US State Capitals Quiz How Many Can You Get - claymation artwork

US State Capitals Quiz How Many Can You Get

50 Questions 20 min
This quiz covers every U.S. state, one capital at a time, so your score reflects full recall rather than a sample. The question order is regional, which helps you notice whether your weak spots cluster in New England, the South, the Midwest, or the West.Use the explanations as a built-in study guide. Each one gives you a quick mnemonic and a short historical note, especially for states that changed capitals, so you remember why Albany beats New York City, why Sacramento beats Los Angeles, and why Tallahassee is not Miami.
1What is the capital of Maine?
2What is the capital of New Hampshire?
3What is the capital of Vermont?
4What is the capital of Massachusetts?
5What is the capital of Rhode Island?
6What is the capital of Connecticut?
7What is the capital of New York?
8What is the capital of New Jersey?
9What is the capital of Pennsylvania?
10What is the capital of Delaware?
11What is the capital of Maryland?
12What is the capital of Virginia?
13What is the capital of West Virginia?
14What is the capital of North Carolina?
15What is the capital of South Carolina?
16What is the capital of Georgia?
17What is the capital of Florida?
18What is the capital of Alabama?
19What is the capital of Mississippi?
20What is the capital of Tennessee?
21What is the capital of Kentucky?
22What is the capital of Arkansas?
23What is the capital of Louisiana?
24What is the capital of Oklahoma?
25What is the capital of Texas?
26What is the capital of Ohio?
27What is the capital of Indiana?
28What is the capital of Illinois?
29What is the capital of Michigan?
30What is the capital of Wisconsin?
31What is the capital of Minnesota?
32What is the capital of Iowa?
33What is the capital of Missouri?
34What is the capital of North Dakota?
35What is the capital of South Dakota?
36What is the capital of Nebraska?
37What is the capital of Kansas?
38What is the capital of Alaska?
39What is the capital of Hawaii?
40What is the capital of Washington?
41What is the capital of Oregon?
42What is the capital of California?
43What is the capital of Nevada?
44What is the capital of Idaho?
45What is the capital of Montana?
46What is the capital of Wyoming?
47What is the capital of Colorado?
48What is the capital of Utah?
49What is the capital of Arizona?
50What is the capital of New Mexico?

Common Mistakes People Make on US State Capitals

Key Takeaways for Mastering All 50 State Capitals

  1. Study by region first, then mix the order

    Chunking capitals by Northeast, South, Midwest, and West reduces overload and helps you notice patterns. Once a region feels strong, switch to mixed-order review so you can recall each capital without leaning on sequence. This two-step method builds both structure and flexibility.

  2. Pair every capital with one vivid mnemonic

    A memorable image works better than raw repetition. Think of an August postcard in Augusta, a red stick in Baton Rouge, or a phoenix rising in Phoenix. The image does not have to be elegant. It only has to be concrete enough that your brain can grab it instantly.

  3. Use history to separate capitals from famous cities

    Many state capitals are smaller because lawmakers chose central, safer, or compromise locations. Knowing that Trenton sat between New York and Philadelphia or that Tallahassee split the distance between St. Augustine and Pensacola makes the answer feel logical instead of random.

  4. Focus on states with changed capitals

    Moved capitals deserve extra attention because they create confusion. California, Georgia, Alabama, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Arizona are classic examples. If you learn the previous capital and the reason for the move, the modern capital becomes easier to retain and harder to mix up.

  5. Practice exact written recall, not loose memory

    Do not stop at roughly knowing the answer. Write the full name exactly, including forms like Saint Paul, Salt Lake City, and Oklahoma City. Exact retrieval turns shaky familiarity into dependable knowledge and prevents errors caused by abbreviations, omitted words, or partial recall.

Authoritative Resources for Further Study

Use these authoritative sources to verify capitals, connect them to state government, and reinforce map-based learning.

Frequently Asked Questions About US State Capitals

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