GCSE Practice Test: Free Exam Questions and Answers for Every Subject

Get free GCSE practice tests with questions and answers for Maths, English, Science and more. Real exam-style questions, instant feedback, no signup needed.

GCSE Practice Test: Free Exam Questions and Answers for Every Subject

Sitting your GCSEs feels like running a marathon you never signed up for. Eleven subjects, hundreds of topic strands, and a single set of summer exams that decide whether you move into A-Levels, college, or an apprenticeship. The good news? You can train for it. The better news? You can train for free.

This page is the working playbook. Inside you will find practice questions written in the exact style of AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC and CIE papers, plus the structure, timing, and grading notes that examiners actually use. No fluff. No paywalls. No pretending one revision guide fits every student.

Some readers want a five-minute warm-up before bed. Others want a brutal full-paper simulation on Saturday morning. We built the materials to handle both. Pick the depth that matches your week and rotate through the subjects you are weakest in first — that is where grades move fastest.

What the GCSE Actually Is (And Why the Grades Look Weird)

The General Certificate of Secondary Education is the qualification students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland sit at age 15-16. It replaced the old O-Level system back in 1988, and the grading scale flipped from letters (A*-G) to numbers (9-1) during the 2017 reform. A 9 is the new super-grade — harder to get than the old A*. A 4 is a standard pass. A 5 is a strong pass. Anything below a 4 usually means resits in Maths or English.

Most students sit between eight and eleven subjects. Three are compulsory in England: English Language, English Literature, and Mathematics. Science counts as two GCSEs (Combined Science) or three separate GCSEs (Biology, Chemistry, Physics) depending on the school's setting. Everything else — History, Geography, French, Religious Studies, Computer Science, Art — is an option block.

Each subject is sat as a series of papers in May and June of Year 11. There are almost no controlled assessments left after the 2017 reforms; nearly everything rides on the terminal exams. That is precisely why doing repeated past-paper practice matters more than it used to.

How the 9-1 Grading Boundaries Work

The reformed scale was designed so the top end rewards genuine excellence. Examiners set boundaries every summer using a method called comparable outcomes — they look at what previous cohorts scored and adjust the cut-offs to keep the qualification stable year to year. So when people say "a 7 is the old A," they are broadly right, but boundaries shift a few marks each session.

Roughly the top 4-5 percent of entries earn a grade 9. Around 20 percent reach a 7 or above. The standard pass (4) typically covers the middle 65 percent of the cohort. Knowing this matters because it means the gap between an 8 and a 9 is often just five or six marks across a whole paper. Tiny improvements in the harder questions move grades.

Combined Science gets reported as a double grade — 9-9, 9-8, 8-8 and so on down to 1-1. That is one qualification expressed as two numbers, not two separate GCSEs.

GCSE in Numbers

📊9-1Grading scale
5+Strong pass
🏆~5%Earn a grade 9
📚8-11Subjects sat

A grade 4 is a standard pass — the minimum for most college and apprenticeship routes. A grade 5 is a strong pass and is what sixth forms increasingly look for in Maths and English. Anything 7 and above is equivalent to the old A grade and signals top-tier performance.

The Core Subjects, Demystified

Maths

Three papers, 80 marks each, 90 minutes apiece. Paper 1 is non-calculator; Papers 2 and 3 allow calculators. Topics split into Number, Algebra, Ratio and Proportion, Geometry, Probability, and Statistics. The non-calc paper kills more students than anything else, so drill mental arithmetic and surds first.

English Language

Two papers. Paper 1 is fiction (unseen 19th-century extract). Paper 2 is non-fiction (two texts, one modern and one historical). Each paper has a reading section and a writing section, and the writing carries 40 of the 80 marks. Don't skimp on the descriptive piece — examiners look for ambitious vocabulary and varied sentence openings.

English Literature

Closed-book at AQA: you cannot bring your text into the exam. You will be tested on a Shakespeare play, a 19th-century novel (usually A Christmas Carol or Jekyll and Hyde), a modern text, and a poetry anthology. Memorise short quotations — five-word fragments work better than long paragraphs.

Science

Combined Science means six papers (two Biology, two Chemistry, two Physics). Triple Science also means six papers, just longer. The required practicals show up directly in questions, so revising the methods is non-negotiable. Equation recall in Physics is now expected — they no longer give you most of them on a sheet.

Modern Languages

Four skills: Listening, Speaking, Reading, Writing. The speaking exam happens earlier in the year (usually April). Higher-tier translation questions punish careless tenses, so practise present, perfect, imperfect and future before you do anything else.

Humanities

History rewards essay technique — explain, evidence, link, evaluate. Geography splits between physical, human, and a fieldwork paper that asks about the trips you actually went on in Year 10. Religious Studies is short-answer heavy with two 12-mark evaluations per paper.

A Revision Strategy That Actually Works

Most students revise wrong. They re-read notes, highlight in pretty colours, and feel productive. None of that builds memory. What works is active retrieval — closing the book and trying to write the answer from scratch, then checking. It is uncomfortable. That discomfort is the learning happening.

