PICAT Portal (picat.dpac): How to Access and Complete Your Test

The PICAT portal at picat.dpac lets recruits take the ASVAB-equivalent test at home. Learn how to access it, what to expect, and how to prepare.

PicatBy James R. HargroveMay 5, 20267 min read
PICAT Portal (picat.dpac): How to Access and Complete Your Test

If your recruiter has told you to complete the PICAT, you'll be directed to the official PICAT portal — accessible at picat.dpac (the Department of the Army's assessment platform). This is where you take the pre-screened, at-home version of the ASVAB before your MEPS visit.

The portal handles authentication, test delivery, and your score. But if you've never seen it before, it can feel confusing — especially since access comes through your recruiter, not directly through a public website. This guide walks through exactly what the PICAT portal is, how to get access, what you'll do inside it, and what happens after you finish.

What Is the PICAT Portal?

The PICAT portal is the secure online platform used to administer the Pre-screening Internet Computerized Adaptive Test — also known as the PICAT. It's hosted under the Defense Personnel Assessment Center (DPAC) infrastructure and requires a recruiter-issued access code to enter. You can't just sign up on your own.

The PICAT is the at-home version of the full ASVAB. It covers the same subjects and generates an Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT) score and line scores that determine which military jobs (MOS/rate/AFSC) you qualify for. For everything about the test format, see our Army PICAT guide.

How to Access the PICAT Portal

Here's the process, step by step:

  1. Your recruiter gives you an access code. This is the only way in. You'll receive a unique code tied to your identity. Guard it — sharing it with someone else to take the test for you is fraud and a federal offense.
  2. Go to the official portal URL. Your recruiter will provide the exact link. It's the picat.dpac domain. Don't use any other site — unofficial versions aren't the real exam.
  3. Log in or create your account. The portal will prompt you to enter the access code and create a profile. You'll verify your identity through the portal.
  4. Read the testing rules. The portal presents rules you must acknowledge: you must take the test alone, in a quiet environment, without assistance from any person or resource. Taking notes, using books, or having someone help you violates the honor agreement and invalidates your score.
  5. Begin the test. Once you start, the timer is running. Complete each section without interruption. The PICAT is computer-adaptive — it adjusts question difficulty based on your answers.

PICAT Portal Requirements

Before you sit down to take the test through the portal, make sure you meet these technical requirements:

  • Stable internet connection: A dropped connection mid-test can cause problems. Use wired internet or a reliable Wi-Fi connection, not mobile data.
  • Compatible browser: Most modern browsers work (Chrome, Edge, Firefox). Avoid using Safari on older macOS versions or outdated browsers.
  • Quiet, private space: You'll acknowledge that you're taking the test alone and without unauthorized assistance. A library, coffee shop, or room with other people doesn't meet the requirement.
  • Uninterrupted time: The PICAT takes approximately 1.5 to 2 hours. Don't start it unless you can complete it in one sitting.
  • No notes, books, or phones: The PICAT is an honor-based test. You're essentially signing an integrity statement when you begin.

What's Inside the PICAT?

The PICAT contains the same core content as the ASVAB. The four AFQT domains are:

  • Arithmetic Reasoning (AR) — word problems involving math calculations
  • Mathematics Knowledge (MK) — algebra, geometry, and quantitative concepts
  • Word Knowledge (WK) — vocabulary and word meanings in context
  • Paragraph Comprehension (PC) — reading passages and answering questions about them

The portal also delivers the additional technical subtests that determine job eligibility: General Science, Electronics Information, Auto & Shop Information, Mechanical Comprehension, and Assembling Objects. Your performance on these generates the line scores (GT, CL, CO, etc.) that MOS/rate recruiters look at.

After You Finish: The Verification Test

Your PICAT score from the portal is preliminary, not final. When you arrive at MEPS, you'll take a short verification test to confirm that your portal score accurately represents your ability. This verification test is about 25–30 questions and focuses on the same content areas.

If your verification test score is within a reasonable range of your PICAT score, the PICAT score stands. If there's a significant discrepancy — usually more than a certain number of points lower — you'll be required to take the full ASVAB at MEPS instead. The verification test exists specifically to catch cases where someone had unauthorized help.

This is why trying to cheat on the PICAT portal is self-defeating. If your portal score doesn't match your verification performance, you'll end up taking the full ASVAB anyway — and face potential integrity issues that can affect your enlistment.

Preparing Before You Open the Portal

The smartest move is to prepare thoroughly before you even open the PICAT portal. You only get one shot at the PICAT before either using that score or taking the full ASVAB at MEPS — so treat it like the real exam, not a trial run.

Focus on:

  • Arithmetic Reasoning and Math Knowledge — these have the most direct impact on your AFQT score, which determines basic enlistment eligibility
  • Word Knowledge and Paragraph Comprehension — strong vocabulary and reading skills pull up your AFQT significantly
  • Your target line scores — if you have a specific MOS/rate/AFSC in mind, look up its line score requirements and prioritize those subtests

Use our PICAT verification test guide to understand what the MEPS follow-up looks like, and practice with our PICAT test questions to get comfortable with the format. For a comparison of how the PICAT differs from the standard ASVAB, see PICAT vs ASVAB.

Common Portal Problems and Fixes

A few issues come up repeatedly with PICAT portal access:

"Access code not working" — Double-check with your recruiter. Codes expire, and there's sometimes a typo in how they're communicated. Your recruiter can reissue if needed.

Test freezing or disconnecting — If the test freezes during the session, don't close the browser. Refresh first. If the session is interrupted, contact your recruiter immediately — they can coordinate with DPAC to restore your session or reissue access in some cases.

"I didn't finish" — The PICAT has time limits per section. If you run out of time, those questions are typically scored as unanswered. Unanswered questions count against you more than a wrong answer in some adaptive testing systems — so pace yourself and don't leave questions blank if you can help it.

Portal not loading — Try a different browser and clear your cache. If you're on a corporate or school network, security settings might block the portal. Use a personal device on a home network.

PICAT by Branch

The PICAT is used by multiple branches, though availability and process details vary:

  • Army: Uses the PICAT most extensively — it's the primary pre-screening tool for most Army recruiters. See our Army PICAT guide for details.
  • Navy: The Navy PICAT process is similar but recruiter-initiated; Navy uses it for pre-qualification before MEPS.
  • Marines (USMC): The USMC PICAT is available and widely used by Marine recruiters for initial qualification screening.
  • Air Force and Space Force: Use their own versions of the ASVAB pre-screening; process details may differ.

What Happens to Your Score

After the portal session, your score report is accessible through the PICAT score report — both through the portal itself and shared with your recruiter. Your recruiter uses the AFQT and line scores to determine what jobs you may qualify for and whether you meet the minimum threshold for your desired branch (varies: Army minimum is typically 31 AFQT; Marine Corps is 32; Navy is 35).

Scores are valid for two years. After two years, you'll need to retest. In most cases, your PICAT score combined with the MEPS verification is what gets logged — not a separate full ASVAB unless verification fails.

PICAT Portal Quick Reference

  • Portal: picat.dpac (access via recruiter-issued code only)
  • Test length: ~1.5–2 hours
  • Content: Same as ASVAB — 9 subtests including AFQT domains
  • Score valid: 2 years
  • Followed by: Verification test at MEPS (25–30 questions)
  • Requirement: Take alone, no notes, no assistance
  • Discrepancy rule: Significant gap → full ASVAB at MEPS instead

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.