What Is the TEAS Test? 2026 Format, Scoring & Pass Guide

What is the TEAS test? The 2026 nursing entrance exam covers reading, math, science and English in 209 minutes. Format, scoring, pass rates explained.

SAEE - TestBy James R. HargroveMay 11, 202610 min read

What Is the TEAS Test? A Plain-English Breakdown

The TEAS test — short for Test of Essential Academic Skills — is the standardized entrance exam most nursing and allied health programs use to decide who walks through the door. Run by ATI (Assessment Technologies Institute), it measures whether you've got the academic chops to survive a rigorous health science curriculum. Reading, math, science, English. Four sections, one score, big consequences.

Here's the part nobody tells you upfront: the TEAS isn't a knowledge dump. It's a readiness test. Programs use it to predict who'll handle pharmacology calculations at 11pm, who'll read 60 pages of pathophysiology and actually retain it, and who'll write a clinical reflection without butchering basic grammar. Score well and doors open. Score poorly and you're either retaking it or watching cohorts fill up without you.

If you're researching this because you just got accepted into a pre-nursing track — or you're staring down an application deadline — you're in the right place. Let's break down exactly what's on the exam, how it's scored, who needs it, and what a passing score actually looks like in 2026.

Quick TEAS facts at a glance

  • Full name: Test of Essential Academic Skills (TEAS), currently version 7
  • Created by: ATI Nursing Education
  • Total questions: 170 (150 scored + 20 unscored pretest items)
  • Total time: 209 minutes — just under 3.5 hours
  • Format: Computer-based at PSI testing centers, ATI partner schools, or remote-proctored at home
  • Cost: Roughly $115 in person, $120 online (prices set by individual schools — yours may differ)
  • Who takes it: Aspiring RNs, LPNs, surgical techs, sonographers, dental hygienists, radiology students

Compared to entrance exams like the ASVAB practice test used for military selection or the SAEE practice test for federal employment, the TEAS sits in its own lane — purely academic, purely health-focused. No physical fitness, no clerical speed drills. Just the foundational skills nursing schools care about.

The Four Sections — What You're Actually Being Tested On

The TEAS Version 7 splits into four sections, each with its own time limit and question count. You can't bank time from one section to use in another. When the clock runs out on Reading, it's gone — even if you finish early.

Reading (45 questions, 55 minutes)

The biggest section by question count. You'll read passages — short editorials, scientific abstracts, instructional sequences, recipe-style how-tos — and answer questions about main ideas, author's purpose, supporting details, and inference. There's also a chunk on interpreting charts, labels, indexes, and following multi-step directions.

What trips most people up? It's not the vocabulary. It's the pace. 55 minutes for 45 questions means roughly 73 seconds per item, including reading the passage. If you're a slow reader, this section eats you alive. Practice timed passages weekly for at least six weeks before the real thing.

Mathematics (38 questions, 57 minutes)

Don't let the lower question count fool you — this is where most candidates lose points. The math section covers numbers and algebra, plus measurement and data. Expect fractions, decimals, percentages, ratios, basic algebra, unit conversions (metric and imperial), and word problems pulled straight from clinical contexts — dosage calculations, body mass index, fluid intake.

You get an on-screen four-function calculator. No graphing, no exponents button. So if you can't do mental math fast, build that muscle now. Many test-takers underestimate how much arithmetic gets done in your head between calculator taps.

Science (50 questions, 60 minutes)

The killer. Science covers human anatomy and physiology (the largest chunk — roughly 32 questions), biology, chemistry, and scientific reasoning. Anatomy alone can include the cardiovascular system, respiratory system, digestive system, reproductive system, nervous system, endocrine system, integumentary system, immune system, urinary system, skeletal system, and muscular system — eleven body systems, each with structures and functions you're expected to know cold.

If you haven't taken A&P recently, this is the section that demands the most study hours. Don't try to cram it in two weeks. Spread it across two to three months, system by system.

English and Language Usage (37 questions, 37 minutes)

Grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, spelling, word usage. The shortest time-per-question ratio — exactly one minute each. Mostly common-sense for native English speakers, but the test deliberately includes tricky homophones (affect/effect, complement/compliment) and comma rules that have stumped people for decades. Don't skip prep here just because it feels easier than science.

Saee Practice Test - SAEE - Test certification study resource

How the TEAS Is Scored — and What Counts as Passing

ATI doesn't publish a universal "pass/fail" cutoff. Instead, you get a composite score (a percentage from 0 to 100) plus four section scores. Each school sets its own minimum. That's why the same score can get you accepted at one program and rejected at another.

Score categories ATI uses

  • Developmental (0–40.6%): Significant gaps. Most programs won't accept this.
  • Basic (41.3–58%): Below the threshold for most ADN and BSN programs.
  • Proficient (58.7–77.3%): Acceptable at many community college nursing programs.
  • Advanced (78–90%): Competitive at most BSN programs.
  • Exemplary (90.7–100%): Top-tier. You'll stand out at any program.

Realistic target: aim for 75% or higher. That puts you in striking distance for both community college and university nursing tracks. Highly competitive programs at state universities often require 80%+ and weight the science section heavily.

