Some trap answers on the GMAT are surprisingly easy to spot—at least when you are sitting at home, relaxed and reviewing a practice question. You might even wonder why the test writers include them at all. They seem so obviously incorrect that it is hard to imagine anyone choosing them.
But the GMAT is not taken in a low-pressure environment. On test day, you are likely to feel some combination of stress, fatigue, time pressure, and mental noise. Under those conditions, even answer choices that look obvious in hindsight can seem plausible. Mistakes happen not because a student does not understand the material, but because they are moving too fast or not fully engaged with what the question is really asking.
These traps are built to exploit rushed thinking. Business school, much like the GMAT, is a high-pressure environment. You are expected to stay composed and think critically even when time is tight and decisions matter. That is part of what the GMAT is assessing. In this way, trap answers serve as useful reminders to slow down and stay focused. They signal that careless mistakes can be costly and that sharp reasoning under pressure is a skill worth developing.
Consider a common trap in Critical Reasoning: the opposite answer. Suppose the question asks you to strengthen an argument. A tempting wrong choice will do the opposite—it will actually weaken the argument. When you are alert and thinking clearly, this trap is usually easy to catch. But if you are reading too quickly or working from memory instead of rereading carefully, it is easy to overlook that the answer is moving in the wrong direction.
If you find yourself falling for these types of traps in practice, it is often a sign that you need to slow down and be more deliberate. Do not trade accuracy for speed. It is far more effective to understand exactly what the argument is doing and evaluate the answer choices through that lens than to rush through a question and miss your target. Developing this kind of precision under pressure is not just helpful for the GMAT—it is a habit that will serve you well in business school and beyond.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep