OAT Prep Classes: Best Training Programs for the Optometry Admission Test

Find the best OAT prep classes and training programs for 2026. Compare online courses, tutoring, and study schedules to pass the Optometry Admission Test.

OAT Prep Classes: Best Training Programs for the Optometry Admission Test

Do You Actually Need OAT Prep Classes?

Short answer: most applicants benefit from structured prep. The Optometry Admission Test is a four-hour exam covering biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, reading comprehension, physics, and quantitative reasoning. That's a lot of ground — and optometry schools use OAT scores as a real filter. The national average composite sits around 320, but competitive programs like UC Berkeley and The Ohio State University typically accept students with scores of 350 or higher.

OAT prep classes aren't mandatory. Some self-starters do just fine with textbooks and practice tests alone. But if you want structure, accountability, and expert explanations for the topics that trip most students — chemistry and physics especially — a prep course can shorten your study timeline significantly.

This guide covers the main types of OAT prep classes available, how to choose what fits your timeline and budget, and how to build a study approach that actually works.

Types of OAT Prep Classes

OAT prep falls into a few broad categories. Each has real tradeoffs depending on your learning style, budget, and how much time you have before test day.

Self-Paced Online Courses

These are the most popular option. You pay once (or subscribe monthly), work through video lectures and practice questions at your own pace, and revisit topics as needed. The best self-paced programs include:

  • Kaplan OAT Prep — Comprehensive content library, adaptive practice, and score predictor. Strong for students who learn well from structured video lectures.
  • The Princeton Review OAT — Detailed content review with drill questions and full-length practice tests.
  • Chad's Videos (now part of OAT Bootcamp) — Long-time favorite for chemistry and physics. Chad's clear explanations cut through concepts that other resources make unnecessarily complicated.
  • OAT Bootcamp — Purpose-built for OAT. Adaptive question bank, timed practice tests that simulate the real exam interface, and detailed answer explanations. Many students consider it the most OAT-specific option available.

Self-paced programs typically run $200-$600 for full access. They're the most cost-effective option if you're disciplined about following a schedule.

Live Online Classes

Live classes give you scheduled sessions with an instructor, real-time Q&A, and a cohort of other students preparing for the same exam. They're closer to the traditional classroom experience — with the flexibility of attending from home.

Kaplan and Princeton Review both offer live online OAT courses. Sessions typically meet two or three times per week over 8-12 weeks. Expect to pay $1,000-$1,500 for a full live course. If you know you won't study unless you have scheduled sessions, live courses can be worth the premium.

Private Tutoring

One-on-one tutoring is the most expensive option — usually $80-$200/hour — but the most targeted. A tutor can identify exactly where you're losing points and build a session plan around those specific weaknesses. This works especially well for students who've already done content review and need targeted drilling on chemistry or physics problem types.

Look for tutors with OAT-specific experience (not just general pre-health tutors) and check whether they've worked with optometry school applicants specifically. The OAT's physics section, for instance, requires different emphasis than MCAT physics.

University-Based Prep Programs

Some universities and optometry school post-bac programs offer prep workshops for the OAT, usually in the weeks before a major test administration. These tend to be more affordable ($100-$300), condensed, and taught by faculty or advanced students. If your undergraduate institution has a pre-optometry advising program, ask whether they offer or recommend specific prep workshops.

What the Best OAT Prep Classes Cover

No matter which format you choose, a solid OAT prep program should include all of the following:

  • Content review for all six sections — biology (30 questions), general chemistry (30), organic chemistry (30), reading comprehension (40 passages), physics (40 questions), and quantitative reasoning (40 questions). Physics and organic chemistry have the steepest difficulty curves; make sure any prep program you choose covers them in depth.
  • Timed practice tests — the OAT is administered by the Association of Schools and Colleges of Optometry (ASCO) through Prometric. Real test conditions include a mandatory 10-minute break and strict timing. Any prep course worth using should include timed full-length tests that mirror the actual format.
  • Detailed answer explanations — not just "B is correct" but why A, C, and D are wrong. This is where many cheaper prep resources cut corners, and it's exactly where the learning happens.
  • Performance analytics — the best programs track which question types and content areas you miss, so you can focus review time where it actually matters.

