How Untimed Practice Boosts GMAT Verbal Performance
A frequent mistake among GMAT test-takers is trying to perfect their Verbal timing strategy before they have fully mastered the underlying content. It is understandable—everyone wants to make their prep as efficient as possible—but jumping into timed practice too early often leads to frustration and stagnation. When you prioritize speed over understanding, mistakes multiply and confidence can erode.
The GMAT Verbal section is not simply a test of how quickly you can answer questions. It measures your ability to carefully analyze and interpret the nuances and key details in each question. These analytical skills require deliberate effort and consistent practice to develop. If you push yourself to answer questions under strict time constraints before you understand them deeply, you risk sacrificing accuracy and missing the subtle reasoning that differentiates correct answers from traps. Without a strong foundation, timed practice can feel like a treadmill where progress is minimal.
The solution is to focus on building your “Verbal muscles.” Begin with untimed practice, giving yourself the time to work through each question thoughtfully and thoroughly. Study why the correct answers are correct and why the incorrect choices fail to hold up. Pay attention to patterns in reasoning, common traps, and the logic behind the questions. This approach ensures that you are learning the skill set the GMAT actually tests, rather than simply practicing answering questions quickly.
Once you consistently answer questions of a particular type correctly, you can start to introduce time constraints gradually. At this stage, timing becomes a natural consequence of skill rather than a separate goal. You will find that managing the clock is less about rushing and more about efficiently applying the strategies and understanding you have already developed. Accuracy will remain high, and your pace will improve organically.
Ultimately, success on the GMAT Verbal section depends on a solid foundation. Master the material first, and let timing follow. This method equips you not only with the speed to complete questions in the allotted time but also with the confidence and analytical precision necessary to achieve your target score. By focusing on skill development before speed, you transform timed practice from a source of stress into a demonstration of mastery.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep