The DAT (Dental Admission Test) takes approximately 4 hours and 15 minutes from start to finish, including tutorial and break time. The actual testing time โ the part where your score accumulates โ is 4 hours and 30 minutes of content across five main sections. Add in the required tutorial and optional survey at the end, and you're looking at a full morning or afternoon commitment.
This matters for your preparation. You can't train for just one section and expect to hold up across a four-hour exam. Mental fatigue becomes a real factor โ performance on the Survey of Natural Sciences (which comes first) can differ significantly from performance on Reading Comprehension (which comes later), simply because your brain has been working hard for hours by then.
Here's the complete DAT timing breakdown:
The SNS section's 90-minute runtime catches many first-time test takers off guard. That's 100 questions in 90 minutes โ just under 54 seconds per question on average. Biology alone covers 40 of those questions, spanning cell biology, genetics, evolution, ecology, anatomy, and physiology. You need to move fast, and you need to know the material cold.
Understanding the pacing requirements for each section isn't just useful โ it's part of your strategy. You'll prepare differently for a section that gives you 60 seconds per question versus one that gives you 72 seconds. Practice under section-specific time constraints, not just overall exam timing.
Knowing the structure of the exam is step one. Using that knowledge to shape your prep is what actually moves scores. Here are the strategies that make the biggest difference.
Don't open a content review book until you've taken a full timed diagnostic DAT. Your baseline score tells you exactly where to invest your prep time. Most students who jump straight to reviewing content spend weeks on topics they already know, while their actual weak areas never get the depth they need.
A diagnostic also exposes timing weaknesses. You might finish the SNS comfortably but run out of time on Reading Comprehension. That's useful information โ and you can't discover it without simulating the full exam under real conditions. Save the date of your first diagnostic and compare it against subsequent practice tests. That trend line is your most honest measure of progress.
The Perceptual Ability Test is unlike any other standardized test section you've encountered. It tests 3D spatial visualization โ your ability to mentally rotate objects, punch holes in folded paper, and read cube configurations. This is genuinely a trainable skill, but it requires dedicated practice that's different from content review.
Daily 15-minute PAT drills consistently outperform cramming sessions. The spatial processing required becomes more intuitive with repetition. Most students need 4โ6 weeks of consistent PAT practice before they see meaningful score improvements. Don't skip this section or leave it to the end of your prep โ it's one of the sections where candidates consistently leave points on the table.
Each PAT sub-section has its own patterns and strategies. Keyhole (apertures) questions, for example, are best approached by looking for eliminations first โ rather than trying to find the correct answer from scratch on each question. TFE (Top-Front-End) requires methodical identification of each view before attempting the construction question. Learning section-specific strategies early saves time on every question you encounter.
The Survey of Natural Sciences combines three subjects into one 90-minute section. They appear in order: Biology first, then General Chemistry, then Organic Chemistry. You can't skip around between subjects within the section, but you can flag questions and return to them.
Allocate your time before you start the section, not during it. A common approach: 35 minutes for Biology, 30 minutes for General Chemistry, 25 minutes for Organic Chemistry, with review time distributed based on your personal speed in each subject. Adjust based on your diagnostic results โ if Organic Chemistry is your weak spot, you might need to flip those time allocations.
A strong SNS performance starts with Biology fundamentals. Specifically: cell division (mitosis and meiosis), DNA replication and transcription, Mendelian genetics, natural selection and speciation, and the major animal organ systems. These topics appear repeatedly across the 40 Biology questions. If your Biology foundation has gaps in any of these areas, they'll show up on test day. Prioritize them.
Reading Comprehension on the DAT isn't like reading a novel. You don't read the passage first. You read the questions first, then hunt for the answers in the passage. This is called the Search and Destroy strategy, and it's the approach used by nearly every high scorer.
The three RC passages are dense scientific text. Reading all of it first wastes time you don't have. Instead: scan the questions, note key terms, then locate those terms in the passage and extract the answer. You'll be surprised how often the answer is one or two sentences that you'd have missed in a full read.
The QR section tests foundational math skills โ algebra, probability, basic statistics, and data interpretation. It's not calculus. But 40 questions in 45 minutes means you have about 67 seconds per question. Calculator use is allowed on the DAT QR section, which is different from some other standardized tests.
Common QR pitfalls: spending too long on a single word problem, missing unit conversion traps, and misreading data from graphs or tables. If a question is taking more than 90 seconds, flag it and move on. Coming back with fresh eyes is usually faster than grinding through a stuck problem.
The QR section tests several specific math topics. Probability questions appear frequently โ expect combinations, permutations, and conditional probability. Applied algebra questions often involve rate-time-distance problems and mixture problems. Data interpretation questions present graphs or tables and ask you to calculate or compare values. Each of these is a learnable pattern, not an unknowable surprise. Practice them by category until each type feels routine.
One more QR tip: don't spend precious time on a unit conversion error because you rushed. Read the question carefully before calculating. Many QR wrong answers come from correctly solving the wrong version of the problem โ answering in miles when the question asks for kilometers, or calculating the per-unit cost when the question asks for total cost. Read the question again after you've done the math, before you select your answer.
