HESI Practice Test: Free Questions for All A2 Sections (2026)
Take free HESI A2 practice tests for every section. Learn what scores schools require, how to study each subject, and when you're ready to register.

What Is a HESI A2 Practice Test?
A HESI A2 practice test is a set of questions that mirrors the content, format, and difficulty of the actual Health Education Systems Inc. Admission Assessment exam — the standardised test that thousands of nursing and allied health programs use to screen applicants. Using practice tests before your exam date is one of the most evidence-backed study strategies available: answering questions under exam-like conditions builds retrieval strength, reveals specific knowledge gaps, and reduces test-day anxiety by making the exam format feel familiar.
The HESI A2 itself isn't a single fixed exam — schools choose which of its 8+ sections to require based on their program's focus. A nursing school might require Biology, Chemistry, Anatomy and Physiology, Math, Reading Comprehension, Vocabulary, and Grammar, while a radiography program might require a different combination. Before you take any practice test, confirm which sections your target school requires — you don't want to spend weeks preparing for Physics if the program you're applying to doesn't include it.
Effective practice testing goes beyond just answering questions and checking your score. The most productive approach is question-level review: for every question you got wrong, read the explanation, identify which underlying concept you misunderstood, and target that concept specifically before your next practice session. Passive review — reading through study materials without testing yourself — is significantly less effective at building the recall under pressure that the real HESI A2 requires. For a complete overview of the exam structure, scoring, and registration process, see our HESI exam guide.
Most nursing programs require a minimum HESI score somewhere between 70 and 80 — though competitive programs often expect 80+ and some use HESI scores as ranking criteria rather than simple pass/fail cutoffs. Knowing your target school's minimum before you start practice testing gives your prep a specific goal: you're not just trying to learn the material, you're trying to demonstrate command of it at a specific score threshold.
The relationship between practice test frequency and real exam performance is well-established: students who take at least four to six full practice tests per section before sitting the real exam consistently outperform those who rely primarily on passive content review. The reason is the retrieval practice effect — practicing remembering something strengthens the neural pathway far more effectively than rereading it does. Build practice tests into your study routine from week one rather than treating them as a checkpoint in the final days before registration.
- Sections: Up to 8 content areas — schools choose which to require (check your program's requirements)
- Common required sections: Math, Reading Comprehension, Vocabulary, Grammar, Biology, A&P, Chemistry
- Question types: Multiple choice, 4 answer options each
- Score scale: 0–100% per section; most schools require 70–80+ minimum
- Time limits: Vary by section (e.g., 50 math questions in 50 min; 55 reading questions in 60 min)
- Best practice strategy: Section-by-section practice + error review, not marathon full-test sessions
How to Use HESI A2 Practice Tests Effectively
Identify Your Required Sections
Take a Diagnostic Practice Test
Target Weak Sections with Focused Study
Practice Questions Daily
Take Full Mock Tests 1–2 Weeks Before Exam

HESI A2 Sections: What Each Practice Test Covers
Each HESI A2 section tests a distinct content domain. The specific topics within each section — and the question distribution across subtopics — are predictable enough that targeted practice significantly improves scores compared to general review. Knowing what each section actually tests helps you build the right practice test routine for your specific situation and avoid the common mistake of preparing for the wrong content because you're relying on secondhand information about what appears on the exam.
Mathematics is one of the most commonly required and most anxiety-producing sections. It covers basic arithmetic (fractions, decimals, percentages), ratios and proportions, algebra, military time conversion, and basic measurement conversions. No calculator is provided during the exam, so accurate mental and paper arithmetic is essential. Many nursing students who struggle with HESI math do so not because they don't know the concepts but because they haven't practiced working without a calculator — solve your practice problems by hand to build that fluency before test day.
