Your first month of ham radio
From exam prep to your first real QSO — what actually happens in your first 30 days of amateur radio, and what to focus on at each stage.
By The JustBeginning Editors · Published May 24, 2026
Ham radio has a prerequisite that almost no other hobby has: a federal exam. You cannot legally transmit until you pass it. This sounds like a barrier. In practice, it’s a week of study that also teaches you most of what you need to know to actually use the radio — a surprisingly efficient on-ramp.
This is what your first month actually looks like, from opening the study guide to checking into your first net.
Days 1–7: Passing the Technician exam
The Technician exam is 35 multiple-choice questions drawn from a published pool of about 400. You can read every question before you sit the test. The pass threshold is 26 correct. Most people clear it comfortably after 5–7 days of focused study.
The fastest approach: buy the ARRL Ham Radio License Manual and read it cover to cover while running daily practice tests at HamStudy.org. HamStudy tracks your accuracy by topic and surfaces weak areas. By day five, you should be consistently scoring above 80%. Day six, find a local testing session. Day seven or eight, sit the exam.
A few study tips that actually matter:
- Don’t memorize — understand. The Technician exam covers electronics basics, FCC regulations, and operating procedures. The electronics is genuinely interesting once you see how it connects to what radios actually do. Memorizing works, but understanding the reasoning means you’ll actually use the radio correctly after you’re licensed.
- The math is not scary. Ohm’s law (V = IR) shows up several times. That’s most of the calculation content. If math questions make you anxious, just learn those five formulas and practice them once.
- Band plans and frequency allocations feel like arbitrary lists until you start using them. Learn them in context: 2m band (144–148 MHz) is your main repeater band, 70cm (420–450 MHz) is the other one. Everything else you can look up.
The exam costs $15, takes 30 minutes, and your results are usually available immediately. Your call sign posts to the FCC’s Universal Licensing System database within 2–10 business days. Until it posts, you cannot legally transmit — but you can listen to everything.
Days 8–14: Setting up your radio
Order your radio and USB programming cable when you sit the exam — don’t wait for your call sign. Shipping takes a few days, and your call sign will likely post before the box arrives.
Yaesu FT-60R buyers: Your radio ships with a basic rubber duck antenna, a wall charger, and a belt clip. The manual is thorough but overwhelming. Set that aside for now. Your first task is programming.
The programming cable and CHIRP workflow:
- Download CHIRP from chirp.danplanet.com (free, all platforms)
- Install your USB cable driver (Prolific for most BTECH cables)
- Go to RepeaterBook.com and find 5–10 active repeaters in your area — you want their output frequency, offset (positive or negative), and CTCSS/PL tone
- In CHIRP: Radio → Download From Radio. This reads your radio’s current state.
- Add your repeater channels in the spreadsheet view
- Radio → Upload To Radio. Done.
The whole process takes 15–20 minutes the first time. After that, adding a new repeater is a two-minute edit.
What’s a CTCSS tone? Most repeaters require you to transmit a sub-audible tone along with your signal before they’ll activate. RepeaterBook lists the tone for each repeater. Program it in CHIRP, or the repeater will hear you but won’t repeat your transmission. This trips up almost every beginner at least once.
Days 15–21: Your first transmissions
When your call sign posts to the FCC database (you can check at wireless.fcc.gov/uls), you’re legal to transmit. Your first contact will feel oddly ceremonial.
Start with a simplex call. Find a local calling frequency (146.520 MHz is the national 2m simplex calling channel) and call “CQ, CQ, CQ — this is [your call sign] calling CQ, listening.” CQ means you’re looking for any station to respond. You may not get an answer on the first try — or the tenth — but the act of making the call cements the process.
Then, check in to a local net. Most amateur radio clubs run a weekly net — a structured on-air meeting, usually on a local repeater, where members check in and exchange brief messages. Find one (ask at the local club or search on repeaterbook.com for “net”) and tune in for one session before you participate. Listen to the format. Most nets go like this: the net control announces the net, asks for check-ins, calls each station alphabetically, you give your call sign and say “checking in,” and that’s it. Your first check-in takes about 20 seconds.
The ham community is famously welcoming to new operators. You’ll almost certainly get a response during your first net check-in mentioning that you’re new, and at least one local ham offering to help you get set up. This is normal and a genuine feature of the hobby.
Radio etiquette basics that matter:
- Listen before you transmit. Always check that the frequency is clear before keying up. Say “KA1ABC — is this frequency in use?” and wait five seconds.
- Identify every 10 minutes and at the end of each transmission. FCC rule. Your call sign, in plain English (or morse for HF).
- “73” means “best regards” and is how most conversations end. You’ll hear it constantly within the first week.
Days 22–30: Going further
By the end of your first month, you’ll have a working radio, a handful of programmed repeaters, and at least one real QSO. A few directions to consider next:
Get your Nagoya NA-771 antenna. If you haven’t already upgraded from the stock rubber duck, do it now. The difference on a marginal repeater is immediate and noticeable. This is a $15 upgrade that makes a bigger difference than almost anything else at this stage.
Join your local ARRL club. Most clubs have monthly meetings, field events, and members who know every repeater and frequency idiosyncrasy in your area. The ARRL club finder at arrl.org is the right place to start.
Start thinking about digital modes. APRS (Automatic Packet Reporting System) uses your radio to broadcast your GPS position to a map visible at aprs.fi — it’s easy to set up on a Baofeng or Yaesu with a $20 cable, and watching your position appear on the map is genuinely satisfying the first time. Digital voice modes (C4FM, DMR) come later, when you’ve decided you want more from repeater contacts.
Study for your General class license. The Technician license gives you VHF/UHF privileges plus limited HF access. The General class opens most of the HF bands — shortwave, the ability to talk across continents on a 100W radio. The General exam is harder than Technician, but the question pool is also public. Most active Technicians upgrade within a year or two.
Things that trip up every beginner
A few patterns that show up in almost every new ham’s first month:
- CTCSS tone not programmed in. The repeater hears you but doesn’t repeat. You hear nothing back. Check RepeaterBook for the tone and add it in CHIRP.
- Wrong offset direction. Most 2m repeaters use a –600 kHz offset (transmit 600 kHz below the output frequency). Most 70cm repeaters use a –5 MHz offset. If you program the offset direction backwards, the radio transmits on the wrong frequency. CHIRP handles this automatically if you enter the offset correctly.
- Talking too close to the mic. HT microphones are sensitive. Holding the radio three inches from your mouth rather than pressed against your face usually improves your audio quality noticeably.
- Impatience after calling CQ. Repeaters and simplex channels go quiet for hours at a stretch. A non-response doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong. Try different times of day — early evenings and weekend mornings are usually the most active.
Ready to buy? See our ham radio gear guide for the exact radios, antennas, and programming cables we recommend to start.