop, thousands of examinees hit online.prc.gov.ph at the same time. The server slows down immediately, and individual profile data does not update in real time anyway. Follow this sequence instead.

Step-by-step: the fastest way to check

  1. Wait for the official announcement. The PRC Facebook page and prc.gov.ph are the only reliable sources. Do not trust Facebook groups or unofficial blogs claiming to have early lists.
  2. Go directly to prc.gov.ph. Navigate to the Board Results section and find the August 2026 ME board exam result entry for Mechanical Engineers or Certified Plant Mechanics.
  3. Download the PDF immediately. Right-click and save the file to your device. Do not try to view it inside a busy browser tab; the connection may time out.
  4. Search your surname offline. Open the downloaded PDF in any viewer and press Ctrl+F (Windows) or Command+F (Mac). Type your surname. The search runs on your device, so server traffic does not affect it.
  5. Wait 3 to 5 days before checking your grades. Once you confirm your name is on the list, wait for the LERIS database update at online.prc.gov.ph before checking individual subject ratings.

On result day, several Facebook groups and unofficial blogs publish outdated lists or fabricated files to farm traffic. If the source is not a .gov.ph domain or a verified national outlet, ignore it entirely.

Four review traps that sink August batch takers

Review centers are businesses built on patterns. They hand you thick modules of past board questions and teach calculator shortcuts to solve them quickly. This approach works for mock exams. However, the Board of Mechanical Engineering knows exactly what review centers teach, and they build traps designed to catch pure memorizers.

Trap 1: The Elements memorization shortcut

Most review centers emphasize memorizing thousands of past objective questions from compiled “Elements” modules. Examinees spend nights flashcarding definitions expecting to see them verbatim on exam day. The BME regularly rewrites these questions by changing a single word: “clearance” becomes “radial clearance,” or the question asks for absolute pressure instead of gauge pressure. If you memorized the answer key from an old module, your brain will select the familiar answer without realizing the underlying physics was flipped.

Trap 2: Calculator shortcut paralysis

Review centers teach powerful calculator hacks, specifically Mode 3-2 and Shift-Solve techniques, to bypass manual derivation. However, under exam pressure, these shortcuts break down. If a problem produces an A-ERROR or the equation has multiple roots, examinees who never learned to derive from first principles freeze entirely. Shortcuts should speed up your work. They should not be the only tool in your bag.

Trap 3: Studying CPM with ME review notes

Many CPM candidates open their old Mechanical Engineering review notes and assume the CPM is simply an easier version of the ME exam. It is not. The ME exam rewards design theory and analytical derivation. The CPM exam rewards grease, safety, and practical troubleshooting. A CPM candidate might know the thermal efficiency formula for a boiler but fail the exam because they cannot identify the correct step-by-step blowdown procedure to prevent a boiler explosion. The CPM tests whether you can be trusted on a live plant floor tomorrow.

Trap 4: Ignoring stamina management

Review centers give you four-hour mock exams, but they do not simulate two consecutive days of intense mental exertion. Machine Design alone runs for five hours on the final exam day. Many examinees fail not because they ran out of knowledge but because their concentration collapsed by hour three. They burned too much energy over-analyzing the first ten difficult problems, then made sloppy arithmetic errors on the last thirty easy ones. Building your physical and mental endurance the week before the exam is just as important as reviewing formulas.

If you failed: the strategic comeback path

Failing the board exam is common. Some of the most capable field engineers and plant managers did not pass on their first attempt. The exam is a specific academic hurdle, not a measure of your potential in the field. However, the path back requires a different strategy, not just more effort.

The 3-strike rule

Under PRC Resolution No. 30, failing the licensure exam three times in a row triggers a mandatory one-year cooling-off period. You can take Attempt 1 and Attempt 2 back to back. However, a third consecutive failure means you cannot apply for the next scheduled exam. You must wait a full year from your last failed exam date before applying again.

What most repeaters get wrong

Most second-time takers do not fail because of a lack of effort. They fail because they recycle the exact strategy that failed them the first time. Studying harder using the same notes reinforces weak foundations rather than fixing them. Similarly, looking at an overall score of 68% and thinking “I was two points away” misses the real problem: one specific subject dragged the GWA down. Find the sinking subject and dedicate most of your review time to it.

A second common mistake is second-guessing correct first-instinct answers on exam day. First-time takers play to win. Second-time takers often play not to lose, and over-analysis under anxiety leads to changed answers and introduced errors.

Phased comeback timeline

PhaseTimelineFocus
DetachWeeks 1 to 2Step away from engineering completely. Burnout prevents effective review. Give your brain a genuine reset before re-entering a study cycle.
AuditWeek 3Request your official subject grades from PRC. Map out exactly which subject caused the most damage and which concepts cost you the most time on exam day.
RebuildMonths 1 to 2Re-learn core derivations from basic principles without using calculator shortcuts or timing yourself. Fix the foundation before adding speed.
SimulateMonth 3Sit for full unassisted mock exams in a continuous 5-hour block using only your PRC-allowed calculator. Build physical and mental endurance for the real exam conditions.

What career paths open after you pass?

Once your ME board exam result is confirmed, you go from graduate to licensed professional under Republic Act No. 8495. Your career options split sharply depending on whether you hold an ME or a CPM license. Both are valuable, but they serve completely different industries and roles.

Mechanical Engineer (ME) career tracks

Under RA 8495, a licensed ME can operate, maintain, or take charge of mechanical plants with a total capacity of up to 2,000 kilowatts. In practice, most fresh ME passers land in one of four sectors.

