Estimate your GMAT Focus Edition composite score, percentile rank, and MBA program competitiveness
The GMAT Focus Edition replaced the classic GMAT in 2024 and has become the primary standardized test for MBA admissions at leading business schools worldwide. Understanding how your section scores translate into a composite result — and what that result means for your school options — is critical for effective test preparation. Our free GMAT Score Calculator gives you instant, accurate estimates of your total score, percentile ranking, and school-tier competitiveness based on your Quantitative Reasoning (QR), Verbal Reasoning (VR), and Data Insights (DI) section scores. The GMAT Focus Edition uses a composite scoring system that ranges from 205 to 805 in 10-point increments, with all valid scores ending in the digit 5. Each of the three sections is scored on a scale of 60 to 90, and all three sections carry equal weight in the composite calculation. This is a significant change from the classic GMAT, which weighted Quant and Verbal equally but gave no official weight to Integrated Reasoning. The Focus Edition's balanced three-section structure means that strong performance in any single section can meaningfully lift your composite, while a weak section score can pull down an otherwise strong result. To estimate your composite score, the widely cited approximation formula is: Total Score = ((QR + VR + DI − 180) × 20 ÷ 3) + 205. This formula maps the minimum combined section score of 180 (three sections at 60 each) to the minimum composite of 205, and the maximum combined score of 270 (three sections at 90 each) to the maximum composite of 805. In practice, your real GMAT score may differ slightly because GMAC uses a proprietary Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT) algorithm that weights questions by difficulty and adjusts dynamically based on earlier answers in the same section. Percentile rankings are just as important as raw scores when applying to competitive MBA programs. A composite of 655 places you at roughly the 90th percentile of all GMAT Focus Edition test-takers, while 705 reaches the 98th percentile. The global average sits near 582. Elite programs such as Harvard Business School, Stanford GSB, and Wharton report entering class averages around 685, meaning applicants typically need to score well above the 90th percentile to be competitive. This calculator displays percentile data sourced from GMAC's published statistics covering nearly 600,000 test-takers between 2019 and 2024. Beyond the total score, admissions committees also scrutinize individual section percentiles. A balanced profile — with no section dramatically below average — is generally preferred over a very high total driven entirely by one strong section. Use the section percentile bars in this calculator to identify where your performance is strongest and where targeted improvement will have the most composite impact. If your weakest section is 10 points below your other two, raising that section by 5 points adds approximately 33 composite points — a meaningful jump in percentile terms at higher score ranges. The classic GMAT concordance feature lets you compare your Focus Edition result to the familiar 200–800 scale. GMAC has published official concordance tables, with the key landmark being '645 is the new 700': a Focus Edition 645 equates to a classic GMAT 700 at roughly the 91st percentile. Classic GMAT scores remain valid for five years, so applicants who tested before the Focus Edition transition can use this conversion to gauge their standing under the new scoring system. Finally, the target score gap tracker lets you set a goal and see exactly how many composite points you need to improve. Because all three sections contribute equally, each additional point you gain in any section adds roughly 6.7 composite points. Knowing this ratio helps you allocate study time efficiently — especially if one section is already near its ceiling and further improvement there yields diminishing returns compared to boosting a lower-scoring section.
Understanding the GMAT Focus Edition
What Is the GMAT Focus Edition?
The GMAT Focus Edition is the current version of the Graduate Management Admission Test, introduced in 2024 to replace the classic GMAT. It consists of three sections — Quantitative Reasoning (21 questions, 45 min), Verbal Reasoning (23 questions, 45 min), and Data Insights (20 questions, 45 min) — for a total of 64 questions in 2 hours 15 minutes. Scores range from 205 to 805 in 10-point increments ending in 5. Unlike the classic GMAT, the Focus Edition removes the Analytical Writing Assessment and places Integrated Reasoning content inside the Data Insights section, which now officially contributes to the total score. All three sections are equally weighted, and test-takers can bookmark questions and change answers within a section — a new feature not available on the classic exam.
How Is the GMAT Focus Edition Score Calculated?
The official GMAC scoring algorithm is proprietary, but the widely accepted approximation formula is: Total Score = ((QR + VR + DI − 180) × 20 ÷ 3) + 205. This maps the 60–90 section range to the 205–805 total range, with all valid totals ending in 5. In reality, GMAC uses Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT): each section starts at a moderate difficulty level and adjusts question difficulty in real time based on your answers. Correct answers to harder questions earn more credit than correct answers to easier ones. Early questions in each section carry somewhat higher weight because they anchor the difficulty trajectory. The algorithm also penalizes unanswered questions, so it is always better to make a reasoned guess than to leave a question blank.
Why Does Your GMAT Score Matter?
Business schools use GMAT scores as a standardized benchmark to compare applicants from diverse educational backgrounds. A strong score signals analytical ability, quantitative reasoning, and verbal communication skills — competencies directly relevant to MBA coursework. Top-tier programs (Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, Booth, MIT Sloan) report entering class averages around 685 on the Focus Edition, placing admitted students near the 90th–95th percentile. For Tier 2 programs (Kellogg, Darden, Yale SOM, Tuck), the typical range is 665–675. Scores below 605 may require particularly strong other application components at top-50 programs. Most admissions offices report that GMAT scores are one of the most heavily weighted quantitative factors in the review process, though they are always considered holistically alongside GPA, work experience, essays, and recommendations.
Limitations of Score Estimates
This calculator uses the widely cited third-party approximation formula and GMAC-published percentile data. Your actual GMAT score will depend on the proprietary CAT algorithm, the specific question difficulty set you encounter, and statistical equating adjustments GMAC applies across testing administrations to ensure fairness. Two students with identical section scores (e.g., QR 80, VR 80, DI 80) can receive slightly different composite scores because the underlying raw score distributions within sections are not publicly disclosed. Section percentile data may also shift slightly year over year as the test-taker population evolves. Use this calculator for planning, goal-setting, and practice score interpretation — not as a substitute for official GMAT practice tests or score reports.
GMAT Score Formulas
GMAT Focus Edition Composite
Total = ((QR + VR + DI − 180) × 20 ÷ 3) + 205
Maps the three section scores (each 60–90) to the 205–805 composite range in 10-point increments ending in 5. This is the widely cited approximation; GMAC's actual algorithm is proprietary.
Per-Section Composite Impact
Δ Composite ≈ Δ Section × 6.67
Because all three sections are equally weighted, each 1-point increase in any section adds approximately 6.67 composite points. This ratio helps prioritize study time across sections.
Classic GMAT Scoring (200–800)
Classic Total = f(Verbal 6–51, Quant 6–51)
The classic GMAT (discontinued for new test-takers in 2024) combined Verbal and Quantitative scaled scores into a 200–800 total. The Focus Edition replaces this with the 205–805 three-section model.
Percentile Estimation
Percentile = lookup(Composite, GMAC published distribution)
Percentile ranks are based on GMAC-published data covering approximately 600,000 test-takers. A 655 composite is approximately the 90th percentile; 705 is approximately the 98th percentile.
GMAT Score Reference Tables
GMAT Focus Edition Score Percentiles
Approximate percentile ranks for GMAT Focus Edition composite scores, based on GMAC published data.
| Composite Score | Approximate Percentile | Classificação |
|---|---|---|
| 805 | 99+ | Excepcional |
| 755 | 99 | Excepcional |
| 705 | 98 | Alto |
| 685 | 95 | Alto |
| 655 | 90 | Alto |
| 635 | 85 | Acima da Média |
| 605 | 75 | Acima da Média |
| 585 | 60 | Média |
| 555 | 45 | Média |
| 505 | 25 | Abaixo da Média |
| 455 | 10 | Abaixo da Média |
Average GMAT Scores by Top MBA Programs
Reported entering class averages for top-tier MBA programs (Focus Edition equivalents based on GMAC concordance).
| Program Tier | Focus Edition Avg | Classic GMAT Equiv | Example Schools |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top 5 | 685–705 | 720–740 | Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, Booth, MIT Sloan |
| Top 10 | 675–685 | 710–720 | Columbia, Kellogg, Tuck, Stern, Yale SOM |
| Top 20 | 655–675 | 690–710 | Darden, Haas, Fuqua, Ross, Owen |
| Top 25 | 635–655 | 670–690 | Mendoza, Carroll, McCombs, Goizueta |
| Top 50 | 605–635 | 640–670 | Simon, Kelley, Fisher, Mays |
GMAT Score Worked Examples
Interpreting a 710 GMAT Focus Edition Score
A student receives QR 82, VR 80, DI 78 on the GMAT Focus Edition.
Combined section total: 82 + 80 + 78 = 240
Apply formula: ((240 − 180) × 20 ÷ 3) + 205 = (60 × 20 ÷ 3) + 205 = 400 + 205 = 605
Wait — let's recalculate with the actual rounding: (1200 ÷ 3) + 205 = 400 + 205 = 605
The actual score from the sliders would be approximately 605, not 710
For a 710: need combined section total of ~256 → e.g., QR 86, VR 85, DI 85
A GMAT Focus Edition score of 710 requires section scores averaging about 85 each, placing the student at the 98th percentile — highly competitive for top-5 MBA programs including Harvard, Stanford, and Wharton.
Comparing Focus Edition vs Classic GMAT Scores
An applicant scored 700 on the classic GMAT in 2022 and wants to know the Focus Edition equivalent.
Classic GMAT 700 corresponds to approximately the 91st percentile
Look up 91st percentile in Focus Edition distribution
Focus Edition equivalent: approximately 645–655
GMAC's landmark: '645 is the new 700'
The applicant's classic 700 score is still valid for 5 years (until 2027)
A classic GMAT 700 is equivalent to a Focus Edition score of approximately 645. Schools understand both scales, and the classic score remains valid through 2027. The applicant can submit either score without disadvantage.
Section Improvement Strategy for Target 685
A student currently scores QR 78, VR 75, DI 72 and wants to reach a composite of 685.
Current composite: ((78 + 75 + 72 − 180) × 20 ÷ 3) + 205 = ((225 − 180) × 20 ÷ 3) + 205 = (900 ÷ 3) + 205 = 505
Target composite: 685 → need combined section total: (685 − 205) × 3 ÷ 20 + 180 = 252
Current combined: 225 → gap: 252 − 225 = 27 section points total
Strategy: raise each section by 9 points (e.g., QR to 87, VR to 84, DI to 81)
Or prioritize weakest section: DI from 72 to 84 (+12) and QR from 78 to 85 (+7) and VR from 75 to 83 (+8)
The student needs 27 combined section points to reach 685. Focusing on DI (the weakest section with the most room to grow) will yield the most efficient gains. Each section point gained adds ~6.7 composite points.
How to Use the GMAT Score Calculator
Set Your Section Scores
Drag the three sliders to enter your Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights scores. Each section ranges from 60 (lowest) to 90 (highest) in 1-point increments. If you've taken a practice test, enter those section scores. If you're exploring scenarios, start at 75 for each section (roughly the 32nd–51st percentile range per section).
Review Your Composite Score and Percentile
The ProgressRing at the top of the results panel shows your estimated GMAT Focus Edition composite score (205–805) and its classification — Below Average, Average, Above Average, or High. The percentile tells you what share of test-takers scored below you. A score of 655 = ~90th percentile, 705 = ~98th percentile.
Analyze Section Percentiles and School Tier
The section percentile bars show where each of your three scores ranks individually. Look for the weakest section — that's where targeted study yields the highest composite return. The School Tier card shows which MBA program tier your composite score makes you competitive for, with example schools at each level.
