PSPO I — Scrum.org Professional Scrum Product Owner I Official Resources

Find official PSPO I source types to verify, what to check with Scrum.org, and how to pair official guidance with independent practice.

Official resources to check first

Use the official links above as starting points, then confirm the exact exam page, current candidate guide, objective outline, booking path, and policy documents with the exam owner or its designated provider.

Use these official source types when you research PSPO I:

  • Scrum.org PSPO I exam or certification page: confirm the current exam name, code, assessment scope, registration path, and certification information.
  • Official Scrum.org preparation guidance: check any recommended reading, learning paths, or preparation notes published by Scrum.org.
  • Official assessment instructions or candidate guidance: verify exam rules, delivery format, timing, retake rules, and any conditions that apply on exam day.
  • Official update or version information: confirm whether the exam content, referenced Scrum materials, or assessment expectations have changed.
  • Official certification verification guidance: confirm how earned credentials are represented, verified, or shared.
  • Employer, regulator, or training provider requirements: if you need PSPO I for a job, contract, course, or compliance purpose, confirm that PSPO I is the accepted credential for that requirement.

What to verify before you study or book

Before you commit to a study plan or schedule the real exam, verify the following with Scrum.org or the organization requiring the credential:

  • The exact exam title and code: Scrum.org Professional Scrum Product Owner I (PSPO I).
  • The current official assessment page and registration process.
  • The current exam content scope and any official preparation references.
  • Whether Scrum.org has announced any content updates, version changes, or transition guidance.
  • Current exam rules, delivery format, time limits, allowed materials, and retake conditions.
  • Whether there are eligibility, course, training, or experience expectations for your situation.
  • How certification results are issued, verified, and recognized.
  • Whether your employer, school, regulator, or client accepts PSPO I for the purpose you need.

Do not rely on third-party summaries for final decisions about registration, rules, eligibility, or credential recognition. Treat official Scrum.org information as the controlling source.

How to use official resources with practice

Use official resources to define what you need to know, then use independent practice to test whether you can apply it.

A practical study workflow:

  1. Start with Scrum.org guidance Identify the official PSPO I exam page, preparation guidance, and any referenced Scrum materials.

  2. Build a topic checklist Convert the official scope into study topics, such as Product Owner accountability, Scrum framework understanding, product value, ordering work, stakeholder collaboration, and empirical product development, only where those topics are confirmed by official materials.

  3. Use topic drills to find weak areas Practice by topic so you can see where your understanding is shallow or inconsistent.

  4. Review explanations, not just scores Focus on why an answer is correct or incorrect. Use official Scrum.org materials to resolve any conflict between practice explanations and official guidance.

  5. Take mock exams after topic review Use timed practice only after you have reviewed the official source materials and completed targeted drills.

  6. Re-check official rules before the real exam Shortly before booking or sitting for PSPO I, confirm current rules, exam version, and registration instructions with Scrum.org.

Mastery Exam Prep practice is independent companion preparation. It is not official Scrum.org content, is not affiliated with Scrum.org, and should be used alongside official resources, not instead of them.

Exam FAQ

Who owns the PSPO I exam?

The Scrum.org Professional Scrum Product Owner I (PSPO I) exam is owned by Scrum.org. Candidates should verify all official exam information directly with Scrum.org.

Use the official links above as starting points, then confirm the exact exam page, current candidate guide, objective outline, booking path, and policy documents with the exam owner or its designated provider.

Where should I confirm the current PSPO I exam version?

Confirm the current PSPO I exam version, scope, and any update notices through Scrum.org official resources. Do not assume that older blog posts, course notes, or third-party summaries reflect the current assessment.

Where should I verify registration or booking instructions?

Verify registration, booking, and exam access instructions directly through Scrum.org official assessment resources. Third-party practice providers should not be treated as the authority for official registration steps.

Does Mastery Exam Prep replace official Scrum.org materials?

No. Mastery Exam Prep is independent companion practice. Use official Scrum.org materials to confirm the exam scope and rules, then use practice questions, topic drills, mock exams, explanations, and QBank practice to build exam readiness.

Can practice questions tell me the exact real exam content?

No. Independent practice should help you understand concepts and apply them under exam-like conditions. It should not be treated as official exam content, an answer key, or a guarantee of the questions you will see.

What if official Scrum.org guidance conflicts with a practice explanation?

Follow the official Scrum.org source. If a practice explanation appears inconsistent with official guidance, use the official source as the final reference and review the underlying Scrum concept.

Should I verify PSPO I acceptance with my employer or course provider?

Yes. If you need PSPO I for employment, a course requirement, procurement, consulting, or internal competency tracking, verify acceptance with the organization requiring the credential.

Next step

Find and review the current official Scrum.org PSPO I resources first. Then use independent practice questions, topic drills, mock exams, explanations, and QBank review to test your understanding against the official scope.