Watson Glaser Scoring Guide — How to Interpret Your Results 2026 June

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Watson Glaser Scoring Guide — How to Interpret Your Results 2026 June

How Watson Glaser Scoring Works

The Watson Glaser Critical Thinking Appraisal comes in two main versions: the full form (Form A or B, 80 questions) and the short form (Form D, 40 questions). Most employers now use the short form, which gives a maximum raw score of 40 points.

Each correct answer earns one point — there is no negative marking for wrong answers. The five sections of the short form are:

  • Inference (8 questions) — judging whether conclusions follow from facts
  • Recognition of Assumptions (8 questions) — spotting unstated assumptions
  • Deduction (8 questions) — determining whether conclusions logically follow
  • Interpretation (8 questions) — evaluating the weight of evidence
  • Evaluation of Arguments (8 questions) — distinguishing strong from weak arguments

All five sections carry equal weight — 8 questions each, 8 points each. Your total raw score is then compared against a norm group (typically professionals in your target field) to produce a percentile rank. This percentile rank is what employers actually use to screen candidates.

Learn more about the full test structure in our Watson Glaser Complete Guide.

What Employers Expect: Sector Benchmarks

Employers rarely publish exact cutoffs, but industry research and candidate reports reveal consistent patterns. The table below shows typical Watson Glaser percentile expectations by sector:

SectorTypical CutoffCompetitive Range
Magic Circle & US Law Firms70th–80th percentile80th percentile+
Regional & Mid-Tier Law Firms50th–65th percentile65th percentile+
MBB & Big 4 Consulting70th–75th percentile80th percentile+
Investment Banking65th–75th percentile75th percentile+
Civil Service Fast Stream50th–60th percentile65th percentile+
Graduate General Management40th–55th percentile60th percentile+

Firms that use the Watson Glaser as a first-round screen (before CV review) often apply stricter cutoffs than those using it later in the process. If you are applying to law firms using the Watson Glaser, targeting the 80th percentile or above gives you the best chance of passing automated screening.

Understanding Your Norm Group

Your percentile rank is only meaningful relative to the norm group used. Pearson, the test publisher, maintains several norm groups:

  • General population norms — used rarely; makes scores look higher
  • Graduate norms — most common for graduate recruitment
  • Professional/managerial norms — used for experienced hire roles; harder to score well against

Always clarify with the employer which norm group applies. A 70th percentile score against general population norms may equate to only the 50th percentile against professional norms.

If you want to benchmark your Watson Glaser Inference section performance specifically, that section is consistently the hardest and most differentiating for top-tier firms.

Watson Glaser percentile score chart showing employer cutoffs by sector

Watson Glaser Checklist

  • Note your raw score (X out of 40) and confirm which form you took (short form D or full form A/B)
  • Ask the employer which norm group was used (graduate, professional, or general population)
  • Compare your percentile to the sector benchmark table above
  • If you passed: prepare for the next stage — verbal reasoning, situational judgement, or interview
  • If you narrowly missed: contact the recruiter — some firms allow borderline candidates through if other application elements are strong
  • If you scored below 60th percentile: identify your weakest section and build a structured 4–6 week practice plan
  • Retake after the employer's cooling-off period (usually 6–12 months) with a fresh norm group if possible
  • Track your section scores across practice tests to measure improvement over time
Student reviewing Watson Glaser practice test results and planning next steps

Watson Glaser Pros and Cons

Pros
  • +Published score scales and passing thresholds create transparent, predictable targets for preparation
  • +Scaled scoring systems allow fair comparison of performance across different test dates with varying difficulty
  • +Detailed score reports identify section-specific performance, enabling targeted remediation for retake candidates
  • +Score validity periods provide candidates flexibility in application timing after passing
  • +Multiple scoring components mean strong performance in some areas can compensate for weaker performance in others
Cons
  • Scaled scores can be confusing — the same raw score translates to different scaled scores across test dates
  • Passing cutoffs set by credentialing bodies may not align with what candidates expect based on content mastery
  • Score report delivery times vary — delays in receiving results can delay application or registration deadlines
  • Performance on a single test date may not accurately reflect a candidate's actual knowledge level
  • Score reports often lack granularity below the section level, making it difficult to pinpoint specific topic weaknesses

Watson Glaser Scoring Questions and Answers

About the Author

Dr. Lisa PatelEdD, MA Education, Certified Test Prep Specialist

Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert

Columbia University Teachers College

Dr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.