USMLE Accommodations Evaluation
You’ve made it this far. Let’s make sure your Step exams reflect what you actually know.
Comprehensive psychoeducational evaluations for medical students seeking USMLE Step 1 or Step 2 accommodations through NBME. Primarily virtual, with documentation built to meet NBME’s detailed requirements.
NBME has some of the most rigorous documentation standards of any testing organization, and many requests are denied not because of the condition they convey but because of the evaluation.
The USMLE Step exams are among the most demanding standardized tests in professional licensing. For medical students with ADHD or learning disabilities, the challenge is often not medical knowledge — it is sustained attention across long testing blocks, processing speed under time pressure, working memory demands, reading load, and cognitive fatigue. These are real, documentable limitations that can substantially affect USMLE performance even in students who perform well in coursework and practicals.
NBME conducts its own independent review of every accommodations request under its own documentation standards. Medical school disability services accommodations do not transfer to the USMLE. The NBME uses the ADA standard of “substantially limits” compared to most people in the general population, which means a diagnosis alone, or a diagnosis that is well-managed or well-compensated, is not automatically enough. The application must show that your condition currently substantially limits functioning in a way that is relevant to standardized testing, supported by performance-based objective data.
A comprehensive, data-driven psychoeducational evaluation is often what makes or breaks a USMLE accommodations application. According to outcome data, applicants with full current evaluations and clear accommodation history have approval rates roughly two to three times higher than those submitting thin documentation or provider letters alone.
At The Center for ADHD, USMLE accommodations evaluations are built to the NBME’s detailed documentation standards — connecting your cognitive profile, academic history, and current functional limitations to the specific demands of the Step exams.
This evaluation may be right for you if:
- You struggle with processing speed or sustained attention on timed practice exams, even when you know the material.
- You experience significant cognitive fatigue or attention deterioration over long testing blocks.
- You had accommodations in college or on the MCAT but have not yet applied for USMLE accommodations.
- You have a prior diagnosis but your documentation is old, limited, or based on self-report rather than standardized testing.
- You have never been formally evaluated but have a longstanding history of difficulty with timed, high-volume reading.
- You were previously denied USMLE accommodations and want a stronger evaluation for reconsideration
What NBME actually requires — and why so many applications are denied even when the diagnosis is established
NBME reviews every USMLE accommodations request independently using its own standards. A diagnosis of ADHD or a learning disorder is the starting point — not the finish line. The NBME is evaluating whether your condition currently substantially limits one or more major life activities as compared to most people in the general population. That means the application must demonstrate functional impairment, not just the presence of a diagnosis.
A complete USMLE accommodations application requires four components:
- A completed NBME request form
Use the correct form for your situation: New Request (first-time applicants), Subsequent Request (applying for a later Step after prior approval), or Reconsideration Request (if previously denied). Starting in June 2026, all requests will be submitted through the MyUSMLE Portal. - A personal statement
Written by you, explaining how your condition currently affects your ability to take standardized exams — including a history of impairment, prior accommodations, and why the specific accommodations you are requesting are necessary. - A comprehensive clinical evaluation
This is the core of the application. NBME requires documentation from a licensed professional with direct experience diagnosing and treating adults with the relevant disability. For ADHD and learning disability requests specifically, NBME expects performance-based standardized testing data — not just clinical interviews, symptom checklists, or self-report rating scales. A strong evaluation includes cognitive and executive functioning, processing speed, working memory, sustained attention, academic achievement, and validity measures. - Objective non-clinical records
Academic transcripts, prior IEPs or 504 plans, standardized test score reports, letters from faculty or clinical supervisors, and official prior accommodations records. The NBME expects real-world corroborating evidence of impairment across settings — not just clinical findings alone.
Why applications get denied:
The most common reasons for NBME denial are: relying on diagnosis alone without documenting current functional impact; submitting evaluations based primarily on self-report rather than objective standardized testing; providing outdated documentation that does not reflect current adult functioning; and submitting thin supporting records without corroborating real-world evidence.
What our USMLE accommodations evaluation includes
Our evaluations are comprehensive, primarily virtual, and built to meet NBME’s detailed documentation standards for ADHD and learning disability requests.
- 1Free Consultation — We review your Step exam timeline, documentation history, prior accommodations, and whether a new evaluation or supplemental testing is the right approach.
- 2Clinical Interview — A thorough session covering developmental history, academic and medical school history, prior accommodations, treatment history, and current functional limitations in timed and high-demand settings.
- 3Testing Sessions — Multiple primarily virtual sessions including a comprehensive battery of standardized, norm-referenced cognitive and academic tests covering cognitive and executive functioning, sustained attention, working memory, processing speed, reading efficiency, academic achievement, and performance validity measures — the specific domains NBME expects to see documented.*
- 4NBME-Aligned Report — A comprehensive written report that integrates your history, testing data, behavioral observations, and current functional limitations into a clear, exam-specific rationale for each accommodation recommended.
- 5Feedback & Next Steps — We walk through your results, help you understand what your documentation supports, and discuss how it fits into your full NBME application, including the personal statement and supporting records.
*Most USMLE evaluations can be completed virtually. In some cases, in-person testing may strengthen the documentation — we will discuss this during the consultation if relevant.
Common USMLE accommodations for ADHD and learning disabilities
Depending on your documented needs, USMLE accommodations may include:
The specific accommodations recommended in your report must be directly tied to your test data and the way your condition affects performance under the specific demands of the USMLE Step exams.
Common Questions About USMLE Accommodations
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Other High-Stakes Exam Accommodations Evaluations
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Ready to Get Started on Your USMLE Accommodations?
Your Compassionate Treatment Starts Here
The NBME review process alone takes up to 60 business days — and your scheduling permit is held until a decision comes through. The earlier you start, the more control you keep over your Step exam timeline. Book a free consultation, and we will walk through your documentation, your timeline, and the right evaluation path for your situation.
Before diving in, let’s touch base. An initial consultation ensures we understand you and your specific experiences.










