Picat Practice Test

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Your PICAT scores determine more than just whether you can enlist โ€” they determine which military jobs (MOS, rate, or AFSC) you're eligible for. A good AFQT gets you in the door. Your line scores dictate what's behind it.

This guide explains exactly how PICAT scoring works: what the AFQT is, how it's calculated, what line scores are, and what minimum scores different branches and job fields require.

What Scores Does the PICAT Produce?

When you complete the PICAT at the portal, you'll receive two types of scores:

  1. AFQT Score โ€” Armed Forces Qualification Test, expressed as a percentile from 1โ€“99
  2. Line Scores โ€” composite scores calculated from subtest combinations, used to determine job eligibility

Neither score is a raw percentage of questions correct. Both are derived from your subtest results using formulas that compare your performance to a national norming sample. For the full breakdown of what PICAT is, see our Army PICAT guide.

The AFQT Score

The AFQT is the most important number on your PICAT score report. It's your overall "can you enlist?" score. Here's how it works:

The AFQT is calculated from four specific ASVAB subtests:

The formula weights these scores and converts the result into a percentile. An AFQT of 50 means you scored at or above 50% of the reference group (the norming sample used for that version of the test). A 72 means you outperformed 72% of that group.

Each branch of the military sets its own minimum AFQT for enlistment:

These minimums are floors. Many applicants scoring right at the minimum are competing with others who scored significantly higher โ€” especially during high recruitment periods. A higher AFQT gives you more options and more negotiating leverage for bonuses and job selection.

Line Scores: The Job Qualification Numbers

Line scores are what actually determine which military jobs you qualify for. Each line score is a composite of specific ASVAB subtests:

Note: VE (Verbal Expression) is itself a composite of WK + PC scores. The specific subtest abbreviations: GS = General Science, AR = Arithmetic Reasoning, MK = Math Knowledge, WK = Word Knowledge, PC = Paragraph Comprehension, EI = Electronics Information, AS = Auto & Shop Information, MC = Mechanical Comprehension, CS = Coding Speed, N = Numerical Operations.

How to Read Your PICAT Score Report

After completing the PICAT portal session and the MEPS verification test, your score report shows:

The standard scores range from roughly 20 to 99 for each subtest. Don't confuse these with percentile scores โ€” a standard score of 60 on Arithmetic Reasoning doesn't mean you scored in the 60th percentile; it means you scored one standard deviation above the mean.

Your recruiter will walk you through the job eligibility implications. If you're researching this in advance, look up the specific line score requirements for MOS/rates you're interested in before your MEPS visit โ€” that way you're walking in informed. For the full score report breakdown, see our PICAT score report guide.

What Counts as a Good PICAT Score?

"Good" depends on your goals:

Line score benchmarks vary by job, but as a rough guide: a GT score of 110+ opens most Army officer and warrant officer programs; GT 100+ qualifies for most technical MOS. Special forces programs typically require GT 110+ combined with other fitness and assessment criteria.

Can You Improve Your PICAT Score?

You can only take the PICAT once before needing to take the full ASVAB at MEPS. If you want to improve your score, you'd need to retake the standard ASVAB with a waiting period (typically 30 days after first attempt, 6 months after second). The PICAT itself can't be retaken โ€” you either pass the MEPS verification with your PICAT score or you sit for the full ASVAB.

The best strategy is to prepare before you open the PICAT portal. Focus on AR, MK, WK, and PC first โ€” those four subtests drive your AFQT, which is the primary enlistment gate. Then study the technical subtests (GS, EI, MC, AS) based on which line scores your target jobs require. Our PICAT verification test guide covers what to expect at MEPS after the portal session, and the PICAT vs ASVAB comparison explains when your PICAT score counts versus when you'll need to take the full test.

Score Validity and the Verification Test

Your PICAT score is preliminary until confirmed by the MEPS verification test. The verification test is ~25โ€“30 questions across the same content areas. If your MEPS performance is within an acceptable range of your PICAT score, the PICAT score is accepted. A significant downward discrepancy triggers a full ASVAB.

This is why it's pointless to game the PICAT portal. Your score only counts if you can reproduce it under controlled conditions at MEPS. Study to know the material, not to pass the at-home test.

For Navy-specific scoring requirements and what the Navy PICAT process looks like, see our Navy PICAT guide. For USMC-specific requirements, the USMC PICAT guide covers Marine Corps line score benchmarks for popular MOS fields.

AFQT Minimum by Branch
  • Army: 31 (waiver to 26 possible)
  • Marine Corps: 32 (25 with GED)
  • Navy: 35 (31 with GED)
  • Air Force / Space Force: 36
  • Coast Guard: 40

These are enlistment minimums, not competitive targets. A score above 65 opens significantly more job options at all branches.

What is a good PICAT score?

Any AFQT score of 50 or above qualifies you for all military branches and opens a solid range of job options. An AFQT of 65+ is competitive for technical roles and officer programs. A score of 85+ maximizes your options across all branches.

How is the AFQT score calculated from PICAT subtests?

The AFQT combines four subtest scores: Arithmetic Reasoning (AR), Mathematics Knowledge (MK), Word Knowledge (WK), and Paragraph Comprehension (PC). These are weighted and converted to a percentile score representing your performance compared to a national norming sample.

What are PICAT line scores used for?

Line scores determine which specific military jobs (MOS, rate, AFSC) you qualify for. Each job has minimum line score requirements in areas like GT (General Technical), EL (Electronics), or MM (Mechanical Maintenance). Your recruiter uses these to match you with available jobs.

How long are PICAT scores valid?

PICAT scores are valid for 2 years. After that, you'd need to retest. In most cases, your score is confirmed at MEPS via the verification test and then used for your enlistment process within that 2-year window.

Can I retake the PICAT if I don't like my score?

Not directly. The PICAT is a one-time test. If you want to improve your score, you'd take the full ASVAB at MEPS after a waiting period (30 days after your first full ASVAB attempt, 6 months after the second). Prepare thoroughly before opening the PICAT portal.

What happens if my PICAT score is below the minimum?

If your AFQT is below your branch's minimum, you won't qualify for enlistment using that score. Some branches allow waivers for scores slightly below minimum with a high school diploma. You can also retake the full ASVAB after a waiting period to try to improve your score.

What's the difference between PICAT scores and ASVAB scores?

They're equivalent โ€” the PICAT is the at-home version of the ASVAB and produces the same score types (AFQT and line scores). Your PICAT score is used in place of an ASVAB score as long as the MEPS verification test confirms it.
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