Skip to content
Studyabroad.wiki
Go back

GRE

The Graduate Record Examination (GRE) is ETS’s standardized test for graduate and professional program admissions. Historically 3.75 hours, GRE transitioned to a shorter format (GRE General Test, ~2.5 hours) in September 2023, with further revision in 2024. The GRE measures Verbal Reasoning, Quantitative Reasoning, and Analytical Writing across a 260–340 scale (Verbal and Quantitative combined; Writing scored separately 0–6). The test is accepted by over 1,000 graduate programs globally, particularly for master’s and PhD programs in sciences, engineering, social sciences, and humanities. It is not required for most MBA programs (which typically use GMAT/GMAT Focus) or JD programs (which use LSAT). Results are valid for 5 years, the longest validity period of major standardized tests.

Key facts

AttributeDetails
Full nameGraduate Record Examination (GRE General Test)
Administering bodyEducational Testing Service (ETS)
FormatComputer-delivered at test centres or at-home (supervised remotely)
Total duration2h 20m (without AWA); 3h (with Analytical Writing, as of 2024 updates)
Score scale260–340 for Verbal + Quantitative (130–170 per section); Analytical Writing 0–6
Pass/failNo pass/fail; scores reported as numeric scale, percentile, and CEFR level (Verbal only)
Validity period5 years from test date (longest among major grad tests)
Cost (USD)USD $205 (standard, as of January 2026)
Number of attemptsUnlimited; at least 21 calendar days between attempts
Result turnaroundTypically 10–15 calendar days; expedited reporting available in some regions

Score structure

The GRE General Test consists of three sections (as of September 2023 onwards):

Verbal Reasoning (36–40 minutes, ~27 questions)

Scoring: 130–170 in 1-point increments. Percentile rank reported alongside score.

Quantitative Reasoning (40–44 minutes, ~27 questions)

Scoring: 130–170 in 1-point increments. Percentile rank reported.

Analytical Writing (30 minutes, one task; sometimes combined with Verbal timing)

Scoring: 0–6 in 0.5-point increments. Separate from Verbal/Quantitative composite.

Overall GRE Score: Sum of Verbal (130–170) + Quantitative (130–170) = 260–340. Analytical Writing reported separately (0–6).

Accepted by

Typical score requirements

Program tierTypical combined scoreVerbal percentileQuantitative percentileExample fields
Top-tier PhD (MIT, Stanford, Berkeley, Cambridge, Oxford)320–34090th–99th90th–99thPhysics, CS, Engineering, Statistics
Top-tier master’s (selective programs)310–33085th–98th85th–98thComputer Science, Business Analytics
Mid-tier PhD300–32070th–90th70th–90thSocial Sciences, Economics, Psychology
Mid-tier master’s290–31060th–85th60th–85thEngineering, Economics, Engineering
Tier 3 master’s / Regional280–30050th–70th50th–70thEducation, Social Work, Library Science
PhD waiver / admission via research recordN/AN/AN/AApplied/interdisciplinary programs

Note: Quantitative-heavy programs (Engineering, Physics, Statistics) require higher Q scores (160+); Verbal-heavy programs (Literature, History, Psychology) require higher V scores (160+). Programs typically specify minimums; above ranges are competitive thresholds.

Registration & logistics

Registration:

ID requirements:

Retake rules:

Test-day procedures (test centre):

At-home testing:

Rescheduling:

Preparation

Official materials:

Recommended materials:

Realistic prep time:

Common pitfalls:

Comparison with similar tests

TestFormatDurationScoreAccepted byKey difference
GREComputer-delivered (centre/home)2h 20m–3h260–340 + AWA 0–61,000+ grad programs globallyLongest validity (5 years); Verbal/Quant balanced
GMAT FocusComputer-delivered (centre/home)2h 5m205–805Business schools, some MBA programsMBA-focused; shorter; Quant-heavy
LSATComputer-delivered (centre only)2h 57m120–180Law schools (US, Canada)Logic-focused; no math
MCATComputer-delivered (centre only)7h 30m472–528Medical schools (US, Canada)Science-heavy; longest exam
TOEFL iBTComputer-delivered (centre/home)2h 30m0–120International grad programs, universitiesEnglish proficiency; separate from GRE

Recent changes

Primary sources

Last updated: 2026-04-16.


Share this entry: Link copied

Related entries


Previous
GPA
Next
IELTS