Exam prep mocks · free for first 20 mock starts
Free GMAT Focus Readiness Check
45 questions · 90 min · 70% pass target · free
Preview readiness check — question bank may still be loading.
- Questions
- 45
- Timing
- 90 minutes
- Pass threshold
- 70%
Topic breakdown ▾
- Quantitative Reasoning — 15 questions
- Verbal Reasoning — 15 questions
- Data Insights — 15 questions
This is an independent readiness diagnostic. It is not official GMAC GMAT exam material and does not predict your official GMAT score.
About this practice testAudience, topics, and how this check fits your study plan
A timed GMAT Focus readiness diagnostic modeled on the official three-section format: Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights with equal section weights and a 205–805 style score prep target.
Built for: MBA and business master's applicants who want a baseline timed diagnostic before official GMAC prep or tutoring.
Topics: Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, Data Insights.
- 45 timed multiple-choice questions
- 90-minute pacing target
- 70% pass threshold with topic breakdown
- Full answer review linked to the Anki deck
Mocks and full reports are free for the first 20 mock starts while we validate demand. After that, access moves to paid Gumroad checkout.
Drill weak topics with GMAT Focus flashcardsFAQFormat, scoring, and independent prep disclaimer
- Is there a free GMAT Focus practice test?
- Yes. UniPrep2Go offers a free online GMAT Focus practice test at https://uniprep2go.study/mock-exams/gmat-focus-readiness-check with 45 timed questions, 90 minutes, a 70% pass target, topic scoring, and a full answer review report. Free for first 20 mock starts.
- How many questions are on this GMAT Focus Readiness?
- This readiness check has 45 multiple-choice questions timed against a 90-minute target. Readiness check sampled across the three GMAT sections (Quant, Verbal, Data Insights) with equal section weights on the official 205–805 exam. Not a full GMAC practice test.
- What score do you need to pass this GMAT Focus Readiness?
- The pass target on this mock is 70%. Your report also breaks down performance by topic so you can see weak areas before retaking the real exam.
- Who should take this GMAT Focus Readiness?
- MBA and business master's applicants who want a baseline timed diagnostic before official GMAC prep or tutoring.
- Where can I take a GMAT Focus practice test online?
- UniPrep2Go hosts the Free GMAT Focus Readiness Check at https://uniprep2go.study/mock-exams/gmat-focus-readiness-check with a timed runner and full readiness report.
- Is this official exam material?
- No. This is an independent readiness diagnostic. It is not official GMAC GMAT exam material and does not predict your official GMAT score.
- What does the report show after the mock?
- The report includes a pass/no-pass verdict with explanation, weighted topic diagnosis, pacing analysis, full question review with deck-backed explanations, and a repair plan linked to the Anki deck. If the verdict is no-pass or borderline, the linked deck is the recommended remediation path before retaking.
- Where do the questions come from?
- Questions are converted from the linked UniPrep2Go Anki deck CSV source, reshuffled into multiple-choice format with distractors drawn from sibling deck cards.
Official exam factsOfficial format, domain weights, and verify links
The GMAT is the graduate management admission test administered by GMAC for MBA and business master's programs. Since February 2024 the Focus Edition format is the only GMAT delivery. This page summarizes official structure and scoring; UniPrep2Go products are independent prep (not GMAC material).
- Questions
- 64 questions total (21 Quantitative + 23 Verbal + 20 Data Insights)
- Time
- 2 hours 15 minutes test time (optional 10-minute break; section order is flexible)
- Passing score
- No pass/fail score — schools set their own score expectations
- Scoring
- Total score 205–805 (10-point intervals, ending in 5); section scores 60–90 each
- Delivery
- Computer-based at Pearson VUE test centers or online proctored (verify current options at mba.com)
- Administered by
- Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC)
Knowledge domains and weights
| Domain | Weight |
|---|---|
| Quantitative Reasoning | 33% of total score (21 questions, 45 minutes) |
| Verbal Reasoning | 33% of total score (23 questions, 45 minutes) |
| Data Insights | 33% of total score (20 questions, 45 minutes) |
What changed in the current exam cycle
- Legacy GMAT (AWA + IR + Quant + Verbal, 200–800 scale) was retired January 31, 2024; the Focus Edition is now the only GMAT format.
- Sentence Correction was removed from Verbal; Quant de-emphasizes geometry; Data Insights replaces standalone Integrated Reasoning and includes Data Sufficiency.
- Total score now ranges 205–805 with three equally weighted section scores (60–90 each).
- Test takers choose section order and may edit up to three answers per section (per GMAC delivery features — verify at mba.com).
- GMAC announced GMAT Superscore (best section scores across attempts) launching August 2026 — verify timing at mba.com/scores.
High-yield facts (commonly tested)
- All three sections contribute equally to the total score — no Quant-only weighting as on the legacy exam.
- Data Insights allows an on-screen calculator; Quant and Verbal do not.
- Unanswered questions incur a score penalty — pacing to finish each section matters.
- Official scores typically arrive within 3–5 days with performance by content domain and question type on the score report.
- GMAT scores are valid for five years for most business school applications.
- Verbal tests Reading Comprehension and Critical Reasoning only (no Sentence Correction on Focus).
Verify current exam fees, scheduling, and administrative details at www.mba.com/exams/gmat-exam/about/exam-structure. Independent study aid — not official exam material.