The adjusted individual score

Your final score is "adjusted" by ATI to account for question difficulty. That means two test-takers with the same raw correct count can end up with slightly different scaled scores. Don't obsess over the math — just answer every question. There's no penalty for wrong answers, so guess when stuck.

Who Needs to Take the TEAS?

Anyone applying to a U.S. or Canadian nursing program — and a growing list of allied health programs — needs the TEAS. Specifically:

  • Pre-licensure RN programs: Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) and Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) — virtually all require it
  • LPN/LVN programs: Most accept TEAS, some still use the older PAX exam
  • Allied health programs: Surgical technology, radiologic technology, dental hygiene, sonography, respiratory therapy
  • Direct-entry MSN programs: Some accelerated master's tracks require TEAS scores from non-nursing bachelor's holders

Some schools accept the HESI A2 instead. A handful accept either. Always — and this is non-negotiable — check the admissions page of every program you're applying to before scheduling. Take the wrong exam and you're paying twice.

How Often Can You Retake the TEAS?

ATI sets a baseline rule: you can retake the TEAS up to three times in any 12-month period, with at least 30 days between attempts. But — and this matters — individual programs may add their own restrictions. Some only count your first attempt. Some only look at the highest score. Some average all attempts. Some allow just one retake per application cycle.

If you scored poorly on your first attempt, don't panic-schedule a retest for next week. Use the 30-day wait productively. Most candidates who retake without changing their study approach get nearly identical scores the second time. The fix isn't more sittings — it's smarter prep.

When and Where to Take the TEAS

You've got three delivery options, and the right one depends on your situation:

1. PSI Testing Centers

Brick-and-mortar testing sites. Strict ID checks, locked phone storage, video monitoring. The most "official" setting. Best if you focus better outside your home and want zero tech glitches.

2. ATI Partner Schools

Many nursing schools host their own TEAS sessions for applicants. Often cheaper, and the score reports directly to the school. Limited dates — register early.

3. Remote Proctored (Online)

Take it at home with a webcam and a live proctor watching. Convenient, but the rules are aggressive: clear desk, no bathroom breaks during sections, no second monitor, no smart watch, no food, no water bottle with a label. Internet drops disqualify you. Only choose this if your setup is rock solid.

How Long Should You Study?

Honest answer: 6 to 12 weeks of consistent daily study, depending on your background. If you finished A&P, Chemistry, and Algebra within the last two years, 6 weeks at 10 hours per week is workable. If those classes are five years behind you — or you skipped them entirely — give yourself three months minimum.

Your study plan should hit four pillars: a content review (the ATI TEAS Study Manual is the gold standard), section-specific drills, full-length timed practice tests, and weak-area retesting. Don't take ten full-length practice tests in a row — diagnose your gaps, fix them, then test again.

Free and low-cost prep resources worth checking: the ATI TEAS practice questions bank, official study guides, and reputable practice platforms. Mix paid official prep with free practice to cover every angle.

Common Mistakes That Tank TEAS Scores

Five mistakes show up over and over in candidates who underperform:

  • Studying breadth instead of depth. Trying to "know everything" in the science section is a trap. Master anatomy and physiology first — that's two-thirds of the section's questions.
  • Skipping timed practice. Knowing the material isn't enough. The TEAS punishes slow thinkers. Practice under timer pressure from week one.
  • Calculator dependency. Reaching for the calculator on every problem burns seconds. Build mental math speed.
  • Ignoring English. It's short, but it's 37 quick points. Skipping it because it "feels easy" leaves easy points on the table.
  • Cramming the week before. The TEAS rewards retrieval practice over re-reading. Quiz yourself daily for two months, not for two days.

Day-of-Test Strategy

Sleep matters more than one more flashcard session. Aim for seven hours minimum the night before. Eat protein in the morning — not just sugar. Drink water, but not so much you're fighting the urge mid-section.

When the test starts, don't read every word slowly. Skim for the question stem first when it makes sense, then go back to the passage. Flag questions you're unsure about and move on. Coming back fresh after finishing easier items often clicks the answer into place.

If you're guessing — and you will be, on at least a few — eliminate two obviously wrong choices first. Statistically, you've then got a 50% shot, which beats the 25% baseline. There's zero penalty for guessing, so never leave anything blank.

What Happens After You Submit

You get your unofficial score on screen the second you finish — composite plus all four section scores. ATI emails the official report within 48 hours. From there, your score is in your ATI account permanently. You can send it to additional schools for a small per-recipient fee.

If you're happy with the score, you're done. Submit it as part of your nursing application packet and move on. If not, schedule a retake at least 30 days out — and use that month to fix the section that dragged your score down, not to re-review everything.

Final Word

The TEAS is gatekeeper. That's the honest framing. It's the exam that decides whether you spend the next two to four years training to save lives or whether you spend another semester at the kitchen table reviewing fractions. Treat it like the milestone it is. Build a real study plan, give it the weeks it deserves, take official practice exams under timed conditions, and walk in on test day knowing exactly what to expect.

Ready to start? Pull the SAEE practice test for general entrance-exam timing practice, then drill section-by-section with TEAS-specific material. The score you walk out with will tell you exactly where to focus next.

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.