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If you are aiming for a high score (particularly in Quant) and are willing to push yourself, then this is a very solid tool.
If you want to practice under pressure, develop speed, and tackle challenging questions so that the “real exam” seems more manageable.
Use these tests early or mid-phase of your prep to train toughness and build stamina: solve tough Quant questions, get used to timing, develop error-log habits.
Then switch to official (or closer to official-level) mocks for final benchmarking so you have a more realistic prediction of your test-day performance.
When using GMAT Club Tests, review thoroughly: spend time on the explanations, error-logs, topic-wise breakdown—not just doing many tests but learning from them.
Don’t over-rely on the raw “score” you get in these tests as a predictor of the exam; treat them more as training rather than exact forecast.
If you are weaker in Verbal, pair the use of GMAT Club with strong Verbal-specific resources to ensure balanced prep.
Time your mocks so that they replicate your actual exam slot (considering any time-zone or local factors in Delhi), so you build comfort in the actual conditions.
If you have a target score and want detailed analytics to identify weak spots and monitor progress.