The Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT)

The Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) is a multiple-choice, computer-based and computer-adaptive standardized exam that is used globally for admission to graduate management/business programs (such as MBA programs).

The GMAT is developed and administered by testmaker GMAC to provide business schools with common measures of applicants’ preparedness for graduate-level academic work. Business school admission committees look at your GMAT score, along with your work experience, academic record, and supporting materials, to assess your readiness for the rigors of an MBA program.

While the GMAT does test facts and rules, including grammar as well as quantitative concepts in arithmetic, algebra, statistics, and geometry, the exam is first and foremost a test of your critical thinking skills. It tests your ability to analyze and evaluate quantitative and verbal material, think logically, and solve problems under time-limited conditions. Knowing how to reason through and analyze information efficiently is the key to a great GMAT score.

GMAT Structure:

The GMAT contains four distinct section types, although you’ll use the same critical thinking and analysis skills throughout the test, as you will during your MBA coursework.

Section Order:

You will choose your section order at the test center, just before you begin your test. There are three orders you will be able to choose from:

Scoring Information:

The Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA or Essay) section of the GMAT is scored separately from 0 to 6 in half-point increments. The Integrated Reasoning (IR) section is scored from 1 to 8 in one-point increments. The Quantitative and Verbal sections each have an official scaled score of 0–60, but in practice, only the scores 6 to 51 are used. Your Quantitative and Verbal scores are also combined to generate your Total score, which is given on a 200–800 scale in 10-point increments. The Total score is the score that a majority of business schools care most about.

Mean Scores:

See below for more on how the GMAT is scored.