WAIS 5 Release Date: When Did WAIS-5 Come Out?

Find out the WAIS 5 release date, what changed from WAIS-IV, and how the new Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale affects clinical practice. Free practice test.

The WAIS-5 — the fifth edition of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale — is the most significant update to this landmark intelligence test in over a decade. If you're a psychology student, clinician, or researcher trying to understand when WAIS-5 came out and what it means for assessment practice, this guide covers the release date, the major changes from WAIS-IV, and how the new edition fits into neuropsychological and clinical assessment.

WAIS 5 Release Date

The WAIS-5 was released in 2024 by Pearson Assessment. It followed the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children — Fifth Edition (WISC-V), released in 2014, and represents a decade of revisions, normative data collection, and structural refinements to the world's most widely used adult intelligence test.

The release came after a lengthy standardisation and norming process. Pearson collected standardisation data from thousands of participants across different age groups, demographic backgrounds, and geographic regions in the United States. The normative sample was designed to be representative of the 2020 US Census data — which means WAIS-5 norms are more current than the WAIS-IV's norms, which were based on 2005 census data.

For clinicians and researchers who had been using the WAIS-IV since its 2008 release, the WAIS-5 arrives after 16 years — a longer interval than the typical update cycle. The extended gap reflects both the complexity of adult intelligence assessment and the substantial investment required to develop updated normative data across a 75-year age range.

What Changed from WAIS-IV to WAIS-5?

The WAIS-5 is not simply the WAIS-IV with updated norms. Several substantive changes affect how the test is structured, scored, and interpreted.

Index Score Structure

The WAIS-IV had four index scores: Verbal Comprehension Index (VCI), Perceptual Reasoning Index (PRI), Working Memory Index (WMI), and Processing Speed Index (PSI).

The WAIS-5 retains these four indexes but renames and restructures one of them. The Perceptual Reasoning Index becomes the Visuospatial Index (VSI) in WAIS-5. This renaming better reflects what the subtests actually measure and aligns with contemporary cognitive science terminology. A new index — the Fluid Reasoning Index (FRI) — is also introduced, separating fluid reasoning ability from visuospatial processing.

The WAIS-5 therefore has five primary indexes compared to the WAIS-IV's four, providing finer discrimination between cognitive abilities that were previously grouped together.

New and Revised Subtests in WAIS-5

Several subtests were added or significantly revised in the WAIS-5:

  • Expanded digit span tasks — the working memory assessment was enhanced with additional conditions
  • Revised visual spatial subtests — reflecting the split between visuospatial and fluid reasoning indexes
  • Updated processing speed tasks — refined for better discrimination across the adult age range
  • Removal of some WAIS-IV subtests — subtests that showed limited incremental validity or cultural bias concerns were dropped or substantially revised

The specific subtest roster in WAIS-5 is somewhat different from WAIS-IV's 15 subtests. Some subtests familiar from the WAIS-IV are retained with modifications; others are new to this edition.

Updated Normative Sample

One of the most practically significant changes is the updated normative sample. The WAIS-IV norms were collected from 2007–2008 and stratified to match the 2005 US Census. By 2024, those norms were 16 years old — which can affect score interpretation because of the Flynn Effect (the documented trend of rising IQ scores over time) and changes in population demographics.

WAIS-5 norms, collected in the 2020s and stratified to 2020 Census data, address this issue. Using current norms produces more accurate score comparisons and reduces the risk of overestimating intelligence (a concern when old norms are used, since the Flynn Effect means older norms make current test-takers look smarter than their age-matched peers).

Digital Administration

The WAIS-5 was developed with digital administration in mind — a significant shift from the fully paper-based WAIS-IV. Pearson offers Q-interactive, a tablet-based platform for administering Wechsler scales. WAIS-5 can be administered digitally (using Q-interactive) or in the traditional paper format, though not all subtests are available in digital form.

Digital administration changes the assessment experience in practical ways: automatic scoring for some tasks, built-in timing, reduced administration errors from misrecording responses, and the ability to capture response time data as an additional variable.

How Does the WAIS-5 Release Date Affect Clinical Practice?

The transition from WAIS-IV to WAIS-5 has practical implications for clinicians:

Training requirements. Clinicians familiar with the WAIS-IV need to learn the WAIS-5's new structure, revised subtests, and updated scoring procedures. Pearson offers training resources and Q-global scoring for the new edition.

Research transitioning. Studies that used the WAIS-IV as a measure cannot simply substitute WAIS-5 scores — the change in index structure and the updated normative sample mean scores aren't directly comparable across editions. Researchers conducting longitudinal work need to account for this.

Comparison with other assessments. Many neuropsychological test batteries have been co-normed with the Wechsler scales. As the field transitions to WAIS-5, comparison data with complementary tests (Wechsler Memory Scales, etc.) will take time to accumulate.

Insurance and reporting requirements. Some jurisdictions, employers, and insurance providers specify which version of a test must be used. Clinicians should check whether their assessment context requires a specific edition before adopting WAIS-5.

WAIS-IV vs. WAIS-5: Which to Use?

After the WAIS-5 release date, the question of which edition to use depends on context:

  • New clinical assessments — transitioning to WAIS-5 is generally recommended as training materials and familiarity develop, since current norms are more accurate and the test better reflects contemporary cognitive science
  • Longitudinal follow-up assessments — if a client was previously assessed with WAIS-IV, there's clinical value in maintaining consistency across editions to allow direct comparison of scores over time
  • Research contexts — continuity with previous studies may require maintaining the WAIS-IV, or explicitly accounting for the version transition in methodology

The WAIS-5 guide on this site covers the full scope of what changed and what it means for interpretation. If you want to understand the WAIS age range and how norms work across the 16–90 age span, that's covered separately.

Whether you're a psychology student preparing for exams or a clinician getting up to speed on the WAIS-5, understanding both the WAIS-IV and WAIS-5 is increasingly important. Graduate-level psychology programmes cover Wechsler assessment in depth — and licensing exams for psychologists test knowledge of intelligence assessment tools including their structure, administration, and interpretation.

Our free practice tests cover WAIS components, subtest functions, scoring principles, and interpretation fundamentals. Use them to consolidate your understanding of what each subtest measures, how index scores are derived, and what score patterns indicate clinically.

The transition from WAIS-IV to WAIS-5 also makes it worthwhile to understand both editions — you're likely to encounter both in clinical settings during the transition period, and research literature will continue citing WAIS-IV data for years. Knowing the differences between the editions helps you read assessment reports accurately and ask the right questions when reviewing historical records.

Start with the free practice test to gauge your current knowledge of WAIS structure and function — then use the content areas where you scored lowest to direct your further study.

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.