
If you live in Connecticut, these are the 2025 civics test answers that change with your state. This page keeps the key facts together so you can practice Hartford, Governor Ned Lamont, and the current Senate names without guessing.
Start free practice with your Connecticut answers ready to review.
Use these cards as your fast study sheet before you move into spoken practice.
Governor
Capital
One senator
Representative
On the 2025 civics test, some answers depend on where you live. For Connecticut, that includes your governor, your state capital, one of your state's U.S. senators, and your U.S. representative.
The representative answer is the most specific one because it depends on your congressional district. Two people in Connecticut can have different House answers even though they share the same governor, capital, and senators.
Memorize the governor and capital first, then choose one senator you can answer confidently out loud.
Finish by checking your House district result close to interview day, because representatives can change and the right answer depends on your address.
District-aware answer
Your U.S. representative depends on where you live inside Connecticut. Use the district lookup below to practice the correct House answer for your part of the state.
Need help finding your district? Use the House district finder
Answer them out loud the way you would answer a USCIS officer.
Governor
Expected answer: Ned Lamont
Say the governor name clearly, the same way you would answer in the interview.
Capital
Expected answer: Hartford
Use the capital city only.
One senator
Expected answer: Richard Blumenthal
Another correct answer is Christopher Murphy.
Representative
Expected answer: Answer depends on your current address or congressional district.
Use the lookup section below. If you already know your district, start with District 1.
Use this page as your Connecticut civics review sheet, but treat current officials as live facts. Re-check them before your interview and use the source links below whenever you want to confirm a recent change.
These are the follow-up questions applicants usually ask when they start reviewing state-specific answers.
On the naturalization interview, the current governor answer for Connecticut is Ned Lamont. This is one of the answers applicants should re-check close to interview day because governors can change after elections, resignations, or appointments.
On the naturalization interview, the capital of Connecticut is Hartford. Capitals are stable facts, but they still matter because USCIS may ask the question exactly as "What is the capital of your state?"
On the naturalization interview, one correct senator answer is Richard Blumenthal or Christopher Murphy. Either name works because USCIS asks for one senator, not both, but it helps to know both names for review.
On the naturalization interview, your House answer depends on your address, not just your state. Connecticut currently has 5 congressional districts, so use a ZIP code or address lookup when available, or choose your district in the fallback tool on this page.
Study the state facts here, then create your free account to save progress and switch into realistic civics practice with spoken answers, feedback, and readiness-focused review.
Use the official references below if you want to confirm a recent change yourself.