Full-length practice exam modeled on the digital PSAT/NMSQT (2024+) format: a Reading & Writing section followed by a Math section. Representative scaled-down version (42 MCQs total).
Reading & Writing — R&W
24 questions · 32 minutes
Information & ideas, craft & structure, expression of ideas, and standard English conventions. Calculator not applicable. (Real PSAT: 54 questions across 2 modules, 64 min — practice version 24 questions, 32 min.)
Math — Math
18 questions · 30 minutes
Algebra, advanced math, problem-solving & data analysis, and geometry/trigonometry. Calculator allowed throughout. (Real PSAT: 44 questions across 2 modules, 70 min — practice version 18 questions, 30 min.)
Total time: 1h 2m. Each section has its own timer; sections are completed back-to-back. Free-response sections use a self-grading rubric checklist after you write your response.
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This full-length practice exam mirrors the real test’s sections, timing, and question mix so you can rehearse pacing and stamina before exam day. Every question is scored instantly with an explanation, and your results feed into your score prediction. For the most realistic read on where you stand, take it in one timed sitting.
The PSAT/NMSQT is a digital practice-and-qualifying test from College Board, taken in the Bluebook app, that mirrors the SAT in content and format while serving a second, high-stakes purpose: it is the entry point to the National Merit Scholarship Program. Most students take it in the fall of 11th grade (a 10th-grade administration is common for practice), and the junior-year score is the one that counts for National Merit. Like the SAT, it has a Reading and Writing section and a Math section, each delivered in two adaptive modules, so a student's performance on the first module determines the difficulty of the second. The content is deliberately slightly easier than the SAT and the score scale tops out lower, but the skills are the same: command of evidence and structure in short reading passages, standard English conventions, algebra, problem solving and data analysis, and advanced math, all with an embedded Desmos calculator. What makes the PSAT distinctive is the Selection Index used by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation, computed as (2 × Reading and Writing score + Math score) ÷ 10, ranging from 48 to 228. Semifinalist cutoffs are set per state and shift yearly, which trips up students who fixate on the 1520 total rather than the index. Common struggles include adapting to the timed adaptive modules, the inference-driven short passages, and recognizing that even a single careless error can move a borderline Selection Index below a state cutoff. Preparation overlaps almost entirely with SAT prep, making the PSAT an efficient diagnostic and a genuine scholarship opportunity.
Two sections in two adaptive modules each: Reading & Writing (54 questions, two 27-question modules) and Math (44 questions, two 22-question modules). Total testing time is about 2 hours 14 minutes with a 10-minute break between sections.
Each section is scored 160-760 for a total of 320-1520; a separate Selection Index (48-228) = (2 × Reading & Writing + Math) ÷ 10 determines National Merit eligibility.