On test day, more GMAT points are lost to fatigue than most students realize. I’ve seen this situation play out over and over again. Students start a test strong. They are focused, accurate, and in control. Then, somewhere in the middle of the exam, things start to slip. They reread questions, make small mistakes, hesitate on decisions, and begin second-guessing their answers. By the final section, their performance is noticeably worse—not because the questions got harder, but because their brains are fatigued.
The GMAT is not simply a test of knowledge and skills. It’s a test of your ability to sustain high-level cognitive performance under pressure. Fatigue impacts focus, accuracy, decision-making, and confidence. Even a slight decline in mental sharpness can cost you multiple questions, and on the GMAT, those misses have real consequences.
I often see this kind of test-day cognitive decline in students who haven’t spent enough time in the practice-test phase of their training. In other words, they’ve invested heavily in building knowledge and skills but not nearly enough in training their brain to handle the full rigors of the exam.
Here’s the sneaky part: fatigue doesn’t always feel like fatigue. It often feels like the question is unusually hard, or like you’re just not focused that day, or like maybe you don’t know the material as well as you thought. So students try to fix a knowledge problem when the real issue could be cognitive performance under pressure and test-day stamina.
If you want to perform well on test day, you need to train your brain the same way you train your knowledge. That means building endurance deliberately by incorporating longer study blocks on a regular basis. It means taking full-length practice tests seriously: testing under realistic conditions, without distractions. It also means reducing unnecessary mental load by using consistent approaches rather than reinventing your process on every question—but that’s a topic for another post.
After more than 20 years in test prep, I can tell you that some of the most avoidable score drops I’ve seen have nothing to do with ability. They’re simply the result of students’ not being prepared to perform for the full duration of the exam.
If you’re preparing for the GMAT, don’t just build your knowledge and skills. Spend sufficient time building your ability to sit for and think carefully during the rigors of the test.