MCAT practice test

MCAT Practice Test and Practice Questions From Your Own Notes and Prep Books

Upload your content review book, class notes or your own summaries and the AI writes unlimited MCAT-style practice questions with an answer key and explanations in seconds. Drill the exact concepts in the material you are studying instead of re-answering a question bank you have already worked through twice.

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In short: to build MCAT practice questions, upload your content review book, class notes or your own summaries, and the AI writes exam-style multiple choice questions with an answer key and explanations in seconds. The MCAT has 230 questions across four sections and takes about 7.5 hours seated, so you can generate focused sets from your own material and drill biochemistry one day and psychology the next, right up to test day.

Last updated July 2026

Exam format
230 questions / 4 sections
Score range
472 to 528 (500 midpoint)
Practice questions
Unlimited

What an MCAT practice question generator does

Drill your own content review, not a bank you have memorized

The MCAT rewards applying concepts to unfamiliar passages across a huge body of content, and by your second pass through a question bank you start remembering the answer letter instead of the reasoning. You read a question on enzyme kinetics or amino acid structure and you recall the option, not the logic. This tool flips the source. You upload what you are actually studying, your content review book, a chapter PDF or your own summaries, and the AI exam question generator writes brand-new items from that text. Weak answers point straight back at the topic you need to review, and a fresh practice set is always one upload away.

Works with any prep book and your notes

Upload your content review set, a chapter PDF, a topic outline or handwritten pages you photographed. If the file explains an MCAT concept, the generator can build questions on it.

Section-by-section drills

Shaky on Chem/Phys one week and Psych/Soc the next? Upload only the notes for that section, then narrow to a single topic, like acid-base chemistry or operant conditioning, when your scores are soft.

Fresh questions every session

Generate a new set every time so you are testing knowledge, not recognition. Repeated retrieval on unseen items is what makes concepts hold up across a long, passage-heavy test day.

MCAT sections and how to practice each one

The MCAT has four scored sections. Upload the notes for whichever one you are covering and generate questions on it.

Section Questions / time What it covers
Chemical and Physical Foundations (Chem/Phys) 59 / 95 min General chemistry, biochemistry, introductory physics and organic chemistry applied to biological systems
Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills (CARS) 53 / 90 min Reading passages from the humanities and social sciences; comprehension, analysis and reasoning only, no science content
Biological and Biochemical Foundations (Bio/Biochem) 59 / 95 min Introductory biology and first-semester biochemistry, with some general and organic chemistry
Psychological, Social and Biological Foundations (Psych/Soc) 59 / 95 min Introductory psychology and sociology, with some biology, applied to behavior and health

Each section is scored from 118 to 132, and the four combine into a total from 472 to 528 with 500 at the midpoint. The exam is broad and passage-driven, so the hardest part is holding a semester of biology, chemistry, physics, biochemistry, psychology and sociology in your head at once. Generating questions from your own notes topic by topic, then mixing them into longer sets, is the closest low-cost rehearsal for the range the MCAT actually tests.

Simple process

How to make MCAT practice questions in 4 steps

1
Upload your material
Drop in your content review book, a chapter PDF, a topic outline or your own notes. Scanned and handwritten pages are read with OCR.
2
Set the drill
Pick the question count and difficulty. Run a 20 question warm-up on one topic or a longer set that mirrors a full content block.
3
AI writes questions
The AI reads your content and writes exam-style multiple choice questions with an answer key and explanations.
4
Review and repeat
Score the set, review the concept behind every miss, then generate a fresh drill on just those weak topics and go again.

Who uses this to prep for the MCAT

Pre-med students in content review

You are working through a stack of review books before you touch full-length exams. Upload one chapter at a time and generate a quick set that checks whether the material actually stuck, then hit the same topic tomorrow with different questions so it holds.

Prep-course and self-study candidates

If you have already worked through the questions in your course once, you are drilling your memory of them, not the concepts. Turn your class notes and review pages into questions you have never seen, without buying a second question bank just to get fresh items.

Retakers targeting one weak section

When Chem/Phys or CARS dragged your total down last time, you do not need to redo everything. Upload just those notes, drill until the misses stop, and turn the section that capped your score into one you can reason through on test day.

MCAT practice questions, answered

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.

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Build your first MCAT practice set now

Upload your MCAT notes or content review PDF and generate practice questions in under a minute. Keep generating fresh sets on your weak topics until every timed run lands in the score range your schools expect.