Nursing applicants searching for ATI TEAS test prep usually start in the same place โ overwhelmed. The exam has 170 questions across four sections, your BSN program probably set a minimum composite score (commonly 65 percent for ADN tracks and 75 percent for competitive BSN cohorts), and the prep market is crowded with overlapping products that all promise the same outcome.
The right answer is rarely "buy one thing." It's usually a layered plan: ATI's own materials for predictive accuracy, a third-party publisher for clearer explanations, free question banks for volume, and a calendar that matches how many weeks you actually have.
This guide walks through that layered approach. You'll see exactly what ATI sells (and what each component is worth), how Mometrix, Kaplan TEAS Strategies, Trivium, and McGraw-Hill compare on price and accuracy, when a 4-week sprint can work, when you need the full 8-week build, and what to emphasize inside each section so your time goes to the questions that actually move your score. If you want a foundational walkthrough of the test structure first, the ATI TEAS 7 Study Guide pairs well with this prep plan.
One thing to set straight up front: the ATI TEAS isn't a knowledge test you can cram. Reading and English questions test trained skills that need reps over time. Science covers four sub-disciplines (anatomy and physiology, biology, chemistry, scientific reasoning) and rewards candidates who built understanding, not memorization. Math is the most coachable section but also the easiest to underestimate. A realistic prep plan respects those differences โ and that's what the rest of this article maps out.
Before you spend a dollar on prep, look at ATI's own ecosystem. ATI Testing โ the company that writes and administers the TEAS โ sells prep products that no third party can fully replicate, because ATI is the only vendor that uses retired live exam items and the actual scoring algorithm. That doesn't mean ATI is always the best buy. It means you have to understand what each component actually does before you decide.
ATI sells four distinct prep products through their store, and most candidates confuse them or assume one bundle covers everything. They don't. Each piece is priced separately, and your BSN program may even mandate one or two as a registration requirement.
Online Practice Assessment A and B are the closest thing to a real ATI TEAS you can take before exam day. Each one is a full-length, timed simulation written by ATI's own item writers, scored on the same scale the real exam uses, and includes a score predictor that's the only forecast tool with statistical backing. Practice A and Practice B are separate purchases โ buying one doesn't give you both. Most candidates take Practice A early to diagnose weak areas and Practice B in the final week as a dress rehearsal.
SmartPrep Tutorial is ATI's video-based content review platform. It's adaptive, meaning it adjusts to your weak areas, and includes interactive quizzes inside each module. It is NOT the same as Practice A/B โ SmartPrep teaches content, Practice A/B simulates the test.
The score predictor is the differentiator. ATI Practice Assessment A and B feed your raw score into the same statistical model used for the actual exam. No third-party prep โ Mometrix, Kaplan, Trivium, McGraw-Hill โ can replicate that, because they don't have access to live exam data. If you score within 5โ8 percent of your program's minimum on Practice B, you should NOT walk into the real exam without another two weeks of focused review.
The ATI Study Manual (7th edition) is the print/PDF content review book โ the kind of resource you'd actually hand to a tutor or use in a study group. The 7th edition is the version aligned to the current ATI TEAS 7 blueprint, and earlier editions are aligned to TEAS V or TEAS 6 content that no longer matches the exam. If you're shopping the used market, verify the edition before buying โ saving 30 dollars on a 6th-edition copy is not a deal when it gives you outdated chemistry content.
Pricing for ATI's components fluctuates and your BSN program may have a discount code, but as a working baseline: Practice Assessment A runs roughly 50 dollars, Practice B similar, SmartPrep Tutorial around 100 dollars, and the Study Manual around 60 dollars in print or slightly less digital. ATI also sells "basic" and "premium" bundles that combine these for modest savings โ usually 10 to 20 percent off the line-item total.
Some nursing programs require you to subscribe to one or more ATI products as part of your application or enrollment. Drexel, Chamberlain, and several large state nursing schools require students to purchase ATI's full assessment package, which includes the proctored TEAS, content modules, and sometimes the print manual. If your program mandates ATI, you don't need to re-buy what's already on your account โ log into the ATI student portal first and check what's already provisioned. Many candidates accidentally pay for the same product twice because their school's bundle wasn't visible to them until enrollment finalized.
The exam writer. Only vendor with score predictor and retired live items.
Most popular third-party publisher. Strong on explanations and video lessons.
Test-strategy heavy. Less content review, more pacing and elimination tactics.
Budget option, dense content review, fewer questions per dollar.
Pure practice volume โ 5 full-length tests, light content.
Your prep plan should weight your time by section difficulty and your starting baseline. Take a diagnostic test before mapping hours per section. Most candidates over-prep Reading (because it feels familiar) and under-prep Science (because it feels intimidating, so they avoid it).
