Key Takeaways
- The GMAT Focus Edition at a glance
- The GRE at a glance
- How to choose
- The honest recommendation
- Next steps
If you are applying to an MBA or a specialised master’s, one of the first decisions is which admissions test to sit. The good news: nearly every top business school now accepts both the GMAT and the GRE, and admissions directors at schools like Harvard, Stanford and Wharton say openly that they have no preference. So, as with the SAT and ACT, the real question is which one you will score better on — and which fits the rest of your plans. Both tests were redesigned recently, so here is the current picture.
The GMAT Focus Edition at a glance
- Three sections — Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning and Data Insights — each 45 minutes, for about 2 hours 15 minutes including the break.
- No essay, and the old Sentence Correction questions are gone; it is now purely multiple-choice and data analysis.
- Scored 205–805 in 10-point increments, with each section weighted equally (section scores run 60–90).
- Built for business: the Data Insights section tests exactly the kind of data interpretation an MBA uses daily.
The GRE at a glance
- Quantitative and Verbal Reasoning, each scored 130–170, adding to a 260–340 total, plus a separate Analytical Writing score (0–6).
- Shorter than it used to be — just under two hours.
- Accepted for a wide range of graduate programmes, not only business, so it keeps your options open if you might also apply to other master’s degrees.
How to choose
What else are you applying to? If business school is your only target, the GMAT signals commitment and its Data Insights section maps closely to the MBA classroom. If you are also weighing other master’s programmes — policy, economics, data, engineering — the GRE is accepted far more widely.
Where are your strengths? The GMAT leans on logical reasoning and data analysis, and its quant is widely considered tougher. The GRE rewards vocabulary and more straightforward maths, and lets you move within a section and skip and return. Quant-confident, logic-minded candidates often prefer the GMAT; strong readers often prefer the GRE.
Career signalling. In finance and consulting recruiting, a strong GMAT is still the more recognised number. If those industries are your goal, weigh that even though schools accept both.
The honest recommendation
Take a short official practice test of each (both publishers offer free ones), convert the scores with an official concordance, and pick the test where you land better against your target schools’ averages. Then commit fully to that one. Splitting prep across both almost always lowers both scores.
Next steps
If you are building a master’s or MBA shortlist and want help deciding which test and which schools fit your profile, contact us for a free discovery call.
Need personalized guidance? Talk to our experts.
Talk to an Expert →