Building a Study Schedule Around OAT Prep Classes

Most students need 10-16 weeks of dedicated prep to see significant score improvements. Here's a realistic framework:

1
Diagnostic full-length OAT. Identify weak sections. Begin biology and general chemistry content review.
2
Continue gen chem. Start organic chemistry mechanisms — reactions, functional groups, stereochemistry.
3
Finish organic chemistry. Begin physics: mechanics, waves, optics, electricity. These take longer than expected.
4
Physics continued. Quantitative reasoning: algebra, probability, statistics, data interpretation.
5
Reading comprehension strategy: passage mapping, elimination, timing. Take a section-specific timed test.
6
First full-length timed practice test. Full review of all wrong answers by subject area.
7
Targeted weak-area drilling based on Week 6 results. Focus on bottom two sections.
8
Second full-length timed test. Increase time pressure — simulate real exam conditions strictly.
9
Final weak-area review. Flashcard review of chemistry reactions and physics formulas.
10
Light review only. Third practice test (3 days before exam). Rest 48 hours before test day.

How to Choose the Right OAT Prep Class

With several solid options available, picking one comes down to a few honest questions about yourself:

Do you need accountability or just resources? If you're disciplined and self-motivated, a quality self-paced program like OAT Bootcamp or Chad's Videos will cover everything you need. If you know from experience that you won't open a textbook without a deadline, a live course or tutor is worth the extra cost.

Where are your weakest sections? Take a free diagnostic or review your undergraduate transcripts. If organic chemistry is your weakest subject, prioritize programs with strong ochem content (Chad's Videos specifically is renowned here). If reading comprehension is costing you points, look for programs with passage strategy instruction.

What's your budget? A $200 self-paced program + dedicated practice tests is genuinely sufficient for many students. There's no evidence that spending $1,500 on a live course produces better scores on average — it just adds structure. Spend what your situation actually requires.

How much time do you have? If you're testing in 8 weeks, a live course's 12-week curriculum won't fit. Self-paced gives you flexibility to accelerate. If you have 6 months, a live course followed by self-study review works well.

Free and Low-Cost OAT Resources

Paid prep programs have advantages, but plenty of free resources can supplement them — or even replace expensive courses for self-disciplined students:

  • ASCO's official OAT practice test — Available through Prometric's testing portal. It uses the same interface as the real exam, which matters for timing and navigation practice.
  • Khan Academy — Strong for biology, general chemistry, and physics fundamentals. Not OAT-specific, but the content level aligns with what the exam tests.
  • OAT community on Reddit (r/PreOptometry) — Active forum where recent test-takers share score reports, resource recommendations, and timing breakdowns. Filter posts by high scores and read their prep strategies.
  • PracticeTestGeeks OAT practice tests — Use the OAT Test Prep guide and work through practice questions by section to identify your gaps before committing to a full paid course.

OAT Score Goals and What Prep Classes Help You Reach

Understanding target scores makes prep more concrete. OAT scores are reported on a 200-400 scale in each section, with 300 representing the national average.

  • Below 310: Difficult for most optometry programs. Additional prep cycles recommended.
  • 310-320: Competitive for many programs, especially with a strong GPA.
  • 330-340: Competitive for most programs nationally.
  • 350+: Competitive for top programs (UCB, OSU, Indiana, etc.).

A well-structured 10-12 week prep program typically produces score improvements of 15-30 points. Your starting baseline and weak-section distribution matter more than the specific program you choose. For deeper strategy, check out the OAT study materials guide covering which textbooks and supplemental resources align with each exam section.

Supplementing Classes With Practice Tests

Prep classes teach you the material. Practice tests teach you how to perform under time pressure. These serve different functions — don't confuse them. Students who do extensive content review but minimal timed practice testing often struggle with pacing on exam day, even when they know the material.

Use this ratio as a rough guide: for every 3 hours of content review, spend 1 hour on timed practice questions. And for every 2-3 weeks of content study, take at least one full timed practice test under real conditions (phone away, timer running, no interruptions).

Review every practice question you miss — correct and incorrect answers alike. The explanation for why a wrong choice is wrong is often where the deepest learning happens. That kind of active review is what separates students who improve significantly from those who plateau.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James 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.

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