Why Improvement on the GMAT Feels So Slow (Even When You’re Doing It Right)
One of the most frustrating parts of GMAT prep is this: you’re putting in the time, you’re studying consistently, you feel like you’re learning... and yet your score isn’t moving as quickly as you expected.
This situation can make you feel like something about what you’re doing is wrong. But in many cases, nothing is wrong. You’re just experiencing what real improvement actually looks like.
The issue is that GMAT progress doesn’t happen in a straight line. It happens in layers.
When you’re learning a new topic, you’re not just memorizing a formula or a rule. You're building a way of thinking. You’re learning how to recognize patterns, how to interpret questions, how to choose the right approach, and how to execute it correctly. That process takes time, and a lot of that progress is invisible at first.
For a while, it can feel like you’re not improving at all. But underneath the surface, your understanding is getting deeper and more structured. Then, at some point, things start to click, and your performance jumps.
Another reason improvement feels slow is that you’re often fixing weaknesses one at a time. If you have gaps in multiple areas, improving one area may not immediately show up in your overall score. You’re getting better, but the test is still exposing other weaknesses. That can create the illusion that you’re stuck, when in reality you’re making real progress.
There’s also a difference between learning and performing. You might fully understand a concept in isolation, but applying it quickly and accurately in a mixed, timed setting is a separate skill. Bridging that gap takes repetition and consistency, and it doesn’t happen overnight.
And then there’s the reality that as you improve, the test gets harder. The GMAT is adaptive, so as you answer more questions correctly, you’re given more difficult ones. That can make it feel like you’re not improving, when in fact you are—you’re just being challenged at a higher level.
So what should you do?
First, stay focused on the process. Are you actually learning the material deeply? Are you reviewing your mistakes carefully? Are you building accuracy before worrying about speed? If the answer is yes, you’re on the right track.
Second, be patient with the timeline. Real skill-building takes longer than most people expect, but it’s also more durable. Once you truly understand something, it stays with you.
And finally, zoom out. Don’t judge your progress based on a single study session or even a single practice test. Look at trends over time—your understanding, your consistency, and your confidence.
If you take one thing away from this, it’s this:
Slow progress isn’t the same as no progress. In GMAT prep, slow, structured improvement is usually the kind that leads to the biggest score gains.