Construction and MEPFS firms are the most common entry point. The continuous development of commercial buildings across BGC, Makati, and Cebu keeps these firms hiring. Fresh MEs typically start as cadet engineers or site engineers, overseeing HVAC installations, fire sprinkler systems, and pump networks.

Manufacturing facilities in Laguna, Batangas, and Clark are another common destination. Multinational corporations in semiconductor fabrication, food manufacturing, and fast-moving consumer goods actively recruit board passers for production engineer and maintenance engineer roles.

Power generation and energy companies offer the most technically demanding positions. Roles at companies involved in coal, geothermal, or hydro plants require rotational 24/7 shifts, but the technical exposure is unmatched for engineers who want to specialize in thermodynamics and large-scale plant systems.

Certified Plant Mechanic (CPM) career tracks

A CPM license authorizes you to operate and maintain mechanical equipment in plants up to 300 kW (or up to 500 kW under specific career pathways), or to serve as a resident technician in larger plants under the supervision of a licensed ME or PME. In practice, CPMs are the operational backbone of live machinery floors.

Building maintenance and property management is the most accessible entry point. Every major office building, hotel, hospital, and shopping mall needs a resident technical team. CPMs perform the hands-on work: servicing air conditioning units, testing backup generators, monitoring boiler systems, and troubleshooting commercial water pumps.

Medium-sized industrial factories, feed mills, bottling plants, and textile manufacturers rely heavily on CPMs for preventive maintenance work: shaft alignment, bearing lubrication, structural welding, and keeping assembly lines running between scheduled overhauls.

Fresh MEFresh CPM
Typical entry salaryP22,000 to P28,000/monthP18,000 to P24,000/month
Multinational / corporate ceilingP28,000+P24,000+
Standard onboarding period6 to 12 months cadet or apprentice program

Neither license guarantees an executive salary at entry level. However, your license makes you immediately billable. Many industrial facilities and construction firms cannot legally operate or sign off on safety permits without a specific quota of licensed resident MEs and CPMs on their payroll.

The ME-to-PME upgrade: scope, salary, and the sign-and-seal economy

Your ME board exam result opens the door. The Professional Mechanical Engineer (PME) designation is the professional peak of the career. It shifts your role from implementing designs to legally approving them. If you want to understand the PME Technical Evaluation process in detail, read our PME Technical Evaluation August 2026 results and guide.

What the PME designation unlocks

Under RA 8495, a regular ME has a hard ceiling on legal accountability. A PME removes that ceiling entirely.

FeatureRegistered MEProfessional ME (PME)
Legal capacity (kW)Up to 2,000 kWUnlimited
Blueprint sign-and-sealNot authorizedFull signing authority
Independent consultationNot authorizedAuthorized
Building permit filingCannot sign offRequired signatory

To qualify for the PME evaluation, you need a minimum of four years of active, progressive ME practice after passing your board exam. The process requires notarized Affidavits of Experience from practicing PMEs, a written technical project report submitted within a 60-day window, and a live panel defense before the BME board.

The salary jump and sign-and-seal income

In corporate settings, the PME title is often a prerequisite for executive engineering roles. A mid-level ME in the P35,000 to P65,000 range can realistically move into P100,000 to P250,000 per month roles after the upgrade, specifically Chief Engineer, Projects Director, or VP for Engineering positions at construction or power generation firms.

Beyond the salary increase, the sign-and-seal economy is where the real financial gap opens. Because licensed PMEs are scarce relative to the volume of construction and industrial work in the Philippines, many run freelance consulting practices alongside their corporate roles. Per-project stamping fees for HVAC, fire protection, and piping plans range from P5,000 to P50,000 per project. Monthly retainer contracts with medium-sized factories that cannot afford a full-time PME run between P20,000 and P50,000 per month for periodic plant visits and annual safety permit sign-offs.

For CPM license holders, note that the PME path requires a valid ME license as a prerequisite. A CPM must first pass the full mechanical engineering board exam before starting the four-year countdown toward a PME application. The ME board exam result is, in that sense, the entry ticket to the entire professional ladder.

Frequently asked questions

When was the August 2026 mechanical engineering board exam result released?

The PRC released the August 2026 mechanical engineering board exam results on August 12, 2026, three working days after the final exam on August 9. The release covers both the ME and CPM licensure exams.

What is the passing score for the ME and CPM board exam?

You need a General Weighted Average (GWA) of at least 70%, with no single subject scoring below 50%. Both conditions must be met. A strong GWA does not override a subject score below the 50% floor.

How many times can you retake the ME or CPM board exam?

There is no permanent cap on retakes. However, failing three consecutive times triggers a mandatory one-year cooling-off period under PRC Resolution No. 30 before you can apply again.

What is the difference between an ME and a CPM license?

An ME license covers design, management, and plant operations up to 2,000 kW. A CPM license covers hands-on maintenance and operation of equipment up to 300 kW. The ME exam tests theoretical knowledge; the CPM exam tests practical plant floor skills and safety procedures.

How do I check my individual subject grades after the board exam?

First, confirm your name on the PDF list at prc.gov.ph. Then wait three to seven days for the LERIS database to update. After that, log in to online.prc.gov.ph and go to the Verification of Rating section for your full GWA and subject scores.

What to do next

Whether your ME board exam result is a pass or a retake, the path forward is clearer than it feels on result day. Passers: register your Professional ID through LERIS and start exploring where your license takes you. Retakers: audit your subject breakdown first, then rebuild from the weakest point up. For more PRC board exam results and guides, visit our PRC board exam results page.

We also covered the April 2026 Electrical Engineers board exam results if you want to see how another engineering batch performed in the same cycle. Check our Electrical Engineers board exam April 2026 results for the full breakdown.

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