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Prepare for the current GMAT with section-by-section strategy, 45-minute pacing, Data Insights practice, review/edit rules, section-order planning, and score-report review.
GMAC lists the GMAT Exam as three sections: Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights. The exam has 64 questions, 2 hours and 15 minutes of testing time, one optional 10-minute break, and a Total Score range of 205 to 805.
The current GMAT is shorter and more flexible than the legacy exam, but pacing and Data Insights remain major differentiators.
Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights.
GMAC lists 64 total questions: 21 Quant, 23 Verbal, and 20 Data Insights.
Each section is 45 minutes, for 2 hours and 15 minutes total, with one optional 10-minute break.
GMAC lists a Total Score range of 205 to 805, with each section scored from 60 to 90.
Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights are each 45 minutes. Candidates should prepare pacing separately for 21 Quant questions, 23 Verbal questions, and 20 Data Insights questions because the per-question pressure and cognitive load differ by section.
GMAC says candidates can bookmark questions and, when time remains at the end of a section, review questions and edit up to three answers in that section. The feature rewards planned triage, but it only helps if candidates leave time for the review screen.
The current Total Score includes Data Insights along with Quantitative and Verbal Reasoning. Candidates should practice tables, graphics, multi-source reasoning, two-part analysis, data sufficiency logic, and time management rather than treating Data Insights as a side section.
Use this GMAT Exam (Focus Edition) exam help page for exam-specific context, then compare the broader online exam help services page or contact HiraEdu if you need a direct handoff. This page stays focused on GMAT Exam (Focus Edition) while the linked service pages cover broader exam support options.
The current GMAT Exam, formerly distinguished as the Focus Edition, measures graduate management readiness through three 45-minute sections: Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights. GMAC lists 64 total questions and 2 hours and 15 minutes of testing time, plus one optional 10-minute break. The current exam includes 21 Quantitative Reasoning questions, 23 Verbal Reasoning questions, and 20 Data Insights questions; candidates may choose section order and can review and edit up to three answers per section if time remains. HiraEdu helps candidates prepare legally with diagnostic scoring, official practice alignment, pacing, section-order strategy, data-insights drills, score-report review, and test-center or online-exam logistics.
GMAC lists 2 hours and 15 minutes of testing time, plus one optional 10-minute break.
GMAC lists 64 total questions: 21 Quantitative Reasoning, 23 Verbal Reasoning, and 20 Data Insights.
GMAC lists a Total Score range from 205 to 805, with each section scored from 60 to 90.
Yes. GMAC states that candidates can answer the three sections in any order.
GMAC states that candidates can review questions and edit up to three answers per section when time remains after completing that section.
Use official-style practice to capture section scores, pacing, question type misses, and whether Quant, Verbal, or Data Insights is holding the Total Score down.
Practice at least two section orders, then pick the order that gives the best combination of accuracy, stamina, and confidence.
Bookmark strategically, move on from time traps, and practice editing only the three highest-value answers per section when time remains.
Check mba.com for current official practice access, especially after the March 30, 2026 Official Prep platform transition.
Use the guide to self-serve, or talk to a coordinator if you need help mapping timelines, official requirements, or troubleshooting day-of logistics.
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