NCLEX Dosage Calculation Practice 2026 (Formulas, Problems, and Solutions)
Dosage calculation questions appear on every NCLEX-RN. While the math itself is basic arithmetic, calculation errors in nursing can be fatal, so the NCLEX tests whether you can compute accurately under pressure. The good news: dosage calculations follow predictable formulas. Master them and these become guaranteed points.
This guide gives you every formula, worked examples, and practice problems with full solutions.
The Golden Rule: Always Label Your Units
Most dosage calculation errors come from mismatched units. Before any calculation:
- Write down what you have (available)
- Write down what you want (ordered)
- Make sure units match (convert if needed)
- Label every number with its unit
- Double-check that your answer makes clinical sense
A dose of 50 tablets or 0.0001 mL should immediately signal an error.
Essential Conversions to Memorize
| Conversion | Equivalent |
|---|
|------------|------------|
| 1 kg | 2.2 lbs |
| 1 g | 1,000 mg |
| 1 mg | 1,000 mcg |
| 1 L | 1,000 mL |
| 1 tsp | 5 mL |
| 1 tbsp | 15 mL |
| 1 oz | 30 mL |
| 1 grain (gr) | 60 mg |
| 1 cup | 240 mL |
Formula 1: Basic Dose Calculation
Formula: (Dose Desired / Dose Available) × Quantity = Amount to Give
This is written as D/H × Q (Desired over Have, times Quantity).
Worked Example 1
Order: Acetaminophen 650 mg PO. Available: 325 mg tablets.
(650 mg / 325 mg) × 1 tablet = 2 tablets
Worked Example 2
Order: Amoxicillin 500 mg PO. Available: 250 mg/5 mL suspension.
(500 mg / 250 mg) × 5 mL = 10 mL
Worked Example 3
Order: Furosemide 30 mg IV. Available: 40 mg/4 mL vial.
(30 mg / 40 mg) × 4 mL = 3 mL
Formula 2: Weight-Based Dosing
Many medications, especially in pediatrics, are dosed by body weight.
Step 1: Convert pounds to kilograms (lbs ÷ 2.2 = kg)
Step 2: Multiply weight by the dose per kg
Worked Example 4
Order: Medication 5 mg/kg/day. Client weighs: 132 lbs.
132 ÷ 2.2 = 60 kg
60 kg × 5 mg/kg = 300 mg/day
Worked Example 5
Order: Acetaminophen 10 mg/kg per dose. Child weighs: 22 lbs.
22 ÷ 2.2 = 10 kg
10 kg × 10 mg/kg = 100 mg per dose
Worked Example 6 (Two-Step)
Order: Medication 15 mg/kg/day divided into 3 doses. Client weighs: 88 lbs.
88 ÷ 2.2 = 40 kg
40 kg × 15 mg/kg = 600 mg/day
600 mg ÷ 3 doses = 200 mg per dose
Formula 3: IV Drip Rate (Drops per Minute)
When an IV runs by gravity (not a pump), you calculate drops per minute using the tubing's drop factor.
Formula: (Total Volume in mL / Time in minutes) × Drop Factor = gtt/min
Common drop factors: 10, 15, 20 (macrodrip), 60 (microdrip) gtt/mL.
Worked Example 7
Order: 1,000 mL over 8 hours. Drop factor: 15 gtt/mL.
8 hours × 60 = 480 minutes
(1,000 mL / 480 min) × 15 gtt/mL = 31.25 → 31 gtt/min
(Always round drip rates to the nearest whole number; you cannot give a partial drop.)
Worked Example 8
Order: 500 mL over 4 hours. Drop factor: 20 gtt/mL.
4 hours × 60 = 240 minutes
(500 mL / 240 min) × 20 gtt/mL = 41.6 → 42 gtt/min
Worked Example 9 (Microdrip Shortcut)
With a microdrip set (60 gtt/mL), the gtt/min equals the mL/hr.
Order: 100 mL over 1 hour with 60 gtt/mL.
(100 / 60) × 60 = 100 gtt/min (same as the mL/hr rate)
Formula 4: IV Pump Rate (mL per Hour)
Pumps are set in mL/hour.
Formula: Total Volume / Time in hours = mL/hour
Worked Example 10
Order: 1,000 mL over 8 hours.
