IAAT Practice Test Guide 2026 — Iowa Algebra Aptitude Test Prep
IAAT practice test guide 2026: what the Iowa Algebra Aptitude Test covers, question types, scoring, and how to prepare for algebra readiness placement.

What Is the IAAT?
The Iowa Algebra Aptitude Test (IAAT) is a standardized assessment developed by the University of Iowa and distributed by Riverside Insights (formerly Houghton Mifflin Harcourt). It is used by middle and high schools — primarily for rising 6th, 7th, and 8th graders — to evaluate readiness for Algebra I or accelerated mathematics courses.
The IAAT is a predictive aptitude test, not a content achievement test. Rather than simply testing what math a student has already mastered, it measures the specific reasoning skills and pre-algebraic thinking patterns that predict success in formal algebra instruction. This distinction matters for preparation: the test rewards flexible mathematical thinking and pattern recognition, not just calculation speed.
Schools use IAAT results as one factor in algebra placement decisions, often alongside grades, teacher recommendations, and standardized achievement scores. A strong IAAT score can open access to accelerated math tracks — Algebra I in 7th grade rather than 8th, for example — which can affect the entire trajectory of a student's high school math sequence. For free iaat practice test questions aligned to the test format, see our IAAT question bank.
IAAT at a Glance
- Questions: ~60 items across 4 sections
- Time: ~50 minutes total
- Format: Multiple choice + completion
- Grade levels: 6th–8th graders
- Purpose: Algebra I readiness placement
- Administered by: School districts
- Score type: Raw score + percentile rank
- Cutoff: Set by school/district
- Result use: Course placement decision
- Creator: University of Iowa
- Publisher: Riverside Insights
- Current edition: 5th Edition
IAAT Test Format
The IAAT (5th Edition) is organized into four subtests, each measuring a distinct component of algebra readiness. The full test takes approximately 50 minutes with timing allocated per subtest. All questions are either multiple choice or short completion items — there is no essay or extended written response component.
Subtest 1 — Pre-Algebraic Number Skills and Concepts: Tests numerical reasoning that underlies algebraic thinking — operations with fractions, decimals, and negative numbers; properties of numbers; and basic number relationships. Students must demonstrate fluency with numerical concepts that algebra builds on directly.
Subtest 2 — Interpreting Mathematical Information: Presents mathematical information in tables, graphs, and written descriptions. Students interpret and extract quantitative relationships from these sources — a skill that translates directly to working with equations and functions in algebra.
Subtest 3 — Representing Relationships: Tests the ability to represent mathematical relationships using symbols, equations, and expressions. Students translate verbal descriptions into mathematical notation and vice versa — the core translational skill of algebraic reasoning.
Subtest 4 — Using Symbols: Evaluates understanding of variables, expressions, and symbolic manipulation. Students work with simple equations, identify equivalent expressions, and reason about relationships using algebraic notation.
For full-length timed practice aligned to all four IAAT subtests, see our iowa algebra aptitude test practice resources.

IAAT Topics and Question Types
Understanding what specific math knowledge and reasoning skills appear on the IAAT helps focus preparation. Key topic areas tested include:
- Number operations: Fractions (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division), decimals, percents, and negative numbers — fluency with these operations is foundational to all four subtests
- Ratios and proportions: Setting up and solving proportional relationships — a core skill for interpreting graphs and writing equations
- Patterns and sequences: Identifying arithmetic and geometric patterns — the IAAT tests pattern recognition as a predictor of algebraic generalization ability
- Variables and expressions: Understanding what variables represent, evaluating expressions by substituting values, and simplifying simple expressions
- Equations: Setting up one- and two-step equations from word problems and identifying solutions
- Functions and graphs: Reading coordinate plane graphs, identifying ordered pairs, and interpreting relationships between quantities in tabular and graphical form
- Word problem reasoning: Translating real-world situations into mathematical representations — the most commonly missed skill area on the IAAT
For comprehensive walkthroughs of past-format IAAT questions by topic, see the iaat test prep complete guide which covers all four subtests in depth.
What Predicts IAAT Performance?
Research from Riverside Insights on the IAAT shows that the test most strongly predicts algebra success for students who: (1) demonstrate flexible thinking about numbers — not just calculation skill, (2) can represent relationships symbolically rather than only concretely, and (3) are comfortable with ambiguity in problem-solving. Students who prepare by practicing reasoning-style math problems (not just drill) tend to see the biggest IAAT score improvements. For free practice materials, see our iaat practice question bank and our iowa algebra aptitude test timed test simulator.
IAAT Preparation Checklist

IAAT Questions and Answers
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About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. 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.