GMAT (Graduate Management Admission Test (Focus Edition)) — Free Online Mock Test
Question-adaptive Quant (21) + Verbal (23) + Data Insights (20). 64 total. 45 min/section. No backtracking. · Official language: English.
Advanced
United States
University & Higher Ed
64 questions
135 min
50 distinct variants
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GMAT section breakdown
The GMAT mock test on Wrexa Edge replicates the real exam's section structure — same names, same question count per section, same time limits. Inter-section breaks are enforced.
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Quantitative Reasoning (21 Q)
21 questions · 45 minutes · ~129 sec/question
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Verbal Reasoning (23 Q)
23 questions · 45 minutes · ~117 sec/question
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Data Insights (20 Q)
20 questions · 45 minutes · ~135 sec/question
GMAT scoring & marking scheme
205–805
Scaled score range
Strategy: GMAT has no negative marking. Attempt every question — blank answers cost you potential marks but cannot pull your score down.
Scale: GMAT (205-805).
How GMAT is conducted
Mode
Proctored — Wrexa Edge mirrors this with a webcam-based proctoring flow (face detection, room scan, fullscreen lock, tab-switch detection).
Test format
Linear / fixed-form — every candidate sees the same number of questions per section.
Backtracking
Disabled — once you answer, you cannot return to a question.
Mark for review
Not available on the real interface.
Tools available during the GMAT exam
Wrexa Edge renders these tools inside the mock test exactly as they appear on the real GMAT exam — same shortcuts, same behaviour.
GMAT time strategy
With 64 questions in 135 minutes, you have about 127 seconds per question on average. Successful candidates aim for the following pacing on each section:
Quantitative Reasoning (21 Q)
Target ~129 sec/question. If a question takes more than 194 seconds, mark for review and move on.
Verbal Reasoning (23 Q)
Target ~117 sec/question. If a question takes more than 176 seconds, mark for review and move on.
Data Insights (20 Q)
Target ~135 sec/question. If a question takes more than 203 seconds, mark for review and move on.
Wrexa Edge's analytics show your actual time-per-question after every mock so you can spot which sections you're losing time on.
GMAT topics covered
Across the 50 Wrexa Edge variants of GMAT, the following topics appear most often (sample distribution from one variant):
Quantitative Reasoning (21 Q)
- Quant — Algebra · 7
- Quant — Geometry · 6
- Quant — Word problems · 2
- Quant — Work / Rates · 2
- Quant — Percent · 2
- Quant — Mixtures · 1
- Quant — Combinatorics · 1
Verbal Reasoning (23 Q)
- Verbal — CR fallacies · 7
- Verbal — CR strategy · 7
- Verbal — RC strategy · 6
- Verbal — RC trap patterns · 2
- Verbal — CR weakening · 1
Data Insights (20 Q)
- DI — Data Sufficiency · 11
- DI — Charts · 3
- DI — Multi-source · 2
- DI — Table Analysis · 2
- DI — Graphics Interpretation · 1
- DI — Two-Part Analysis · 1
Sample GMAT questions
A preview of real practice questions from the Wrexa Edge GMAT bank — the same style, phrasing and difficulty you'll face on test day. Full solutions unlock free inside the mock.
Quantitative Reasoning (21 Q) · Quant — Algebra
Q1. If 2(x − 3) = 4x + 6, then x =
Why: Correct answer: D — −6. Topic: Quant — Algebra.
Verbal Reasoning (23 Q) · Verbal — CR weakening
Q2. An argument from a survey that polled only a small unrepresentative group is weakened by:
Why: Correct answer: D — A challenge to the survey's sampling method or sample size. Topic: Verbal — CR weakening.
Data Insights (20 Q) · DI — Data Sufficiency
Q3. A DS question asking "is x positive?" — statement 1: x² > 0. This statement is:
Why: Correct answer: D — Not sufficient (x² > 0 means x ≠ 0, but x could be positive or negative). Topic: DI — Data Sufficiency.
Quantitative Reasoning (21 Q) · Quant — Algebra
Q4. The roots of x² + 5x + 6 = 0 are:
Why: Correct answer: A — −2 and −3. Topic: Quant — Algebra.
Verbal Reasoning (23 Q) · Verbal — CR fallacies
Q5. In a "find the flaw" question, common flaws include:
Why: Correct answer: A — Correlation/causation confusion, ad hominem, hasty generalization, false dilemma. Topic: Verbal — CR fallacies.
Data Insights (20 Q) · DI — Data Sufficiency
Q6. A DS question asking "what is x?" Statement 1: x is a positive integer < 5. Statement 2: x is a prime number.
Why: Correct answer: A — Together sufficient: x must be 2 or 3 — but actually still two values, so insufficient even together. Topic: DI — Data Sufficiency.
These are a handful of the 3200 unique GMAT questions across all 50 Wrexa Edge variants — start a free mock to attempt the full set with instant scoring.
GMAT difficulty calibration
Advanced tier. Advanced-level: high-stakes exam with rigorous content depth. Expect 4-8 months of structured prep.
Question-adaptive Quant (21) + Verbal (23) + Data Insights (20). 64 total. 45 min/section. No backtracking. · Official language: English.
Verified content — Wrexa Edge's GMAT bank has been deeply curated with real exam-aligned content (estimated 100% syllabus coverage).
How Wrexa Edge prepares you for GMAT
Real test-day interface
Our sat skin mirrors the actual GMAT testing software — same timer, palette, tools, and navigation.
50 distinct variants
3200 unique practice questions, each variant a fresh test — not just shuffled options.
Detailed analytics
Scaled score, section accuracy, topic-wise heatmap, time-per-question — see where to focus after every attempt.
Spaced repetition (Notebook)
Wrong answers and flagged questions flow into an SM-2 spaced-repetition deck so you actually retain what you learn.
Optional proctoring
Browser-based face-api detection (no install) — turn it on to simulate real GMAT test-day conditions.
Free to start
No credit card. Sign up, pick a variant, and your first GMAT mock starts in under a minute.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the GMAT exam pattern?
- Graduate Management Admission Test (Focus Edition) contains 64 questions across 3 sections: Quantitative Reasoning (21 Q), Verbal Reasoning (23 Q), Data Insights (20 Q). Total duration is 135 minutes (about 127 seconds per question).
- Does GMAT have negative marking?
- No — GMAT has no negative marking. Each correct answer is worth 1 mark, so attempt every question.
- How is GMAT scored?
- Scaled score range: 205 to 805. GMAT (205-805).
- How can I practise GMAT online for free?
- Wrexa Edge offers free full-length GMAT mock tests with instant scoring, detailed explanations, and 50 distinct variants. Sign up for free at Wrexa Edge and start practising in under a minute — no card required.
- What is the difficulty level of GMAT?
- GMAT is rated Advanced difficulty on Wrexa Edge. Advanced-level: high-stakes exam with rigorous content depth. Expect 4-8 months of structured prep. Question-adaptive Quant (21) + Verbal (23) + Data Insights (20). 64 total. 45 min/section. No backtracking. · Official language: English.
- How long is the GMAT exam?
- GMAT runs for 135 minutes total across 3 sections. On Wrexa Edge the timer is enforced exactly as on the real exam — including mandatory inter-section breaks.
- What topics are covered in GMAT?
- GMAT is split into: Quantitative Reasoning (21 Q), Verbal Reasoning (23 Q), Data Insights (20 Q). Each section is timed and weighted separately. Question-adaptive Quant (21) + Verbal (23) + Data Insights (20). 64 total. 45 min/section. No backtracking. · Official language: English.
- What tools or aids are allowed during GMAT?
- On-screen scientific calculator (matches the real exam interface). Note: real exam is proctored — Wrexa Edge mirrors this with a webcam-based proctoring flow you can enable.
- Is the GMAT test adaptive?
- No — GMAT is a fixed-form (linear) test. Every candidate sees the same number of questions per section.
- How many GMAT mock tests does Wrexa Edge offer?
- Wrexa Edge generates 50 distinct GMAT variants — each with different question content, not just shuffled options. That's 3200 unique practice questions you can attempt, all in the real test-day interface, free to start.
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