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Best GRE Quantitative Reasoning Practice Sites 2026: Free vs. Paid, by Score Goal

9 min read

Updated on May 23, 2026

GRE Quantitative Reasoning tests arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and data analysis — all at the level of a strong high school math curriculum, not calculus. The challenge isn't the difficulty of the math itself; it's speed, trap answer design, and unfamiliar question formats like Quantitative Comparison. Finding the right practice site — one that matches your current score and your target — makes a measurable difference. This guide breaks down the best free and paid options for 2026, organized by what you actually need.

What does the GRE Quant section actually test in 2026?

The GRE General Test now includes two Quant sections of 27 questions each, with 47 minutes per section. The four question types are Quantitative Comparison (QC), Multiple Choice — one answer, Multiple Choice — one or more answers, and Numeric Entry. Data Interpretation sets, which embed multiple questions around a chart or table, appear in both sections. Scores range from 130 to 170 in 1-point increments. A 150 places you at roughly the 40th percentile; a 160 at the 76th percentile; a 165 or higher at approximately the 90th percentile. Knowing your target percentile for your programs helps you decide how much time to invest in high-difficulty content versus drilling fundamentals.

One structural point that surprises many test-takers: the GRE uses an adaptive model between sections, not within them. If you perform well on Section 1, Section 2 will be harder. This means that a wrong answer on a hard Section 2 costs you more than a wrong answer on an easy Section 1. Practice sites that offer this adaptive structure give you more realistic scoring.

Which free GRE Quant practice sites are worth your time?

ETS PowerPrep Online is the most important free resource for GRE Quant. It provides two full-length adaptive practice tests that use real retired GRE items. The score predictions are the most accurate available because they come from the test-maker. The free version includes two tests; you can purchase PowerPrep Plus for three additional tests at $39.95 each. For most test-takers, starting with the two free tests is essential regardless of what other resources they use.

Khan Academy covers all the underlying math topics the GRE tests — arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and statistics — through free video lessons and practice problems. It does not offer GRE-formatted questions, but it is the best free option for rebuilding weak topic areas before moving to timed GRE practice. If your diagnostic shows gaps in, say, coordinate geometry or probability, Khan Academy is where you close those gaps efficiently before returning to GRE-format drills.

GREPrepClub.com hosts a large community-sourced question bank with verified GRE-style problems and detailed explanations. The site is free with registration and includes a timer function. The quality of explanations varies because many are community-written, but the volume of problems is hard to match for free. Use it for additional practice sets after exhausting ETS material.

What are the best paid GRE Quant resources for a 160+ score goal?

Manhattan Prep GRE offers six full-length adaptive practice tests, a 500+ question bank organized by topic and difficulty, and on-demand video lessons. Their 5 lb. Book of GRE Practice Problems is widely regarded as the most thorough third-party drill book available, with over 1,800 problems across all Quant topics. The digital subscription runs around $249 for six months. For test-takers targeting 160 or higher, Manhattan Prep's difficulty calibration is closer to hard Section 2 level than most competitors.

Magoosh GRE provides approximately 200 video lessons, 1,000+ practice questions with video explanations for every question, and three full-length practice tests. The interface is mobile-friendly, and the lesson library covers every GRE Quant topic in short 5–10 minute videos. Magoosh scores tend to run slightly optimistic relative to actual GRE performance, but the question quality is high and the explanation style — emphasizing reasoning over memorization — trains good problem-solving habits. A six-month subscription is $149.

The Princeton Review GRE Complete Prep includes five full-length tests, topic drills, and a score improvement guarantee. Their adaptive drills feature a "Hyperlearning" mode that serves questions in the format and difficulty mix closest to the actual exam. It is priced comparably to Magoosh. The Princeton Review is a solid choice for test-takers who prefer a more structured, guided study plan over a self-directed approach.

How should you structure GRE Quant practice by score goal?

If your current diagnostic score is below 150, spend the first three to four weeks on topic rebuilding before doing full-length practice. Use Khan Academy to patch specific weaknesses — fractions, ratios, basic geometry — then shift to ETS PowerPrep and GREPrepClub for GRE-formatted practice. Rushing to timed full-length tests before fundamentals are solid is the most common mistake at this stage.

If you're scoring 150–158 and targeting 160+, the priority is QC strategy and Data Interpretation speed. Quantitative Comparison questions have a specific structural logic — when a quantity depends on the value of a variable, the answer is almost always (D) "the relationship cannot be determined." Practice identifying when plugging in numbers is faster than algebraic manipulation. For Data Interpretation, practice reading charts quickly and calculating percentages under time pressure.

If you're already scoring 158+ and targeting 165+, the marginal return from more practice problems is lower than from understanding why you missed specific questions. Keep a detailed error log categorized by question type and error type (computational error, misread, conceptual gap). Manhattan Prep's hardest problems are the best training material at this level. A score of 167+ puts you above the 96th percentile and is competitively strong for quantitative graduate programs.

What GRE Quant question type should you prioritize first?

Most test-takers should prioritize Quantitative Comparison because it appears frequently and has a counterintuitive structure that rewards technique over computation. The four answer choices are always the same: (A) Column A is greater, (B) Column B is greater, (C) the quantities are equal, (D) the relationship cannot be determined. If you can find one scenario where A is greater and another where B is greater, the answer is immediately (D) without further calculation. Learning to apply this "two-scenario kill" logic systematically dramatically improves both speed and accuracy on QC questions.

Data Interpretation sets require a different skill: reading charts accurately under time pressure. The most common error is misreading axes — confusing absolute values with percentages, or missing a "in thousands" notation. Slow down when entering a DI set, read the title and axes carefully, and then work the questions. Speed on DI comes from chart literacy, not from rushing the questions themselves.

How does SimpuTech help with GRE Quant preparation?

SimpuTech's GRE Quantitative AI tutor gives you adaptive practice that adjusts to your current score in real time. After each session, it identifies your weakest topic areas — whether that's number properties, coordinate geometry, or probability — and serves more problems in those areas until your accuracy improves. You can also ask it to explain any concept in plain language, step through a specific problem type, or simulate the difficulty shift you'd see in a hard Section 2. Use SimpuTech alongside ETS PowerPrep to maximize score gains in the time you have.

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