TEAS Pre Test: Free Diagnostic Questions and Score Predictor (2026)
Take a free TEAS pre test to predict your ATI TEAS 7 score. Diagnostic questions for Reading, Math, Science, English. Identify weak areas before exam day.
You signed up for the ATI TEAS. Test day is six, eight, maybe twelve weeks out. The question gnawing at you: am I ready? A TEAS pre test answers that. Not a full mock exam — a focused diagnostic that samples every section, scores you fast, and shows the gaps you need to close before you sit the real thing.
This page gives you the diagnostic itself, explains how to read your results, and walks you through the prep timeline that follows. The goal is simple. Stop guessing where you stand. Get a number, get a study plan, and start moving the dial. Most nursing programs want 65 minimum. Competitive ones want 78 to 85. A pre test taken cold tells you which target is realistic and how many weeks of work sit between you and your seat in the cohort.
What a TEAS pre test actually is
A pre test is a short, timed diagnostic — usually 30 to 60 questions — pulled from the four ATI TEAS 7 sections. It mirrors the real format. Multiple choice, four answer options, no penalty for guessing, scored as a percent. The difference from a full TEAS practice test is length and intent. A pre test diagnoses. A practice test rehearses.
You take it before you open a study guide. Sit down, no notes, phone in another room, timer running. The number you get back is your baseline. Every study session after that aims to lift that baseline by one or two points.
Walking into prep without a baseline is like training for a marathon without knowing your current mile time. You might overstudy strengths and ignore weak sections. Or panic-cram everything when only two areas actually need work. A diagnostic strips that guesswork out. You see, on paper, that your Reading is solid at 82% but Science is sitting at 51% — and now your study plan writes itself.
The other reason to start with a pre test: it builds tolerance for the test environment. Sitting in front of a screen, answering questions under a clock, with nobody to ask for help — that's a specific muscle. The more times you exercise it before exam day, the less foreign the real test feels when you walk in. Anxiety drops. Performance climbs.
What's on the pre test
Key ideas, craft & structure, integration of knowledge. Tests reading speed under time pressure and inference.
Numbers, algebra, measurement, data. Calculator allowed on the real test — practice with one.
Anatomy, physiology, life science, scientific reasoning. The longest and hardest section for most candidates.
Conventions of standard English, vocabulary, knowledge of language. Grammar and word choice in context.
How to take the pre test for an honest score
The instinct is to peek. Don't. A score inflated by Google searches and textbook glances tells you nothing useful — you'll sit the real exam and find out the hard way. Take this diagnostic the way you'd take the real thing.
Pick a 90-minute block where nobody will interrupt you. Sit at a desk, not the couch. Use a basic four-function calculator for Math only — that's what ATI provides on test day. Read each passage once, answer, move on. If a question stumps you, flag it and come back. Don't leave blanks. There's no guessing penalty on the TEAS, so a 25% educated-guess is better than an automatic zero.
Time yourself by section, not just by total run. The real TEAS gives you 64 minutes for Reading, 54 for Math, 63 for Science, and 28 for English. Scale that down to your pre test length. If your diagnostic has 12 Reading questions instead of 45, give yourself 17 minutes. The point isn't to beat the clock — it's to feel what the pace demands so test day doesn't catch you off guard.
Conditions matter more than people think. Take your pre test at the same time of day you'll sit the real exam. If your test is at 8 AM, take the diagnostic at 8 AM. If it's at 2 PM, run it at 2 PM. Cognitive performance varies by hour, and you want your baseline calibrated to the conditions you'll actually face. Same goes for caffeine, breakfast, hydration. Match what you plan to do on test day so the score reflects test-day-you, not pajama-Saturday-you.
Pre test setup checklist
- ✓Quiet room, door closed, phone in another room
- ✓Timer set, one session, no breaks between sections
- ✓Basic calculator (Math only)
- ✓Scratch paper and a pencil for Math and Science
- ✓No notes, no textbook, no internet searches
- ✓Score honestly at the end — count only correct answers
What your pre test score means
Below 60% — you need 8 to 12 weeks of structured prep before sitting the real test.
60 to 70% — you're at most program minimums but not competitive. 4 to 6 more weeks of focused work.
70 to 80% — solid. Polish weak sections and you'll pass most programs.
80%+ — competitive territory. Maintain and refine.
Above 90% — book the test, you're ready.
