• Abstract Reasoning has been withdrawn for UCAT 2025; the test now comprises Verbal
Reasoning, Decision Making, Quantitative Reasoning (each scaled 300–900) plus the
Situational Judgement Test (SJT). UCAT
• The 2025 standard test structure and timings are: Verbal 44 Q / 22 min; Decision Making 35
Q / 37 min; Quantitative 36 Q / 26 min; SJT 69 items / 26 min. Total cognitive scaled score =
900–2700. UCAT+1
• Use the free official UCAT preparation materials (tour, tutorials, question banks, practice
tests). These are the standard reference for realistic practice. UCAT
• You receive a copy of your score report at the test centre; it is uploaded to your UCAT account
≈24 hours after testing and (for UK candidates) UCAT will send results directly to your chosen
universities. UCAT
Fast Q&A
Q — Why was Abstract Reasoning removed?
A — UCAT’s analysis found Abstract Reasoning had comparatively lower predictive/incremental
validity for university performance and was highly coachable; removing it lets the Consortium
reallocate time and questions to more predictive subtests. (UCAT statement summarises the evidence).
UCAT
Q — How is the test scored now?
A — Each cognitive subtest is converted to a scaled score 300–900; total = sum of the three = 900–
2700. The SJT is reported as Band 1–4 (Band 1 highest). UCAT
Q — How much time per question (rough guide)?
A — Using published subtest timings, the average time available is approximately:
• Verbal Reasoning: 22 min / 44 Q → 30 s per Q.
• Decision Making: 37 min / 35 Q → ~63 s per Q.
• Quantitative Reasoning: 26 min / 36 Q → ~43 s per Q.
• Situational Judgement: 26 min / 69 items → ~23 s per item.
(These are averages — individual questions vary; allocate time by question complexity.) UCAT
Q — Will practice material change? Are older resources valid?
A — UCAT updated official practice resources for 2025; official materials are authoritative.
Commercial material may be out of date — treat it with caution and cross-check against UCAT’s
practice banks. UCAT
, Q — Do universities see my result and when?
A — UCAT sends results directly to selected UK universities in early November; results are valid for
the admissions cycle specified (check your entry year). You do not need to upload results to UCAS.
UCAT
Critical appraisal — what this change means for
you
• Validity and fairness: Removing a low-validity, coachable subtest should improve the test’s
measurement precision for traits universities care about. Expect universities to re-examine
whether they weight totals or individual subtests. UCAT
• Practical effect: Decision Making has more questions and time; Quantitative and Verbal
timings changed slightly. Because one cognitive subtest is removed, each remaining subtest
now carries more relative weight in total score — adapt preparation accordingly. UCAT
• Commercial prep caution: Official practice sets the standard. Commercial providers may still
be useful for extra drill, but do not rely on them as authoritative for format or timing changes.
UCAT
High-yield, exam-grade preparation plan
A. 8-week plan (recommended if you have time) — 40–60 hours total
1. Weeks 1–2 — Familiarise & baseline
• Complete the Tour Tutorial and Question Tutorials (one per subtest). Do untimed
question banks to learn formats. UCAT
2. Weeks 3–5 — Skills and deliberate practice
• Focus on weakest subtest(s). Drill question types: reading speed + inference for Verbal;
Venn/logic/probability for Decision Making; graph reading and arithmetic for
Quantitative. Use official question banks. UCAT
3. Week 6 — Timed blocks
• Timed subtest blocks (not full test) to practise pacing using the on-screen calculator and
keyboard shortcuts.
4. Weeks 7–8 — Full mocks and reflection
• 2–3 official practice tests under exam conditions. After each, write a short error log:
question type, error cause, time spent, corrective action.