How Many Questions Are on the ACT? 2026 Section Breakdown
The ACT has 215 questions: 75 English, 60 Math, 40 Reading, 40 Science, plus an optional essay. Full section breakdown, time limits, and question types.


ACT Question Count by Section
Here's the complete breakdown of questions, time, and pacing for each section:
| Section | Questions | Time | Pace |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | 75 | 45 minutes | 36 sec/question |
| Mathematics | 60 | 60 minutes | 60 sec/question |
| Reading | 40 | 35 minutes | 52 sec/question |
| Science | 40 | 35 minutes | 52 sec/question |
| Total | 215 | 2h 55m | — |
| Writing (optional) | 1 essay | 40 minutes | — |
The sections always appear in this order: English → Mathematics → Reading → Science → Writing (if applicable). You can't skip ahead or go back to a previous section once the proctor moves on.
One important rule: no wrong-answer penalty. Raw score is simply the number of questions answered correctly. A blank answer and a wrong answer both score zero, so there's no reason to leave anything blank. On any question you're unsure about, eliminate what you can and guess — statistically, guessing on a 4-choice question gives you a 25% chance of a free point.
English Section: 75 Questions, 45 Minutes
The English section is the longest by question count. You get 36 seconds per question — tight, but manageable if you're not re-reading passages unnecessarily.
What It Tests
English tests two broad skill areas: Usage and Mechanics (punctuation, grammar, sentence structure) and Rhetorical Skills (style, organization, strategy). Questions are embedded in five prose passages — each passage has underlined portions, and you choose the best correction or revision from four options.
About 40% of English questions are rhetorical ("which choice best achieves the writer's goal?"), and about 60% are usage/mechanics ("which is grammatically correct?"). Most students find the usage/mechanics questions more straightforward — they have a defensible right answer based on grammar rules.
Pacing Strategy
At 36 seconds per question, you can't read every passage word for word. Read enough context to answer each underlined portion, but don't treat it like a Reading passage. Many questions only require reading one or two sentences around the underline. If a question asks about the passage as a whole ("should this paragraph be added/deleted?"), skim for main idea rather than re-reading from the start.

Mathematics Section: 60 Questions, 60 Minutes
Math is the only section where you can use a calculator. You have exactly one minute per question — and that average includes the straightforward early questions, which means you need to bank time early to spend on harder problems later.
What It Tests
ACT Math covers six content areas: Pre-Algebra, Elementary Algebra, Intermediate Algebra, Coordinate Geometry, Plane Geometry, and Trigonometry. The distribution has stayed roughly consistent: about 40–45% algebra, 30–35% geometry, 10–15% pre-algebra, and 5–10% trig.
Questions are independent — no reading passages, no shared data sets. Each question stands alone, which means you can skip a hard one and come back without losing context.
Calculator Use
You can bring most scientific and graphing calculators. The main restriction: no CAS (Computer Algebra System). Knowing what calculators are allowed on the act before test day matters — bringing a banned model means completing Math without one. The TI-84 Plus CE is the most common choice and covers everything you'll need.
Pacing Strategy
Questions roughly increase in difficulty from #1 to #60, but not perfectly. If you hit a problem that's taking more than 90 seconds, mark it and move on — an easy problem later in the section is worth the same point. Return to skipped problems once you've answered everything you know.
Reading Section: 40 Questions, 35 Minutes
Reading is where students most often run out of time. Thirty-five minutes for 40 questions and four passages — about 8 minutes 45 seconds per passage, including reading and answering questions. That's tight.
What It Tests
The Reading section has four passages (occasionally 5 shorter paired passages treated as one): Literary Narrative/Prose Fiction, Social Science, Humanities, and Natural Science. Each passage is followed by 10 questions testing three skill types: Key Ideas and Details (main idea, inference, cause and effect), Craft and Structure (vocabulary in context, author's purpose), and Integration of Knowledge and Ideas (comparing viewpoints, evaluating evidence).
The Real Challenge
Reading doesn't test outside knowledge — everything you need is in the passage. The difficulty is purely time. Students who struggle here usually spend too long reading the passage before looking at questions. Two approaches work: questions first (skim questions, then read strategically) or passage first (read the full passage quickly, then answer). Neither is universally better — try both during practice and use whichever produces more consistent results.

Science Section: 40 Questions, 35 Minutes
Despite the name, Science doesn't require memorizing biology facts or chemistry equations. It's a data interpretation test. The questions are about reading graphs, interpreting experimental results, and comparing conflicting hypotheses — not recalling content knowledge.
What It Tests
Science presents six or seven sets of material: Data Representation (graphs, tables, figures — ~38% of questions), Research Summaries (descriptions of experiments — ~45%), and Conflicting Viewpoints (two scientists with opposing theories — ~17%). The Conflicting Viewpoints passage is the most text-heavy and benefits from a read-first approach.
Students with strong Reading skills often do well on Science without additional prep. Students who struggle with Science but read well should focus practice on graph and table interpretation — that's the bottleneck for most.
Timing
Pacing on Science mirrors Reading: 52 seconds per question. Unlike Reading, you don't need to absorb every detail of each data set before looking at questions — go directly to the question, find the relevant figure, read what you need. Most answers are right there in the data.
Writing Section (Optional): 1 Essay, 40 Minutes
The optional ACT Writing section is a single essay prompt. You're given a perspective on a complex issue and three different viewpoints on it. Your task: analyze the perspectives, develop your own position, and explain how your position relates to the others.
Writing is scored 2–12 by two human readers across four domains: Ideas and Analysis, Development and Support, Organization, Language Use and Conventions. It does not affect your composite score — it's reported separately.
Most colleges don't require Writing. Check each school's policy individually. If none of your target schools require it, skipping Writing saves 40 minutes of testing time and avoids the 2-week essay score delay.
Registration costs cover only the four multiple-choice sections — Writing is an add-on fee at registration. Review how much does the act cost including the Writing section add-on before you register, and decide based on your school list rather than paying by default.
The Writing section is also where the optional ACT Superscore gets more complicated for some colleges. If you're unsure how your results will be used, what is act superscore explains how colleges apply your best section scores across multiple test attempts.
After the test, your four section scores determine your composite. Understanding what is the average act score helps calibrate whether your section performance met the bar for your target schools before you even see your official results.
ACT Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.