Reading Comprehension tests your ability to identify main ideas, make inferences, determine the meaning of words in context, and distinguish fact from opinion in short passages. The passages are often healthcare or science adjacent but don't require prior content knowledge — the answers are always supported by text in the passage. Common mistakes include bringing in outside knowledge and choosing answers that are generally true rather than specifically supported by the passage in front of you.
Anatomy and Physiology is among the highest-stakes sections for nursing programs because it directly reflects content you'll use in nursing school and clinical practice. It covers all major body systems — skeletal, muscular, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, urinary, reproductive, nervous, endocrine, lymphatic, and integumentary. The depth required goes beyond memorising organ names: you need to understand how systems interact, the mechanism of major physiological processes, and clinical implications like what happens when a system fails. Our HESI A2 practice test resource includes dedicated A&P sections to help you identify which systems need the most work.
Chemistry covers atoms and the periodic table, chemical bonding, states of matter, chemical reactions (including balancing equations), acids and bases, and basic biochemistry relevant to healthcare. Students who haven't taken chemistry recently often find this section the most challenging — a targeted review of general chemistry fundamentals before practice testing pays dividends here.
Grammar is frequently underestimated by students who consider themselves strong writers. The HESI grammar section tests specific grammatical rules — subject-verb agreement, correct pronoun case, punctuation rules, and commonly confused words — rather than writing quality or style. Strong writers often miss grammar questions because they answer based on what sounds right rather than applying specific rules. Grammar is also one of the sections where focused practice produces quick score gains, because the rules being tested are finite and learnable in a short time with the right materials.
HESI A2 Sections Overview
Basic arithmetic, fractions, decimals, ratios, proportions, military time, measurement conversions. No calculator provided. 55 questions, 50 minutes. Key skill: accurate paper arithmetic at speed.
Main idea, inference, vocabulary in context, fact vs. opinion. Answers always supported by the passage — don't use outside knowledge. 55 questions, 60 minutes.
Healthcare-related vocabulary, word roots and prefixes/suffixes. Build vocabulary by studying medical terminology alongside practice questions. 55 questions, 50 minutes.
Subject-verb agreement, punctuation, sentence structure, commonly confused words. Often underestimated — a focused 2-week grammar review significantly improves scores. 55 questions, 50 minutes.
Cell biology, genetics, evolution, microbiology, photosynthesis, cellular respiration. AP Biology-level conceptual understanding required. 25 questions, 25 minutes.
All major body systems, physiological processes, system interactions. Highest-stakes section for nursing programs. 25 questions, 25 minutes.
Periodic table, chemical bonding, reactions, acids/bases, basic biochemistry. Requires general chemistry fundamentals. 25 questions, 25 minutes.
Required only by some programs. Covers motion, force, energy, electricity, optics. Less commonly required by nursing programs; more common in radiology and respiratory therapy programs.
Practice Test Strategies by Section
For Biology, Chemistry, Anatomy and Physiology, and Physics, practice tests work best when combined with targeted content review:
- Error analysis by topic: When you miss a Biology question on mitosis vs. meiosis, that tells you to review cell division — not just answer more random Biology questions
- Build concept maps: Drawing connections between related concepts (e.g., the endocrine system's role in blood glucose regulation connecting to the pancreas and diabetes) strengthens the retrieval pathways the exam tests
- Spaced repetition: Review missed concepts again 2 days later and 5 days later — not just immediately after missing them. Spacing reviews dramatically improves long-term retention
- Don't skip Physics: Even if your target school doesn't require it, check in advance — programs sometimes add or change required sections

How to Interpret Your HESI Practice Test Scores
A HESI practice test score in the high 60s or low 70s doesn't mean you're failing — it means you have identified specific areas to improve before you sit the real exam. That's the entire point of practice testing. The goal isn't to celebrate scores above a threshold; it's to use scores diagnostically to direct your remaining study time toward the areas where you're losing points.
Treating an early low score as a failure rather than information is one of the most common mindset errors in HESI prep — it leads students to avoid practice testing (to avoid the discomfort of a low score) at exactly the time when frequent testing would accelerate improvement fastest.
Compare your score to your target school's minimum requirement, then add 5–8 points as your personal target. If a school requires a 75, you want to score 80–83 consistently on practice tests before registering — because real exam conditions (test anxiety, unfamiliar environment, time pressure) typically produce scores 3–7 points lower than relaxed practice conditions. Building in that buffer gives you margin for the performance dip that most test-takers experience under real exam conditions.
Section scores matter more than composite scores for most nursing programs. Even if your overall HESI average is strong, some programs will reject applicants who score below their section minimums in specific required subjects regardless of composite performance. Check whether your target program reports individual section minimums or only an overall composite requirement — both exist, and the implications for your prep strategy differ significantly. The full HESI exam guide covers scoring in detail, including how schools use HESI scores in admission decisions beyond simple pass/fail cutoffs.
HESI A2 Practice Test Preparation Checklist
- ✓Confirmed which HESI A2 sections your target school requires (don't assume from generic prep materials)
- ✓Noted the minimum score requirement per section for each program you're applying to
- ✓Taken a diagnostic practice test under timed conditions without studying first
- ✓Identified the three sections with the largest gap between your score and the target minimum
- ✓Created a daily study schedule with section-specific practice questions and content review
- ✓Set up a personal error log recording which concepts appear in questions you miss
- ✓Practiced all math problems by hand — no calculator during prep
- ✓Reviewed medical terminology for Vocabulary section (20+ terms per day)
- ✓Scheduled a full mock test 1–2 weeks before your exam date
- ✓Confirmed your target score is at least 5–8 points above the school's published minimum
Official HESI Practice Tests vs. Free Practice Tests
- +Official Elsevier practice tests mirror the real HESI A2 format and difficulty most accurately
- +Free practice tests from reputable prep sites cover the same content domains at lower cost
- +Variety of practice sources reduces the risk of learning one source's answer patterns rather than genuine content
- +Free tests allow high-frequency practice without financial constraint — quantity of practice matters
- +Official tests provide reliable score benchmarks for predicting actual exam performance
- −Official Elsevier practice materials can be expensive ($35–$50 per section or more for full packages)
- −Free practice tests vary widely in quality — some have errors, outdated content, or misleading difficulty
- −No free source exactly replicates the official HESI question style — answers may feel slightly different
- −Over-reliance on any single practice source risks score inflation without genuine content mastery
- −Official materials alone are insufficient — content review is needed alongside practice testing regardless of source

Common Mistakes on HESI A2 Practice Tests
The most common mistake is taking practice tests passively — completing the questions, checking the total score, and moving on without reviewing wrong answers in detail. The diagnostic value of a practice test comes entirely from the analysis of errors, not from the score itself. A practice test you complete without thorough error review is missed study time, not productive preparation. After every practice session, spend at least as much time reviewing wrong answers as you spent answering questions.
A second common mistake is studying sections you're already strong in because it feels productive. If you're consistently scoring 85+ on Grammar but 68 on Chemistry, more Grammar practice is pleasant but won't help you pass. The brutal but effective approach is to spend 70% of your remaining study time on your three weakest sections and 30% on maintenance of stronger areas.
Ignoring the time component is another significant error. The real HESI A2 has strict per-section time limits, and running out of time on a section you actually know is a preventable failure mode. Practice under timed conditions from the beginning — not just in the final days before the exam. Develop pacing strategies (spending no more than 60 seconds per question before marking and moving on, returning to skipped questions if time allows) while the stakes are low.
Finally, many students register for the HESI too early — before they've reached consistent practice test scores above their target threshold. The exam costs $35–$100 per administration depending on the testing center, and retakes require waiting periods that can delay your application cycle by months. Taking additional time to prepare before registering is almost always the better financial and strategic decision compared to sitting before you're ready and needing a retake.
A less-discussed mistake is practicing only in ideal conditions — quiet room, no distractions, unlimited time for review. The real exam environment is a testing center with other test-takers, a time clock you can't pause, and none of your notes available. Deliberately introducing mild constraints into practice sessions (timed segments, no looking up answers mid-section) builds the mental flexibility and confidence that real exam conditions require. Save your full-comfort review sessions for initial learning; shift to exam-conditions practice as your exam date approaches.
HESI A2 Practice Test Stats
Building a HESI A2 Study Schedule with Practice Tests
The optimal study schedule for the HESI A2 depends on your starting point (your diagnostic scores) and your timeline (when your application deadline is). Most students who are starting from scratch — no recent coursework in the science sections — benefit from 6–10 weeks of structured preparation. Students with recent Biology or Chemistry coursework can often prepare in 3–4 weeks if they focus their practice testing on sections where gaps are identified. Don't build your schedule backward from your exam date before establishing your baseline — take the diagnostic first, then figure out how many weeks you actually need.
A practical weekly structure for a 6-week plan: Weeks 1–2 focus on your two weakest content sections with daily practice questions and targeted review of wrong answers. Weeks 3–4 add your next two weakest sections while maintaining a weekly review session on sections from weeks 1–2. Weeks 5–6 shift to integrated practice: full mock tests for all required sections under timed conditions, followed by error analysis and targeted review of any remaining weak spots. This structure uses your limited study time efficiently rather than spreading it equally across all sections regardless of your starting proficiency in each.
Consider using our HESI 30-day study plan if your timeline is compressed — it structures daily content review and practice test sessions across all major sections in a format that works for students preparing on a 4–6 week timeline. The key guiding principle regardless of which schedule you follow is that daily consistent practice produces better outcomes than last-minute cramming — 30 minutes of focused daily practice for six weeks outperforms three days of marathon studying the week before the exam.
There is no single HESI A2 passing score — each nursing program sets its own minimum requirements. One school might require a 70 overall with no section minimums; another might require an 80 overall with a minimum 75 in Anatomy and Physiology specifically. Some programs rank applicants by HESI scores and admit only the top performers, making the effective score requirement much higher than the stated minimum. Always check the specific requirements of every program you plan to apply to — don't rely on generic prep materials or internet forums that cite a single "passing score" for the HESI A2, because no such universal number exists.
Getting the Most from Your Practice Test Results
Raw scores tell you where you are; error analysis tells you how to get where you need to be. After every practice test, categorise your wrong answers by the underlying concept being tested — not just the section. Within Anatomy and Physiology, are you missing questions about the cardiovascular system specifically? Within Chemistry, are buffer/pH questions consistently tripping you up? That level of specificity is what transforms practice test data into an actionable study plan.
Keep a running error log — a simple document or spreadsheet where you record the concept behind every question you missed, the date you missed it, and the date you reviewed it. This log serves two purposes: it reveals patterns (if the same concept appears six times in your log, it's a priority), and it creates a review checklist for your final week of prep. During your last week, go through the error log and verify you now understand each concept that previously gave you trouble.
When you're consistently scoring 5+ points above your target school's minimum across three consecutive practice test sessions for each required section, you're likely ready to register for the real exam. Don't let perfect be the enemy of good — if you're scoring 83 and the minimum is 75, that buffer is sufficient. Additional practice beyond that point has diminishing returns and delays an application you're ready to submit. For detailed information on registration, testing locations, and score reporting, the HESI complete study guide covers the full logistics of booking and sitting the official exam.
One final practice-test principle worth emphasising: simulate the full exam experience at least once before your actual test date. Sit down with all required sections sequentially, take only the breaks you'll get in the real exam, and don't check your phone between sections. The mental stamina of maintaining focus through multiple timed sections in succession is a real factor in HESI performance — and it's a skill you can develop through practice exactly as you develop content knowledge. Most students who've done full-length simulation feel noticeably more confident walking into the actual exam.
HESI 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.