Build your week around three modes. Mondays through Thursdays should be short retrieval sessions, 25 minutes each, on individual topics. Use flashcards, blurting, or past-question chunks. Fridays go to weak-spot drilling — the thing you flinched at on Tuesday. Saturdays are full timed papers under exam conditions. Sundays are off, or spent reviewing the mark scheme on Saturday's paper.

That weekly loop, repeated for twelve weeks, beats any cram. The students who jump from a 6 to a 9 are not the ones with more hours — they are the ones who did one fewer mock and one more focused recall session per day.

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How the GCSE Subjects Break Down

Compulsory Core

English Language, English Literature, and Mathematics — every state-school student sits these three. They are non-negotiable for progression into sixth form and feature in nearly every university and apprenticeship entry requirement.

Science Block

Schools offer either Combined Science (two GCSE grades reported together) or Triple Science (Biology, Chemistry and Physics as three separate GCSEs). Triple Science is usually streamed into the top sets and required for A-Level science.

Option Choices

Typically three to four subjects chosen by the student from Humanities (History, Geography, Religious Studies), Modern Languages (French, Spanish, German), Arts (Art, Music, Drama), Technology, and Computer Science.

Total Subjects

Most students sit between 8 and 11 GCSEs in total. The entire qualification is assessed through terminal exam papers in May and June of Year 11 — coursework now accounts for almost nothing.

EBacc Subjects

The English Baccalaureate measures whether students have studied a balanced core: English, Maths, Sciences, a humanities subject (History or Geography), and a Modern Foreign Language. Many schools push pupils to complete the EBacc.

Exam Day: The Small Things That Save Marks

Read the front cover. Yes, really. Every year students lose marks because they answered all four poetry questions when they only needed two. The instructions tell you how to allocate time — follow them.

Underline command words. Describe wants facts. Explain wants reasons. Evaluate wants both sides plus a judgement. Mixing them up is the fastest way to drop a band.

Watch the mark allocation. A 4-mark question wants four distinct points. A 6-mark question usually wants three points developed with evidence. A 16-mark essay needs structure, signposting, and a conclusion that actually concludes, not a polite re-statement of the question.

If you blank, move on. Come back at the end. Two minutes spent staring at one question is two minutes you could have used grabbing easy marks somewhere else. Examiners do not care about the order you wrote in.

Resits, Equivalents, and What Happens if You Miss the Grade

Didn't get a 4 in English or Maths? You will resit. Sixth forms, colleges and apprenticeship providers all require continued study in those two subjects until you pass or turn 18. The November resit window is the next shot — same paper structure, same grading, just three months later.

For other subjects the resit picture is more relaxed. You can pay to resit privately the following summer, though most students move on rather than dragging old papers into Year 12. Universities care most about Maths, English, and the subjects relevant to your degree — a missed Geography grade rarely sinks an application.

If formal exams are not the right route, Functional Skills Level 2 in Maths and English is widely accepted as equivalent to a GCSE grade 4 by colleges and employers, though not always by universities. Worth asking before you commit.

Choosing Between Exam Boards — Why It Matters Less Than You Think

Schools, not students, pick the exam board. You will sit AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC/Eduqas or CIE depending on which provider your school registered with. The headline content is almost identical across boards because they all answer to the same Ofqual specification — the differences sit in wording, question style and the set texts chosen for English Literature.

AQA is the largest provider in England. Its questions tend to be the most straightforwardly worded but the mark schemes are strict about exact phrasing. Edexcel, owned by Pearson, leans into longer applied questions, especially in Maths and Business. OCR likes structured contexts — you will see more diagrams and more scaffolded sub-parts. WJEC/Eduqas, the dominant board in Wales, has a slightly more discursive feel in the humanities. CIE (Cambridge International) is sat by some independent schools and by international students.

Practical advice: do your own board's past papers first. Once you have wrung them dry — usually after eight or nine sittings — start dipping into other boards' equivalents. The exposure to different phrasing makes you less likely to freeze when your real paper throws a slightly unfamiliar wording at you.

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Subject Quick Reference

Three papers of 90 minutes each, worth 80 marks apiece. Paper 1 is non-calculator and tests mental arithmetic, surds, fractions, and basic algebra. Papers 2 and 3 allow calculators and lean into geometry, trigonometry, statistics, and problem-solving. Foundation tier covers grades 1-5; Higher tier covers grades 3-9. The non-calculator paper is where most weaker candidates lose ground, so prioritise it in revision.

The Eight Mistakes That Tank GCSE Grades

Knowing what not to do is sometimes more valuable than knowing what to do. After watching thousands of Year 11s walk into and out of these exams, the same self-inflicted wounds keep showing up. Here is the short list.

One: leaving revision until Easter. The cohort that hits 8s and 9s started gentle topic review by Christmas. Two: highlighting in pretty colours and calling it studying. Three: only doing past papers from one year — examiners recycle question themes across cycles, so spread your sample. Four: ignoring the mark scheme. It tells you exactly what a top-band answer looks like; reading three of them teaches you more than reading a revision guide.

