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Prepare for the current ETS Subject Test family with official blueprint review, testing-window planning, at-home or test-center readiness, score-report strategy, and retake timing.
ETS lists the current GRE Subject Tests as Mathematics, Physics, and Psychology. These computer-delivered achievement tests measure undergraduate preparation and are offered in September, October, and April windows.
Subject Tests are narrower than the GRE General Test and should be prepared around the exact ETS blueprint for the chosen discipline.
ETS lists Mathematics, Physics, and Psychology as the current GRE Subject Tests.
Tests are computer-delivered at centers worldwide, with at-home testing available on certain dates.
ETS offers Subject Tests during two-week windows in September, October, and April.
Every Subject Test reports a total score from 200 to 990 in 10-point increments.
ETS positions GRE Subject Tests as achievement tests for applicants with an undergraduate major or extensive background in the subject. Candidates should confirm program expectations before registering because not every graduate department requires or values a Subject Test equally.
Mathematics is longer at 2 hours and 50 minutes with about 66 questions. Physics and Psychology are each 2 hours, but Physics has about 70 questions while Psychology has about 144. Those differences change pacing, review depth, and practice-test planning.
Unlike the GRE General Test in many regions, Subject Tests are offered in specific September, October, and April windows. A useful prep plan works backward from the target application cycle, score-report date, and possible retake window.
Use this GRE Subject Tests 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 GRE Subject Tests while the linked service pages cover broader exam support options.
ETS describes GRE Subject Tests as achievement tests that measure knowledge and skill in a specific undergraduate field and help graduate admissions or fellowship panels supplement records, recommendations, and other qualifications. The current GRE Subject Tests are Mathematics, Physics, and Psychology. ETS administers them in a computer-delivered format at centers worldwide during two-week windows in September, October, and April, with at-home testing available on certain dates during those months. Mathematics is 2 hours and 50 minutes with approximately 66 multiple-choice questions; Physics is 2 hours with approximately 70 five-choice questions; Psychology is 2 hours with approximately 144 multiple-choice questions. Every Subject Test reports a total score on a 200 to 990 scale in 10-point increments, and scores are reportable for five years. Physics and Psychology also report percent-correct subscores. ETS allows Subject Test retakes every 14 days. HiraEdu helps candidates prepare legitimately with subject selection guidance, official blueprint review, topic diagnostics, practice-book planning, testing-window strategy, at-home or test-center readiness, score-report planning, and retake decisions.
ETS currently lists Mathematics, Physics, and Psychology.
Yes. ETS describes the Subject Tests as computer-delivered.
ETS says Subject Tests are offered during two-week windows in September, October, and April.
Every Subject Test reports a total score on a 200 to 990 scale in 10-point increments; Physics and Psychology also report percent-correct subscores.
ETS says candidates may take a Subject Test every 14 days.
Check target programs and fellowship requirements before choosing Mathematics, Physics, or Psychology.
Review the ETS content areas and practice book for the selected Subject Test, then score current strengths and gaps.
Use full-length or long mixed sets that match the timing, question count, and topic mix for the chosen test.
Schedule around September, October, or April windows, score-report dates, recipient choices, five-year reportability, and 14-day retake eligibility.
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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