Reading your pre test score
Total your correct answers, divide by total questions, multiply by 100. That's your raw percent. The real TEAS reports a composite on a 0-100 scale, weighted slightly by section difficulty, but for a diagnostic the raw percent is close enough. Now look at section breakdowns — a 70% composite hides everything. A 70% that's 85 Reading, 60 Math, 55 Science, 80 English tells you Science and Math need the next four weeks of attention.
The composite is the headline. The section scores are the story. Most candidates make the mistake of celebrating or panicking about the composite alone, then discovering on test day that one bad section dragged the whole thing down. Look at all four numbers. Plan from all four. And track them over time — a Reading score that bounces from 78 to 85 to 80 is stable. A Science score that goes 55, 54, 56 is stuck and needs a different approach.
People conflate pre tests and full practice tests and it costs them prep time. A pre test runs 30 to 60 questions in under an hour. Its job is diagnostic. You take it once, maybe twice, at the start of prep. A full ATI TEAS practice test is 170 questions and runs 209 minutes — its job is rehearsal.
The pre test tells you what to study. The practice test tells you whether studying is working. Skip the pre test and you'll waste weeks on the wrong content. Skip the practice tests and you'll show up on exam day having never sat through three and a half hours of continuous testing.
Section-by-section breakdown
Reading is the most predictable section. Passages run 100 to 200 words and questions ask you to identify main idea, infer meaning, follow logical structure, or compare two sources. Skim the questions before reading the passage so you know what to look for. Most candidates finish with time to spare. Aim for 85%+ on the pre test — this section is easier to improve than any other.
Your diagnostic score is a snapshot of today, not a prediction of test day. Candidates routinely lift their score 15 to 25 points over an 8-week prep window. A 55% pre test does not mean you'll fail. It means you have work to do — and now you know exactly where.
Turn your pre test into a study plan
Score in hand, you've got data. Now translate it into weekly action. Rank your four sections from weakest to strongest. The weakest section gets 40% of your study time. The next weakest gets 30%. The remaining two split 20% and 10%. This isn't arbitrary — the math of score improvement says you gain more points lifting a 55% to a 70% than a 78% to an 85%.
Within each section, work in 45-minute blocks. Twenty minutes reviewing content, twenty doing practice questions, five reviewing the questions you missed. Repeat three to five times a week. Take a fresh diagnostic every two weeks to measure progress. If a section stalls, change the approach — switch from textbook to video, or from review to question drilling.
The temptation is to spend the most time on what you already know. It feels productive because you get most questions right. Resist that pull. Comfortable studying is unproductive studying. The discomfort of working on your weakest area is the signal that you're actually learning something new. Lean into it for the four to six weeks it takes, and the composite score moves. Pair the weak-section work with quick maintenance drills on strong sections — even 15 minutes twice a week is enough to keep a Reading score from drifting while Science gets the heavy attention.
Five mistakes that wreck pre test results
Most bad pre test outcomes aren't about knowledge — they're about process. Avoid these and your diagnostic gives you a real number you can build on. Mistake one is taking it untimed. The TEAS is a pacing test as much as a knowledge test, and untimed scores lie. Always run the clock.
Mistake two is looking up answers. Even one peek invalidates the whole diagnostic. Mistake three is taking it after a week of study, so you can't separate baseline knowledge from new learning. Mistake four is skipping the review — the score is the start, not the end. Every wrong answer needs a five-minute review: why was I wrong, what's the right concept, where do I find more practice on this content.
Mistake five is treating one pre test as the final word. Scores fluctuate ten points easy depending on which questions you happened to draw and how alert you were. Take two diagnostics a week apart, average them, that's your real baseline. Then retest every two weeks across the prep window. The line on the graph should slope upward — if it doesn't, something in the study plan needs to change before another week burns.
The 8-week prep framework
- ✓Weeks 1-2: weakest section, content review heavy
- ✓Weeks 3-4: weakest section, question drilling heavy
- ✓Weeks 5-6: second weakest section, mixed approach
- ✓Week 7: full practice test under exam conditions, review every miss
- ✓Week 8: light review, mental rest, exam day prep
- ✓Retest every 2 weeks to measure progress
After the pre test — registration and timeline
Pre test done, score logged, plan drafted. Next step is registering for the real exam. Most nursing programs require the TEAS as part of the application, with deadlines tied to cohort start dates. Register at least 8 weeks before your application deadline so you have buffer for a retake if needed. Check TEAS exam eligibility for state-by-state score requirements and state-specific minimums.
The exam costs $70 to $140 depending on test center and format. ATI offers in-person at PSI testing centers and online proctored versions. The online version is fine for most candidates but requires a quiet room, working webcam, and decent internet. In-person removes the tech risk if you'd rather not gamble on your home setup on test day. Book the time slot when you're sharpest — most candidates do better mid-morning than late afternoon, but know your own rhythm.
You can retake the TEAS, but most programs limit retakes to two or three attempts within a 12-month window and may average your scores or take the most recent. Treat your first sitting like it counts — because it does. The pre test gets you ready so the first sitting is the only one you need. If a retake is required, take it within 30 days while the content is still fresh, not six months later when half the prep has faded.
What study materials actually move your score
The market is flooded with TEAS prep books, video courses, and apps. Most are fine. A few are excellent. The differentiator isn't the brand — it's whether the material matches the section you actually need to lift. Cardiovascular anatomy gaps don't get fixed by a math workbook, no matter how good the math workbook is.
For most candidates, the stack looks like this: one comprehensive review book for content, one question bank for drilling, and one free diagnostic for tracking progress. Three resources used consistently beat ten resources used sporadically. The full breakdown of options sits in the TEAS study materials guide.
Science is the one section where video usually beats text. Anatomy and physiology have so much spatial information — how blood flows through the heart, where nerves attach, how the kidney filters — that watching it animated sticks better than reading static diagrams. Use video for first-pass learning, then text and flashcards for review. The reverse is true for Math and English, where worked-out written examples beat video for most candidates.
Test day essentials
One government photo ID, one with a signature. Without both, the proctor turns you away — no refund, no makeup.
Check-in is slow. Late arrivals lose seats. The 30-minute buffer also gives you time to settle nerves and use the restroom.
Protein and complex carbs. Eggs, oatmeal, peanut butter. Not just coffee. Stable blood sugar across a 4-hour test window prevents the 2 PM crash.
Smart watches count as phones. Lock everything in the provided locker. Bringing a phone into the testing room voids your score automatically.
Test day itself — what to do in the room
The pre test trained your timing. The study plan filled the gaps. Test day is execution. Eat a real breakfast — protein and complex carbs, not just coffee and sugar. Bring two forms of ID and your registration confirmation. Arrive 30 minutes early. The waiting room is calmer than rushing in five minutes before the proctor closes the door.
Once the test starts, read every question carefully. The TEAS doesn't trick you, but it does write questions where a careless skim leads to the wrong answer. Reading and English questions in particular reward slow, careful reading. Math and Science questions reward quick pattern recognition. Adjust your pace to the section.
Don't second-guess answers on review unless you spot a clear error. First instincts are usually right on multiple choice. The candidates who change five answers on review and gain one usually lose three. Trust your prep. Trust your pre test progress. The work you did is the work that shows up on the score.
When you finish, you'll get an unofficial composite immediately and the official report within 48 hours. If it's the score you wanted, send it to your programs and move on. If it's not, you can retake — but most candidates who follow this pre test → diagnose → plan → retest → exam cycle hit their number on the first sitting. That's the whole point of the diagnostic. To make the first try the only try.
Candidates who score 75% on practice tests and 60% on the real exam usually didn't get dumber — they got anxious. Sleep eight hours every night the week before. Box-breathe (4 in, 4 hold, 4 out, 4 hold) before each section. Flag-and-return on questions that stump you. Anxiety is physiological — tools that work on the body work on the mind.
The pre test is the easiest step you'll take
It costs nothing. It takes under an hour. It tells you exactly where you stand and what to do next. Candidates who skip the diagnostic and dive into prep almost always study the wrong content for the wrong amount of time. Candidates who take the pre test first, work the plan, and retest as they go land in the 78%+ band — competitive program territory — at much higher rates.
One last note on the week before test day. The temptation is to cram. Don't. Cramming the week before a standardized test costs more than it adds — fatigue degrades the working memory you need for Reading and Math sections. Light review only. Twenty to thirty minutes a day on flashcards, mnemonics, formulas. One last full practice test five days out, scored honestly, weak misses reviewed. Then taper. Sleep eight hours every night that week.
Sit down, set the timer, and find out where you are. Then build the plan that closes the gap. The seat in the nursing cohort isn't won on test day — it's won in the weeks of focused work that follow an honest diagnostic. Browse all TEAS practice tests to keep drilling, or check the TEAS exam prep guide for full study plans. The work starts now.
TEAS Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames 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.