1,000 / 8 = 125 mL/hour
Worked Example 11
Order: 50 mL over 30 minutes.
30 minutes = 0.5 hours
50 / 0.5 = 100 mL/hour
Formula 5: IV Infusion Time
Formula: Total Volume / Rate (mL/hr) = Time in hours
Worked Example 12
Infusing: 1,000 mL at 125 mL/hour.
1,000 / 125 = 8 hours
Formula 6: Units-Based Calculations (Heparin, Insulin)
High-alert medications like heparin are often ordered in units.
Worked Example 13
Order: Heparin 5,000 units SubQ. Available: 10,000 units/mL.
(5,000 / 10,000) × 1 mL = 0.5 mL
Worked Example 14 (Heparin Infusion)
Order: Heparin 1,000 units/hour. Available: 25,000 units in 500 mL.
First find concentration: 25,000 units / 500 mL = 50 units/mL
1,000 units/hr ÷ 50 units/mL = 20 mL/hour
Practice Problems (Solutions Below)
Try these before checking the answers.
Problem 1: Order: Digoxin 0.25 mg PO. Available: 0.125 mg tablets. How many tablets?
Problem 2: Order: Cefazolin 1 g IV. Available: 500 mg/mL after reconstitution. How many mL?
Problem 3: Client weighs 176 lbs. Order: Medication 3 mg/kg. How many mg?
Problem 4: Order: 1,500 mL over 12 hours. Drop factor 15 gtt/mL. How many gtt/min?
Problem 5: Order: 250 mL over 2 hours via pump. What mL/hour?
Problem 6: Order: Heparin 8,000 units SubQ. Available: 20,000 units/mL. How many mL?
Problem 7: Child weighs 33 lbs. Order: 20 mg/kg/day divided into 2 doses. How many mg per dose?
Problem 8: Order: 1,000 mL at 100 mL/hour. How many hours to infuse?
Practice Problem Solutions
Solution 1: (0.25 / 0.125) × 1 = 2 tablets
Solution 2: 1 g = 1,000 mg. (1,000 / 500) × 1 = 2 mL
Solution 3: 176 ÷ 2.2 = 80 kg. 80 × 3 = 240 mg
Solution 4: 12 × 60 = 720 min. (1,500 / 720) × 15 = 31.25 → 31 gtt/min
Solution 5: 250 / 2 = 125 mL/hour
Solution 6: (8,000 / 20,000) × 1 = 0.4 mL
Solution 7: 33 ÷ 2.2 = 15 kg. 15 × 20 = 300 mg/day. 300 ÷ 2 = 150 mg per dose
Solution 8: 1,000 / 100 = 10 hours
NCLEX Dosage Calculation Tips
1. Use the on-screen calculator. The NCLEX provides one. Do not do complex math in your head.
2. Read the question twice. Note whether it asks for mL, gtt/min, mg, or mL/hour.
3. Watch the units. Convert g to mg, lbs to kg, hours to minutes before calculating.
4. Round correctly. Drip rates (gtt/min) round to whole numbers. Some answers want one or two decimal places. Read the instructions.
5. Sanity-check your answer. 50 tablets or 0.001 mL signals an error. Re-do the calculation.
6. Know your high-alert medications. Heparin, insulin, and potassium calculations require extra care and often double verification.
Practice More at LisensyaPrep
LisensyaPrep's NCLEX Quiz Module 1 (Pharmacology) includes dosage calculation questions in the boss-battle format, with full solutions for every problem.
Practice NCLEX Dosage Calculations at LisensyaPrep
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use a calculator on the NCLEX?
Yes. The NCLEX provides an on-screen calculator for dosage calculation questions.
How many dosage calculation questions are on the NCLEX?
The number varies because of the adaptive format, but expect several calculation questions distributed through the Pharmacological Therapies category.
What is the most common calculation error?
Mismatched units (forgetting to convert lbs to kg, or g to mg) and rounding incorrectly.
Do I round drip rates up or down?
Round to the nearest whole number using standard rounding rules (0.5 and above rounds up).
What formula should I memorize first?
The basic D/H × Q (Desired over Have times Quantity) formula, as it underlies most calculations.
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