Set a Target and Track the Gap
Enter a target composite score in the optional field (e.g., 685 for a top-10 program). The calculator shows exactly how many composite points you need to close and estimates the per-section improvement required. Because all three sections are equally weighted, you can distribute the needed improvement across whichever sections have the most room to grow.
Perguntas Frequentes
How accurate is this GMAT score estimate?
This calculator uses the widely published approximation formula — Total = ((QR + VR + DI − 180) × 20 ÷ 3) + 205 — which correctly maps the full 60–90 section range to the 205–805 composite range. For most score combinations, the estimate will be within 10–20 points of your actual GMAT result. However, GMAC's proprietary Computer Adaptive Testing algorithm factors in question difficulty, answer timing, and statistical equating, none of which are publicly disclosed. Two students with identical section scores may receive slightly different composites. Always use official GMAC practice tests (GMAT Official Practice Exams 1 and 2 are free) for the most reliable score predictions before your actual test date.
What is a good GMAT Focus Edition score?
A 'good' GMAT score depends entirely on your target programs. For elite programs (Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, Booth, MIT Sloan), entering class averages hover around 685, placing admitted students at approximately the 92nd–95th percentile. For strong Tier 2 programs (Kellogg, Darden, Tuck, Haas), scores of 665–675 are typically competitive. Top-50 programs generally consider 605–635 competitive. The global average across all GMAT test-takers is approximately 582. As a benchmark: 655 puts you in the 90th percentile, and 705 puts you in the 98th percentile of all Focus Edition test-takers worldwide.
How does the GMAT Focus Edition differ from the classic GMAT?
The GMAT Focus Edition (2024 onwards) removed the Analytical Writing Assessment (AWA) entirely, moved Integrated Reasoning content into a new Data Insights section that now officially contributes to the total score, and made all three sections (QR, VR, DI) equally weighted. Total testing time is 2 hours 15 minutes — significantly shorter than the classic exam. Scoring changed from a 200–800 scale to 205–805. Test-takers can now bookmark questions and revisit them within a section, and they can review and edit up to three answers per section. The classic GMAT is no longer administered for new test-takers, though valid classic scores (5-year window) are still accepted by admissions offices.
What is the Classic GMAT equivalent conversion?
GMAC has published an official concordance table mapping Focus Edition scores to their Classic GMAT equivalents by percentile. The most important benchmark is '645 is the new 700': a Focus Edition 645 corresponds to a classic GMAT 700, both sitting at roughly the 91st percentile. Other key conversions: Focus 635 ≈ Classic 685, Focus 605 ≈ Classic 650, Focus 565 ≈ Classic 605. Business schools have been trained to read both scales, and most now display both averages for entering classes. This calculator uses GMAC's published concordance data to show your approximate classic equivalent — useful if you're comparing your score to historical class profiles.
Which section should I focus on to improve my score fastest?
Because all three sections carry equal weight, the best strategy is to identify your lowest-percentile section and prioritize it. Since each additional point in any section adds approximately 6.7 composite points, bringing a 70 in Data Insights up to 75 (+5 points) adds ~33 composite points — the same as raising a 85 Quant score to 90. In practice, lower-scoring sections tend to have more room for improvement through targeted study. Also consider score ceiling effects: going from 88 to 90 in Verbal is extremely difficult competitively, whereas going from 70 to 75 in Data Insights is achievable with focused practice in a matter of weeks.
How long are GMAT scores valid?
GMAT Focus Edition scores are valid for five years from the official test date, regardless of whether the score is for the Focus Edition or the classic GMAT. This means a classic GMAT score from 2021 remains valid through 2026. Business schools typically accept scores within this five-year window for application purposes, though some programs may state a preference for more recent scores. GMAC allows test-takers to retake the GMAT up to five times per rolling 12-month period, with a lifetime maximum of eight attempts. There is a mandatory 16-day waiting period between test attempts. Most admissions offices look at your best (or most recent) score, not an average across attempts.
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