GMAT Club
November 13, 2025
bhanu29

Joined: Oct 02, 2024

Posts: 113

Kudos: 47

Verified GMAT Focus score:
675 Q87 V85 DI79

Great Quality Questions

REVIEWER IDENTITY VERIFIED by score report [?]

Strengths:

The user interface closely resembles the official GMAT exam, providing a realistic test-taking experience.

The questions are generally high quality, especially in terms of content and style.

The Quant section is particularly challenging, which helps build strong problem-solving skills and prepare for difficult questions.

Detailed explanations and solutions are provided, making it easier to learn from mistakes.

The tests help with endurance and timing, simulating the real exam conditions effectively.

Would make the product better:

Balance the difficulty level of Quant questions to be closer to the actual GMAT. The current difficulty can be intimidating and might undermine test-takers’ confidence.

Increase the difficulty and realism in the Verbal and Data Interpretation sections to better match official GMAT mocks and the real exam experience.

I think GMAT Club tests are pretty solid overall. The user interface is really close to the actual GMAT, so it feels familiar when you take the test. The questions are generally good quality, especially the Quant ones. The Quant section here is definitely tougher than the real GMAT, which can be both good and bad. It’s good because it pushes you to think deeper and prepare for harder problems, but it can also shake your confidence if you find it way harder than what you usually see on official practice tests.

On the other hand, the Verbal and Data Interpretation sections feel easier compared to the official mocks or the real GMAT. So while they help with practice, they don’t perfectly match the difficulty or style of the actual exam’s verbal part. One thing I liked is that explanations for the questions are detailed, which really helps when you’re reviewing mistakes and trying to improve.

Overall, GMAT Club tests are great for those wanting to challenge themselves, especially in Quant. But I’d say don’t rely on them alone—make sure to also use official GMAT resources so you have a realistic idea of where you stand. The scores on GMAT Club tests might not exactly match your official GMAT results, so keep that in mind.

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