Reading (39 scored questions, 55 minutes). Reading on the ATI TEAS isn't about reading fluently โ it's about identifying main ideas, distinguishing fact from opinion, evaluating sources, and interpreting diagrams, infographics, and tables. The passages run roughly 100 to 300 words. The trap is that the questions look easy, so candidates skim. Strong scorers slow down, annotate, and answer the question as written rather than the question they expected.
Math (38 scored questions, 57 minutes). Heavy on arithmetic, ratios, percentages, basic algebra, measurement, and one or two data interpretation problems. Calculator allowed (on-screen). The biggest mistake here is rushing problems with multi-step word framing โ translating the words into an equation is where most points are lost. Drill word problems specifically; abstract calculation drills won't transfer.
Science (50 scored questions, 60 minutes). The longest and highest-weighted section. Roughly half the questions cover anatomy and physiology โ circulatory, respiratory, digestive, nervous, endocrine, muscular, skeletal, reproductive, urinary, integumentary. The rest splits across life science (cells, genetics), physical science (chemistry, physics fundamentals), and scientific reasoning. TEAS Science section breaks down the system-by-system content list in detail.
English and Language Usage (37 scored questions, 37 minutes). Grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, vocabulary in context, and spelling. Short section, fast pace. This is the lowest-effort section to gain points on if your grammar baseline is weak โ a focused weekend of review can lift your raw score by 15+ percentage points.
What to drill: Main-idea identification in 200-word passages, author's purpose, comparing two short passages, interpreting tables and infographics. The most-missed question type is identifying the difference between a topic sentence and a thesis statement.
Time per question: ~85 seconds. Two-passage questions take longer; pure infographic questions take less. Don't panic if a passage looks long โ TEAS passages are short by standardized-test standards.
Free supplement: Khan Academy reading comprehension drills (originally written for SAT prep) translate well to TEAS Reading at zero cost.
What to drill: Word problems involving percentages, ratios, proportions, basic algebra (solving for x), measurement conversion (especially metric-to-customary), and table/graph interpretation. Approximately 12โ15 questions will be straight algebra or arithmetic with no word framing โ these are gimmes if you've drilled the fundamentals.
Time per question: ~90 seconds. Multi-step word problems can run 2 minutes; flag and return if you stall past that mark.
Free supplement: Khan Academy's Pre-Algebra and Algebra 1 modules. The {P_MATH} walks through TEAS-specific question framing.
What to drill: Anatomy and physiology by system (highest yield by far โ roughly 50 percent of the section). Chemistry fundamentals (pH, atomic structure, chemical bonds, balancing equations). Genetics and inheritance patterns. Scientific reasoning and experimental design.
Time per question: ~72 seconds โ tightest pace of any section. You cannot afford long stalls. A&P questions should resolve in 30โ45 seconds if you know the content; chemistry and reasoning take longer.
Free supplement: CrashCourse Anatomy & Physiology on YouTube โ 47 episodes covering every system tested.
What to drill: Subject-verb agreement, pronoun-antecedent agreement, comma rules, apostrophe rules, fragments and run-ons, dictionary skills, and vocabulary in context. Approximately 10 questions will be straight "identify the correct sentence" โ these are pure point-grabs once your rules are sharp.
Time per question: 60 seconds. Fastest pacing of the four sections. Move quickly; don't agonize.
Free supplement: Purdue OWL grammar guides โ comprehensive, free, and the standard reference most college writing centers cite.
Most candidates over-estimate how many study hours they'll actually log and under-estimate how much repetition Science requires. The honest math: a 4-week plan works only if you can dedicate 15 to 20 hours per week and you start with a passing diagnostic. If your diagnostic puts you 10+ percentage points below your program's minimum, you need 6 to 8 weeks.
The 4-week sprint is the right plan for repeat test-takers who already know their weak section, or candidates with strong science background (recent A&P coursework) who mainly need to refresh and run through full-length practice. Week 1 is diagnostic and weak-area triage. Weeks 2 and 3 are focused drilling on your bottom two sections, mixed with daily 30-minute drills in the other two to stay sharp. Week 4 is full-length simulation, mistake review, and rest before exam day.
The 8-week build is the right plan for first-time test-takers, anyone whose diagnostic score is well below threshold, or candidates who haven't taken science coursework in 5+ years. Weeks 1โ2 build the content foundation (Science and Math). Weeks 3โ4 add Reading and English drills. Weeks 5โ6 are full-length practice tests with detailed mistake review. Weeks 7โ8 simulate exam conditions, run final review of weak topics, and taper to rest for 48 hours before test day.
Free practice volume matters more than you'd expect โ TEAS practice tests and Mometrix TEAS practice test both supply hundreds of questions at no cost.
You don't need to spend 300 dollars to pass the ATI TEAS. You probably can't get to passing with only free resources โ you'll want at minimum ATI Practice B for the score predictor โ but the free supplement layer is where most candidates dramatically expand their question volume without adding cost.
For science, CrashCourse Anatomy & Physiology on YouTube is the single highest-yield free resource. Forty-seven 10-minute episodes cover every body system on the TEAS blueprint. Pair it with Quizlet's verified TEAS Science flashcard decks (filter for decks with 4+ star ratings and 500+ saves) and you have a complete A&P refresher at zero cost.
For math, Khan Academy's Pre-Algebra and Algebra 1 modules cover every quantitative skill tested on the TEAS, with millions of practice problems and step-by-step solutions. Skip the higher modules โ TEAS math doesn't test trigonometry, calculus, or advanced functions.
For reading and English, Purdue OWL is the gold standard for grammar rules and reading comprehension strategy. It's free, exhaustive, and used by college writing centers nationwide.
For practice questions, our TEAS practice tests library is organized by section and includes timed mode that mirrors the real exam pacing. Most candidates use these as warm-ups between content review sessions โ a 30-minute timed drill before bed is one of the most efficient retention tools you can run.
ATI's score predictor on Practice Assessment A and B is the only TEAS prep prediction tool with statistical validation behind it, but it is not infallible. ATI's own published correlation studies show roughly 0.75 to 0.85 correlation between predictor score and actual exam score โ that means most candidates land within 5 to 8 percentage points of their predicted composite, but a meaningful minority drift further.
Two patterns explain most large gaps. Candidates who outperform their predictor by more than 8 points usually took Practice A or B without simulating real exam conditions โ taking it untimed, breaking up the sections across days, or repeating questions they'd seen before. The predictor assumes a single, timed, full-length attempt; if you split it or repeated it, the prediction is inflated downward.
Candidates who underperform by more than 8 points usually had test-day anxiety they didn't account for, a venue distraction (HVAC noise, neighboring test-takers), or a content surprise โ a Science question type they hadn't drilled, or a heavier Math word-problem mix than their practice tests showed.
The honest interpretation: if Practice B shows you 5+ percent above your program minimum, you're very likely to pass. If it shows you within 3 percent, you're on the bubble โ invest one more week and re-test. If it shows you below threshold, do not sit the exam; reschedule and add two weeks of focused review on the sections that pulled your composite down.
After thousands of candidates have walked through TEAS prep, the same handful of mistakes show up over and over. Knowing them in advance is the cheapest way to add points to your score.
Buying too much, doing too little. The most common pattern is stacking ATI's bundle, Mometrix, Kaplan, and McGraw-Hill โ five hundred dollars of resources, and the candidate uses maybe 30 percent of any of them. Pick one content review source, one practice question source, and ATI Practice B. That's it. More material doesn't mean more learning.
Avoiding Science because it feels hard. Science is 50 questions โ nearly a third of the entire scored exam. Candidates who under-prep Science to focus on Reading and English routinely score 8 to 12 percentage points lower than they could have. Front-load Science in your plan, not the other way around.
Taking practice tests before content review. Practice tests at the start of prep are diagnostic, not measurement. Don't be discouraged by a low diagnostic score and don't take a victory lap on a high one โ your real measurement comes from Practice B at the end.
Memorizing answers from practice question banks. If you take the same Mometrix or Kaplan practice set three times, your score will climb โ but not because you got smarter. You memorized the bank. Rotate your practice sources so every test you take has questions you've genuinely never seen. The Mometrix TEAS practice test review breaks down which Mometrix products avoid this trap.
Whether you pass or miss, your post-exam moves matter. ATI releases your composite score immediately after the test (paper-based options take longer), and the report includes a sub-score breakdown by section plus a percentile rank against the national candidate pool.
If you passed and exceeded your program's minimum by a comfortable margin, your only task is to submit your official score report to your nursing program through ATI's transcript service (usually $25โ$40 per recipient). Confirm the submission deadline with your program admissions office โ some BSN programs have hard cutoffs that fall just days after the exam window.
If you passed but just barely cleared your program's minimum, consider whether to retake. Many competitive BSN cohorts evaluate composite scores during admissions even after the minimum is met โ a 78 percent composite competes much better than a 66 percent in admissions ranking. Most programs allow up to three TEAS attempts per academic year with a mandatory 30-day wait between attempts.
If you missed, breathe. The TEAS is not a one-shot exam for most candidates. Pull your sub-score breakdown and identify the two lowest sections. Allocate 2 to 3 additional prep weeks per missed section before retesting โ a faster retake without focused remediation usually produces a similar score.
One detail many candidates miss: ATI does NOT automatically send your score to your nursing program. You must order a transcript through your ATI account. Each program is a separate transcript fee. Build that cost into your prep budget โ sending to three programs adds roughly $90โ$120 on top of your registration. Plan ahead with the ATI TEAS 7 Study Guide so registration and score reporting are mapped before you sit the exam.