Understanding the Gaokao Score Range Practice Test PDF (Free Printable 2026)
Download a free Gaokao score range practice test PDF. Study offline to understand China college entrance exam scoring, cutoffs, and university admissions.
The Gaokao (全国高考) is China's National College Entrance Examination — the single most consequential academic exam in the world by participation, with approximately 13 million students sitting each year. Understanding the Gaokao score range is essential not only for students and families planning university applications in China, but also for international students, researchers, and educators who need to evaluate Chinese academic credentials accurately.
The total possible score is 750 points, distributed across core subjects: Chinese Language (语文) worth 150 points, Mathematics (数学) worth 150 points, and Foreign Language (外语, most commonly English) worth 150 points. The remaining 300 points come from the science bundle (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) for STEM-track students, or the arts bundle (History, Geography, Politics) for humanities-track students. Some provinces implementing the new "3+3" or "3+1+2" reform model allow students to choose their elective subjects from a broader menu, which affects how the 300-point bundle is calculated.
Raw scores alone do not determine admission. China's voluntary reporting system means students submit their university preferences — ranked by choice — after their scores are released, not before. This creates a high-stakes strategic layer: students must judge which universities are realistically within reach given their score, their province's competitive landscape, and that year's minimum admission lines.
Gaokao Scoring Fast Facts
Provincial Score Lines and Tier Thresholds
China's university admissions system is built around provincial score lines (省控线 or 批次线) that divide the applicant pool into admission tiers. Historically, the main tiers are:
- One-ben (本科一批 / 一本线): The threshold for top-tier universities, including the 985 and 211 project institutions. Crossing this line is the ambition of most competitive students.
- Two-ben (本科二批 / 二本线): The threshold for second-tier four-year universities. Students scoring above this line but below one-ben are eligible for this bracket.
- Three-ben (本科三批 / 三本线): Historically applied to independent colleges; many provinces have merged the two-ben and three-ben lines in recent reforms.
These provincial cutoffs are recalculated every year based on the current year's score distribution. A score of 580 might place a student above the one-ben line in a less competitive province like Qinghai, but fall well below it in highly competitive provinces like Henan or Shandong, where millions of students compete for a proportionally smaller share of top-university quotas.
How Provincial Quotas Create Score Inequality
Top universities in China allocate enrollment seats by province. Because Beijing and Shanghai host flagship universities like Peking University and Tsinghua University, local students in those cities often gain admission with raw scores 50–100 points lower than students from high-population provinces like Henan, Hebei, or Sichuan. This provincial quota disparity is one of the most debated features of the Gaokao system and directly shapes the meaning of any given raw score.
Strong-Year vs. Weak-Year Effects
Each year's exam difficulty is not perfectly calibrated. In a "strong year" (难年), when the exam is harder, raw scores across the province drop, and the official cutoff lines are adjusted downward accordingly. In a "weak year" (弱年), when the exam is easier, scores inflate and cutoff lines rise. This means historical cutoff data should always be compared relative to that year's provincial average, not treated as fixed benchmarks.
How to Use This Gaokao Score Range Practice PDF
This PDF contains practice questions that test your understanding of the Gaokao scoring structure, provincial cutoff tiers, the voluntary reporting system, and the mechanics of subject-by-subject score allocation. It is designed for students preparing for Gaokao-related coursework, international educators evaluating Chinese transcripts, and anyone who needs a working knowledge of how China's national exam system translates into university admissions outcomes.
Print the PDF and answer the questions in order, then review your answers against the key provided at the end. Pay particular attention to the provincial quota questions — these are the area most test-takers find counterintuitive, since the same national exam produces radically different admission outcomes depending purely on where a student sits the exam. Understanding this provincial dimension is essential for anyone interpreting a Chinese student's Gaokao score in an international context.