A significant obstacle that GMAT students face is anxiety. If you have ever struggled with anxiety, you know how draining it can be. It clouds your thinking, saps your energy, and makes even simple tasks feel overwhelming. Anxiety during GMAT preparation can lower your motivation and make it difficult to study consistently. It is important to understand where this anxiety comes from and how to address it before it undermines your progress.
One of the most common causes is not giving yourself enough time to prepare. I often speak with GMAT students who tell me they need to raise their score by more than 200 points, yet they have scheduled the exam only five weeks away. The reality is that meaningful score increases take time. Learning how to solve difficult questions, mastering test strategies, and strengthening weak areas cannot be compressed into a few short weeks. When students try to force this timeline, it almost always leads to stress and disappointment.
Despite knowing this, many still attempt to make it work. They cut back on sleep, push themselves to study for long hours, and hope that sheer effort will make up for the lack of time. In reality, these choices add even more pressure. Anxiety builds, confidence drops, and motivation fades. Before long, burnout sets in, and progress stalls completely.
If you find yourself in this position, the solution is clear. Reschedule your GMAT for a later date. It may feel difficult to do if you are aiming for a particular application deadline, but remember that deadlines are only meaningful if you are submitting a competitive score. Rushing to apply with a score below your target will not improve your chances of admission. By giving yourself more time to prepare, you reduce unnecessary anxiety and give yourself the opportunity to perform at your true potential.
Another major source of anxiety comes from the expectation of overnight success. Many students believe they can study intensively for a few weeks and walk away with a top score. In most cases, this is not realistic. Even strong students with strong academic backgrounds need time to adjust to the GMAT’s unique format, its question types, and the reasoning skills it demands. Expecting a sudden 200 point jump in a matter of days or weeks only sets you up for frustration.
When those unrealistic results do not appear, students feel defeated. They question their ability, when in truth the problem lies with their expectations, not their potential. The GMAT is a skill-based test, and like any skill, mastery comes through consistent practice over time.
The best approach is steady and structured. Set goals that are realistic for your timeline. Track your progress carefully. Focus on gradual improvement rather than quick wins. This process not only builds your skills, it also builds your confidence. In the long run, you will be glad you gave yourself the time to prepare properly. Success on the GMAT rarely comes overnight, but it does come with patience, planning, and persistence.
Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep