- How many questions are on the MCAT?
- The MCAT has 230 questions split across four sections. The three science sections have 59 questions each and the CARS section has 53. Total testing content runs 6 hours 15 minutes, and the full seated appointment with breaks and check-in is about 7 hours 30 minutes. Because that is a long, dense sitting, rehearsing full-length sets built from your own content review is a good way to train both recall and stamina. If your notes are on paper, run them through an OCR tool like DocuOCR first so the text is selectable.
- How long is the MCAT?
- The MCAT has 375 minutes of test content, which is 6 hours 15 minutes across the four sections. Each science section is 95 minutes and CARS is 90 minutes. Counting the tutorial, optional breaks, a mid-exam lunch break and the end survey, the full appointment lasts roughly 7 hours 30 minutes. Pacing over that window is part of the challenge, so timed practice built from your own notes helps you get used to it.
- What is a good MCAT score?
- The MCAT is scored from 472 to 528, with 500 as the midpoint and roughly the 50th percentile. A score around 510 sits near the 79th percentile and is often cited as competitive for many MD programs, while the average score for students who matriculate is about 511 to 512. What counts as a good score also depends on the schools you are targeting, so check the score ranges for your programs.
- What is the average MCAT score?
- The average total MCAT score across all test takers is about 501, which is close to the 500 midpoint. Among students who are accepted and enroll in MD programs, the average is higher, around 511 to 512. These figures shift slightly each year because the AAMC updates its percentile tables annually, so treat them as approximate reference points rather than fixed targets.
- What sections are on the MCAT?
- The MCAT has four sections: Chemical and Physical Foundations of Biological Systems, Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills (CARS), Biological and Biochemical Foundations of Living Systems, and Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior. The three science sections test general and organic chemistry, physics, biology, biochemistry, psychology and sociology, while CARS is pure reading and reasoning with no science content.
- Is there a passing score for the MCAT?
- No. The MCAT has no passing score. It is a percentile-based admissions test, so your score is compared against other applicants rather than measured against a fixed cut line. Medical schools weigh your total and section scores alongside your GPA, experiences and application, and each program has its own competitive range, so the goal is a score that fits the schools you are applying to rather than a single pass mark.
- Is this an official MCAT practice test?
- No. PDFQuiz is an independent study tool and is not affiliated with or endorsed by the AAMC. This tool generates practice questions from the study material you upload so you can rehearse recall and reasoning between full-length practice exams, and it does not reproduce official AAMC questions. Use it alongside official AAMC materials and your prep course, not as a replacement for them.