ATI TEAS Practice Questions: Best Free & Paid Question Banks

ATI TEAS practice questions ranked by quality: ATI's Online Practice Assessments A & B, free Mometrix, Pocket Prep, PTG. How many to do, where to focus.

ATI TEAS Practice Questions: Best Free & Paid Question Banks

ATI TEAS Practice Questions: What's Worth Your Time

Looking for ATI TEAS practice questions that actually mirror the real exam? The honest answer is shorter than most prep blogs admit: ATI's own Online Practice Assessments A and B are the gold standard, and almost every free resource is a downgrade in question style. That doesn't mean free banks are useless. It means you have to know which ones predict your real score, which ones are good for reps, and which ones are noisy.

The ATI TEAS, now in version 7, is what almost every U.S. nursing program uses as a gatekeeper exam. You'll face 170 scored questions across four sections — Reading (39), Math (38), Science (50), and English & Language Usage (37) — plus 20 unscored pretest items. That's 209 questions in 209 minutes. Most students bombing the TEAS aren't failing because of content gaps. They're failing because they didn't do enough timed, exam-style ATI TEAS practice questions before walking in.

This guide breaks down every question bank worth knowing about, ranks them honestly, and gives you a working number for how many questions you should grind through before test day. You'll also see how to slice your practice by section, what to do with your results, and how to set up a true full-length simulation in the final week. None of this is theoretical — it's the same playbook ATI tutors use with students aiming at the 75th percentile and above.

ATI TEAS 7 At a Glance

170Scored questions on ATI TEAS 7
209 minTotal testing time across all sections
500-1500Practice questions to hit your goal score
60.7%Adjusted score threshold for most nursing programs

ATI's Own Online Practice Assessments: The Only "Real" Practice

If you only buy one resource for ATI TEAS practice questions, make it the official ATI Online Practice Assessments. There are two forms — Practice Assessment A and Practice Assessment B — sold directly on the ATI Testing store at around $50 each, or bundled with the SmartPrep self-study package for roughly $109. Each form contains 150 questions written by the same item writers who build the live TEAS exam.

The reason these are uniquely valuable is simple. The questions match the live test in three ways no third-party bank can replicate: identical phrasing style, identical difficulty calibration, and identical category weighting. A student who scores 75% on Practice Assessment A typically scores within 3-5 points of that on the real exam. No free resource comes close to that predictive power.

The strategic move is to save Form B for your final week. Take Form A early as a diagnostic — after 10-15 hours of content review — to identify weak sections. Then drill those sections with cheaper resources. Save Form B as your dress rehearsal 5-7 days out, under strict timed conditions, and trust the score it gives you. Students who follow this two-test bookend pattern walk into test day knowing exactly where they stand, which kills most of the test anxiety that tanks performance.

Worth noting: Practice Assessments A and B are not the same as the ATI "PrepU" or "focused review" modules embedded in some nursing program curricula. Those are tutorial-style, not exam-style. The Practice Assessments are the simulation tests — buy the standalone exams, not the tutorials, if cost is a concern.

TEAS Nursing Exam - TEAS - Test of Essential Academic Skills certification study resource

Strategy: Take ATI Practice Assessment A as your diagnostic after 10-15 hours of review. Drill weak sections with free or third-party banks. Take ATI Practice Assessment B as your final dress rehearsal 5-7 days before test day. Trust the Form B score within 3-5 points of your real exam result.

Free and Paid Alternatives Worth Using

Once you have ATI's two official assessments locked in, the rest of your ATI TEAS practice questions can come from much cheaper places. The free resources are surprisingly strong for content reps, even if their difficulty calibration drifts. Here's how the main alternatives rank.

Mometrix TEAS Practice Test (Free, online). Mometrix has been writing TEAS prep material for over a decade. Their free practice test isn't full length, but the question quality is good — written by educators, with clean explanations after each item. The Math and English sections are particularly solid. Mometrix also sells a flashcard and study guide combo (around $40) that pairs well with their free tests for budget-minded students.

Pocket Prep TEAS App (Free + paid tiers). Pocket Prep is the best mobile option for grinding ATI TEAS practice questions in short bursts — think 10 questions while waiting for class to start. The free tier gives you about 100 questions across all four sections. The paid tier (~$49.99 lifetime) unlocks 1,500+ questions, custom quizzes by topic, and a question bank that genuinely respects the TEAS 7 category breakdown. The interface is built for phones, which makes the daily 15-minute habit easier to sustain.

Practice Test Geeks TEAS (Free). PTG runs free, browser-based TEAS practice tests across all four sections — no signup, no paywall, no app install. The questions are sectioned by topic and lean toward the easier end of TEAS difficulty, which makes them a good starting point for early prep when you're still building stamina and getting used to the question format.

Quizlet TEAS sets (Free, community-built). Mixed quality. Some Quizlet sets are gold mines built by recent test-takers; others are years out of date or written by students who haven't taken the exam. Treat Quizlet as flashcard practice for terminology, not as practice questions — the multi-choice format on Quizlet doesn't match TEAS question styles.

Union Test Prep TEAS (Free). Provides free practice questions plus a free study guide. Reading and English sections are decent; the teas practice can feel uneven — some questions test depth that exceeds what shows up on the real test.

Smart Edition Academy TEAS (Paid, ~$59-$99). Smart Edition runs video lessons plus a question bank of around 1,000 items. The platform is polished and the explanations are above average. It's a decent middle ground between free banks and a private tutor, especially for students who learn from video more than from reading.

ATI TEAS Section Breakdown

Reading (39 questions)

55 minutes total. Key ideas & details, craft & structure, integration of knowledge. Includes prose, infographics, instructions, and following-directions passages.

Math (38 questions)

57 minutes total. Numbers & algebra (~18 questions) and measurement & data (~20 questions). On-screen calculator allowed for the full section in TEAS 7.

Science (50 questions)

60 minutes total. Heaviest section by question count. Human anatomy & physiology dominates (~32 of 50). Plus biology, chemistry, and scientific reasoning.

English (37 questions)

37 minutes total. Conventions of standard English, knowledge of language, vocabulary acquisition. The fastest section — about one minute per question.

How Many ATI TEAS Practice Questions Should You Do?

The number tutors converge on is 500 to 1,500 completed practice questions before test day, depending on your starting baseline. Below 500 questions, your pacing and stamina aren't built up. Above 1,500, you hit diminishing returns and the prep starts cannibalizing actual sleep and study time. The right number for you sits somewhere in that band, anchored by your diagnostic score.

If you scored 60-65% on a cold-start diagnostic, plan for the higher end — 1,200 to 1,500 questions — spread across 6-8 weeks. If your diagnostic was 70%+, you can land your goal score with 500-800 questions over 3-4 weeks, focused mostly on Science (which is the hardest section for most students) and whatever your second-weakest area is. Students starting below 55% on diagnostics generally need a longer runway: 10-12 weeks, content review first, then heavy question volume in the back half.

The shape of your practice matters more than the count. A student who does 800 questions across four sections — reviewing every wrong answer with a one-line journal entry — gains more than a student who does 1,500 questions and never reviews them. The wrong-answer journal is the single most underrated TEAS prep habit. Each entry is one row: question topic, what you got wrong, what the correct reasoning was. Five minutes after each practice block. That's it. Compound that over 40 practice blocks and you've built a personal study guide that's tighter than any third-party book.

Section by section, the recommended question volume looks roughly like this: Science gets the most (200-400 practice questions), Math next (150-300), Reading (100-250), and English (100-200). Science is weighted heaviest in question count on the real exam and is the section where most students start lowest, so the time investment pays off twice. English is lightest because most students already test reasonably well there on a cold start — diminishing returns set in fast.

One more variable: how recently you took your last academic math or science class. Students fresh out of college chemistry usually need fewer Science reps. Students who haven't sat in a science classroom in 8+ years almost always need the full 400-question Science block, plus content review on top of it. Be honest with yourself about which camp you're in — over-budgeting prep time is far cheaper than under-budgeting it.

TEAS Exam for Nursing - TEAS - Test of Essential Academic Skills certification study resource

Section-by-Section Practice Tactics

Focus on infographic and 'following directions' passages — these trip up readers more than prose. Time yourself at 80 seconds per question. About a third of TEAS Reading questions ask about author purpose or passage structure; the rest are direct lookups. Build that pattern recognition through reps.

Using Practice Results to Find Your Weak Areas

The diagnostic value of ATI TEAS practice questions only works if you review them properly. Most students glance at their score, sigh at the wrong answers, and move on. That's wasted prep time. The real signal sits inside the question categories, not in the overall percentage.

After each practice block of 20-50 questions, write down two things: which category showed up most often in your wrong answers, and what type of mistake you made (content gap, careless reading, timing pressure, or trick wording). Over a week, patterns emerge fast. Maybe Science is fine except for cellular respiration. Maybe Math is fine except for ratios. Pinpointing the sub-topic is the difference between studying "Science" for 10 vague hours and studying "the Krebs cycle and ATP yield" for 30 focused minutes.

The ATI Practice Assessments give you category-level breakdowns automatically. Free banks usually don't, which is why a self-built wrong-answer journal is mandatory if you're relying on free resources. Use a simple spreadsheet — question topic, your answer, correct answer, one-sentence reason. The act of writing it forces the lesson into long-term memory more than passive re-reading.

One trap to avoid: don't chase your weakest section to the exclusion of everything else. Students who score 60% on Science and 85% on English often dump all their time into Science and watch English slip to 75% by test day. Maintain your strong sections with a 15-20% maintenance review every week. The points you keep are just as valuable as the points you gain.

Building a Full-Length Simulation

Practicing questions in 20-minute blocks builds skills. Practicing for three and a half hours straight builds stamina. The TEAS is 209 minutes of continuous testing with one optional break, and most students underestimate how much mental fatigue costs them in the back half of the exam. A proper full-length simulation in the final two weeks of prep is where score gains often come from — not new content, but stamina. The students who fade on Science after already crushing Reading and Math are the ones who never rehearsed the full sit-down before test morning.

Build at least one true simulation into your prep — two if you have time. Use the checklist below as your run sheet. Mimic exam conditions as closely as you can: same start time as your scheduled exam, same kind of room, same kind of chair. Small details add up over three and a half hours.

What is the TEAS Exam for Nursing - TEAS - Test of Essential Academic Skills certification study resource

Full-Length Simulation Run Sheet

  • Block 4 uninterrupted hours — 209 minutes of testing plus break and setup time.
  • Pick a quiet location: library, empty classroom, or kitchen table with no phone.
  • Use ATI Practice Assessment B for the truest simulation, or stitch together free section tests in correct order: Reading, Math, Science, English.
  • Strict timing per section: 55 / 57 / 60 / 37 minutes. Use a phone timer, not a clock you can ignore.
  • One 10-minute break after Math — same as the real test.
  • No phone, no notes, no music. Treat it like the actual exam room.
  • Score immediately. Don't wait until the next day — the answer reasoning is freshest right after.
  • Spend 60-90 minutes reviewing every wrong answer plus every flagged question, even the ones you got right.
  • Log your section-by-section percentages in your prep journal. Compare to your last full-length.
  • If you scored within 5 points of your goal, you're test-ready. If not, identify which section cost you and do one more focused week.

The Big Mistakes Students Make with TEAS Practice

Practice questions only help if you use them deliberately. The same handful of mistakes drag down scores year after year, and they're all avoidable.

The first is doing untimed practice for too long. It feels productive — you get more questions right, you feel confident — but the TEAS punishes slow correct answers exactly as harshly as wrong ones. Time every practice block from week two of prep onward. If you can't finish a Math section in 57 minutes, you don't yet know the section well enough.

The second is buying too many resources. Five question banks is too many. Pick one paid resource (ATI's Practice Assessments are non-negotiable), one free bank for daily reps (Pocket Prep or PTG), and one study guide for content review (Mometrix or Smart Edition). Adding a fourth resource almost always means you finish none of them.

The third is ignoring Science because it feels overwhelming. Science is the heaviest-weighted section and the one where most students start lowest — which is exactly why it's the highest-leverage section for prep. Front-load your Science time, especially anatomy & physiology, in the first half of your prep window.

The fourth is rushing the wrong-answer review. Five minutes after a practice block is the minimum. Skip the review and you'll see the same question pattern wrong on test day that you saw wrong in week two. The journal entry is non-negotiable.

The fifth is treating the TEAS like a content exam alone. About 30% of TEAS questions test reading the question carefully, not subject knowledge. Practice questions train both at the same time, but only if you slow down and notice when a question is testing wording over content.

Paid Question Banks vs Free Practice

Pros
  • +ATI's official Practice Assessments predict your real score within 3-5 points.
  • +Paid platforms (Pocket Prep, Smart Edition) include category-level analytics that free banks rarely match.
  • +Paid banks have larger question pools, so you don't fatigue from seeing the same items twice.
  • +Premium explanations walk through every answer choice, not just the correct one.
Cons
  • Most paid third-party banks (Mometrix, Pocket Prep, Smart Edition) drift 5-15 points off real ATI difficulty.
  • Free options (PTG, Mometrix free tier, Pocket Prep free tier) cover 80% of skill-building needs at zero cost.
  • Buying multiple paid platforms wastes money — most students never finish two banks.
  • Paid courses with live instructors run $200-$700 and rarely outperform a disciplined self-study plan.

Putting Your TEAS Practice Plan Together

The most useful next step is a cold-start diagnostic, not more research. Take a free full-length ATI TEAS practice test under timed conditions — even an unofficial one is fine for the first read. Score it section by section and pick the two lowest categories as your week-one focus. The rest of your prep plan flows from that diagnostic.

From there, the framework is straightforward. Drill those two weakest sections for two weeks using free banks. Take ATI Practice Assessment A as your real diagnostic. Adjust your focus based on the official category breakdown. Drill another 3-4 weeks. Take Practice Assessment B in your final week. Walk in test day knowing your score within 5 points.

Where Real Score Gains Come From

The students who clear their nursing program's TEAS cutoff aren't the ones who bought the most resources. They're the ones who picked a small, honest toolkit — ATI's two official Practice Assessments, one free daily-reps bank, one content review guide — and ran it consistently for six to eight weeks. The TEAS rewards quiet, steady prep more than any single trick.

What separates a 70 from an 85 on the TEAS isn't talent. It's reps. Reps under timing pressure. Reps with same-day review. Reps in the section you've been avoiding. Once you have that habit in place, every ATI TEAS practice question becomes useful, and the test starts feeling less like a wall and more like a checklist.

The TEAS isn't designed to fail you. It's designed to confirm you can read carefully, calculate accurately, recall science basics, and write with reasonable grammar — all under time pressure. Those four skills are practiceable. Pick your bank, pick your schedule, log your wrong answers, and the score will follow.

TEAS Questions and Answers

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.