Five: cramming the night before. Sleep consolidates memory; you cannot shortcut that. Six: panic-skipping questions instead of attempting them — half marks for a partial answer beat zero marks for a blank. Seven: writing in pencil where ink is required, or vice versa. Eight: forgetting to sign your name. Yes, students still do that. The script gets matched to you eventually, but it adds a stress layer to results day you do not need.

The High-Yield Topics Worth Drilling First

If you have limited time, target the topics that come up most often and carry the heaviest marks. In Maths, that means simultaneous equations, surds, circle theorems, trigonometry, and percentage change — these reliably appear on every paper. In English Language, focus on the writing tasks; they make up half the marks and reward technique more than content. In English Literature, learn three killer quotations per major theme rather than twenty surface-level ones.

In Biology, the required practicals (osmosis, photosynthesis rate, food tests) appear nearly every year. In Chemistry, electrolysis, mole calculations, and the reactivity series are perennial favourites. In Physics, the equation list and the practical investigations are the highest-yielding revision targets. In History, interpretation questions are now mandatory and trip up students who only revised content.

None of this means you skip the rest. It means you start with the heaviest hitters and work outward.

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30-Day Revision Checklist

  • Print or download the official specification for each subject from your exam board's website and bookmark the topic lists for quick reference.
  • Audit your weakest topics using a short retrieval test, not a passive re-read of class notes or revision guides.
  • Build a weekly schedule with three short focused sessions per subject and one long timed mock paper at the weekend.
  • Memorise the required equations for Physics and the standard formulae for Maths — write them out daily until automatic.
  • Drill quotations for English Literature — keep them short, varied, and drawn from across each set text rather than clustered in one chapter.
  • Practise speaking aloud for Modern Languages, including the unprepared spontaneous-question section that catches most candidates off guard.
  • Sit one full past paper per subject under timed exam conditions every fortnight, ideally in the morning to mirror the real schedule.
  • Review every mock paper using the official mark scheme — write down each lost mark and the topic it belonged to.
  • Sleep at least seven hours the night before each paper. Skip the all-nighter — sleep cements memory while you rest.
  • Pack your equipment the night before: black pens, pencils, calculator with fresh batteries, ruler, protractor, and clear water bottle.

Online Practice Tests vs Past Paper Booklets

Pros
  • +Instant marking — no waiting and no parent-tutor needed
  • +Random question shuffling so you can repeat without memorising the order
  • +Mobile-friendly — useful for short bus-journey revision
  • +Free to access, with no signup wall
  • +Coverage across every major exam board's question style
Cons
  • Not always identical to the printed format examiners distribute
  • Some long-answer questions are harder to self-mark precisely
  • Screen fatigue is real — alternate with paper for longer sessions
  • Missing the experience of writing under handwritten timed pressure

What Happens After Results Day

Results land on the third Thursday of August. Schools open early so students can collect printed slips in person — most do, partly for the support and partly because the online portals creak under traffic. The slip shows your grade in each subject; it does not show your raw marks unless you ask for them.

If you hit your sixth-form offers, you confirm your place and enrolment dates follow within a fortnight. If you missed by a grade, talk to the head of sixth form on the day — most centres have flex on the boundary subjects, particularly if you came close in your target.

If you genuinely think a paper was marked unfairly, you can request a review of marking through your school. The fee is refunded if the grade changes. Reviews rarely shift more than one grade and only succeed where the original marking missed clear evidence in the script.

A Quick Note for Parents Reading Over Their Teenager's Shoulder

You cannot revise for them. You can build the conditions. Three things move the needle more than buying yet another revision guide: a quiet room, a printed weekly timetable stuck on the fridge, and a calm response to the inevitable mock-paper meltdowns. Mocks are diagnostic — a bad one in February is a gift, not a verdict.

Skip the lecture about effort. Replace it with a short Sunday-night conversation about what is on the plan for the coming week and what gets crossed off. The students who finish strong are not the ones whose parents policed every hour — they are the ones whose parents made the kitchen feel like a place where studying was expected, supported, and not a constant point of conflict.

Where the Free Practice Tests Below Fit In

Everything you see further down this page is built to slot into the revision loop above. Short sets for weekday retrieval. Longer subject runs for the weekly weak-spot session. Full mock papers for Saturday simulations. Pick the format, hit start, get a score, see which topics need another loop.

You don't need an account. You don't need to download anything. You don't need to pay. Just go.

One last thing before you start clicking. Treat your first attempt at any quiz as a diagnostic — your score matters less than the pattern of misses. Note which topics keep tripping you up, then circle back tomorrow with a fresh head and tighter focus. The students who improve fastest are the ones who repeat the same quiz three times across a week, not the ones who race through a hundred different ones once each.

GCSE Questions and Answers

About the Author

Dr. Lisa PatelEdD, MA Education, Certified Test Prep Specialist

Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert

Columbia University Teachers College

Dr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.