The DAT exam prep guide on this site covers each section's content in more depth and gives you a full breakdown of the scoring system. Use our DAT practice tests to drill specific sections under timed conditions โ these are the closest thing to real exam pacing you'll find before test day.
Most students need 3โ6 months of dedicated preparation to hit a competitive DAT score. Here's how to structure that time effectively.
Start with a full content review pass through each SNS subject area. Don't try to memorize everything on the first pass โ read for understanding, flag things you don't know, and do end-of-chapter practice questions. By the end of this phase, you should have solid conceptual footing in all three science subjects and a basic familiarity with QR topics.
Simultaneously, start daily PAT practice during content review. The PAT is separate from content knowledge โ you can develop spatial skills in parallel with science review. Even 15โ20 minutes of PAT daily during content phase compounds into significant improvement by the time you hit practice tests.
One mistake to avoid in Phase 1: treating all science subjects equally. Most pre-dental students are stronger in General Chemistry than Organic Chemistry, and stronger in both chemistry subjects than in Ecology or Genetics. Identify your weak areas early and give them disproportionate attention. Don't spend Phase 1 polishing what's already strong.
Shift to full timed practice tests as the centerpiece of your prep. One or two full exams per week, with thorough review sessions after each. Review means understanding every wrong answer โ not just noting the correct one, but understanding why you got it wrong and what you need to know to get it right.
Track your scores across sections over time. You want to see a trend toward your target score, not just one good test sandwiched between mediocre ones. Consistency under timed conditions is the goal. The DAT practice tests on PracticeTestGeeks let you drill by section or take full mixed-format tests. Use them alongside your content review for section-specific drilling.
The review session after each practice test is where the real learning happens. Block at least as much time for review as you spent taking the test. For a 4-hour exam, that means a 4-hour review session. Work through every question you got wrong, every question you guessed correctly, and any question where you felt shaky even if your answer was right. Shaky correct answers are accidents waiting to happen.
Two weeks before your exam, stop introducing new content. You're reinforcing, not learning. Do one or two more full practice tests, identify your remaining weak spots, and do targeted review on those areas only. Let your brain consolidate what you've learned rather than overloading it with new material right before test day.
Rest the day before. Seriously. Cramming in the final 24 hours rarely improves scores and often increases anxiety. A well-rested brain retrieves information faster โ that directly affects your performance on a timed exam. Trust your preparation. For a full breakdown of what each DAT section covers and how it's scored, see our DAT exam prep guide. You can also download printable practice materials from our DAT practice test PDF page for offline review.
Your preparation matters most โ but your execution on exam day can still cost you points if you're not ready for the logistics. Here's what to do โ and what to avoid โ on the day of your exam.
Get your brain moving before you arrive. Do 10โ15 minutes of light mental warm-up before leaving for the test center. A few arithmetic drills, a quick PAT exercise, or even reading a dense paragraph and summarizing it gets your cognitive processing online. You want your brain in gear when the exam starts, not still warming up three questions into the SNS.
Arrive early and stay calm through check-in. The Prometric testing center has check-in procedures that take time. Arrive 30 minutes early. You'll need valid ID, and you'll go through palm vein scanning. Don't let the process stress you out before you even start.
Use the tutorial time. The DAT begins with an optional tutorial on the testing interface. Use it โ not to learn the interface, but as a warm-up period to get your brain into test mode before the SNS starts.
Take the break. The 15-minute break between sections isn't optional โ well, it technically is, but take it. Eat something, drink water, stand up. Your Quantitative Reasoning score at the end of a 4-hour exam depends on your energy level in the final 45 minutes.
Don't skip flagged questions permanently. Flag and move on is a good strategy for getting through sections, but make sure you return to flagged questions before the section ends. A blank answer is always wrong; an educated guess has a chance.
Watch your PAT pacing closely. The PAT has 90 questions in 60 minutes โ 40 seconds per question. That's the fastest pace on the exam. Candidates who spend too long on a difficult Keyhole question can run out of time before reaching the final sub-sections. Keep moving.
Pace yourself through the SNS. The SNS is the longest and most content-heavy section. It comes first, which means you're tackling it when your brain is fresh โ that's an advantage. But it also means you set the cognitive tone for the next 3+ hours. Don't rush Biology questions just because you're anxious to reach a section you feel more confident in. Steady and accurate beats rushed and reckless on a section that accounts for the majority of your scored content.
One thing that catches test takers by surprise: the break happens after the PAT, not after the SNS. So you're doing the two most cognitively demanding sections โ SNS and PAT โ back to back without a break. Going into your prep knowing this changes how you train. Practice doing SNS-then-PAT in a single sitting on a regular basis, not just each section independently.
The DAT is a long, demanding exam. But it's also a learnable one. The students who score highest are almost always the ones who prepared systematically โ not harder or longer, but smarter. For more preparation resources, our DAT preparation overview covers the full picture of what strong candidates do to reach their target scores. You can also practice individual DAT subject areas on this site to reinforce specific knowledge gaps.
The Survey of Natural Sciences is the most content-heavy section and comes first. Use these strategies to maximize your performance:
The Perceptual Ability Test rewards systematic approaches and consistent daily practice over cramming. Key strategies per sub-section:
Reading Comprehension tests your ability to extract information from dense scientific text under tight time pressure. The Search and Destroy strategy works best for most test takers: