Enter a Focus composite between 205 and 805. Standard error: about 30-40 points.
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| # | Date | Mode | Composite | Percentile | Band | Remove |
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How the GMAT Scoring System Works
The current GMAT (Focus Edition) reports a composite total score from 205 to 805 in 10-point increments, with three section scaled scores (Quant, Verbal, Data Insights) each running 60 to 90. The composite is computed using a published linear formula, so unlike many standardized tests the math behind your score is transparent. The legacy GMAT, administered through January 2024, used a 200 to 800 composite scale built only from Quant and Verbal scaled scores (0 to 60 each, though raw scores rarely exceed 51). Schools accept either edition for current admissions, but anyone testing now takes Focus.
Focus composite = round((Q + V + DI minus 180) times (20/3) + 205, 10)
Each Focus section score itself comes from a proprietary item-response theory model that adjusts for question difficulty across test forms, so a 79 Quant on one test date represents the same level of ability as a 79 on any other date. GMAC does not release the raw-to-scaled tables, which is why this calculator (and every other GMAT tool you will find) starts from the scaled score the test report gives you. The standard error of measurement on the composite is approximately 30 to 40 points, comparable to the published error on our SAT score calculator and MCAT score calculator. A 685 reported score reflects an underlying ability roughly between 645 and 725, which is why schools rarely care about 10-point differences in the same range.
GMAT Score Range and Score Chart
The table below maps composite scores to percentiles on both editions and shows the admissions tier each score reaches. Use it alongside the calculator above to interpret your section results.
| Focus composite | Legacy composite | Approx. percentile | Score band | MBA admissions context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 805 | 800 | 100th | Elite | Perfect score (extremely rare) |
| 765 | 770 | 99th | Elite | Top 5 MBA range (Stanford GSB, Wharton outliers) |
| 745 | 760 | 99th | Elite | M7 admit threshold |
| 735 | 750 | 98th | Strong | M7 class median range |
| 725 | 740 | 96th | Strong | Strong M7 candidacy |
| 705 | 720 | 92nd | Strong | Top 10 working target |
| 685 | 700 | 88th | Strong | Top 20 baseline (legacy 700 percentile-equivalent) |
| 665 | 680 | 75th | Above average | Top 30 working target |
| 645 | 660 | 64th | Above average | Top 50 floor |
| 625 | 640 | 51st | Above average | Solid candidacy at most top 50 programs |
| 605 | 620 | 40th | Above average | Competitive at regional MBA programs |
| 585 | 600 | 29th | Average | Floor for many full-time MBA programs |
| 565 | 580 | 21st | Average | Part-time and executive MBA range |
| 525 | 540 | 9th | Developing | Below typical admit cutoff for full-time MBA |
| 485 | 500 | 3rd | Developing | Significant improvement needed before applying |
| 205 | 200 | Below 1st | Developing | Minimum possible composite |
Percentile ranks are recalibrated annually by GMAC using rolling three-year test-taker data. School cutoffs reflect class-median ranges, not minimums. Verify current percentiles at mba.com.
GMAT Percentile Rankings: What Each Composite Means
Your percentile rank shows the share of recent test-takers you scored at or above. A 685 Focus places you at the 84th percentile, meaning you scored as well as or better than 84% of the recent reference group. Percentile is the metric admissions committees actually compare, because the composite scales recalibrate over time. A 700 legacy that placed you at the 88th percentile in 2018 is at a slightly higher percentile today because mean test-taker scores have drifted down. Schools see the percentile that was current when you took the test, not what your score would receive today.
GMAC publishes section-specific percentiles separately. On Focus Edition, mean section scores in the most recent reporting cycle were approximately Q 78, V 79, DI 74, so a balanced Q 80, V 80, DI 80 produces a 605 composite that lands roughly at the 40th percentile despite each section being above the mean. The reason is simple: composites round to 10-point steps and the bulk of test-takers cluster in a tight range. Pushing past the 90th percentile typically requires Q 85 or higher because Quant has the steepest upper tail.
What Is the Maximum GMAT Score?
The maximum composite score depends on which version of the test you take. On the current Focus Edition, the highest possible composite is 805, achieved with a perfect 90 on Quant, 90 on Verbal, and 90 on Data Insights. On the legacy GMAT, the maximum was 800, reached with Q51 + V51 (the practical scaled-score ceiling, since 52 to 60 are technically possible but never reached by test-takers). Both maximums correspond to the 100th percentile (or 99th-plus, since GMAC caps reported percentiles at 99 to avoid identifying individual test-takers with perfect scores).
Among all current Focus Edition test-takers, fewer than 1% reach 765 or higher, and fewer than 0.1% reach the maximum 805. The historical legacy GMAT distribution was similar: under 1% scored above 760, and a perfect 800 was achieved by approximately 30 test-takers worldwide each year. A maximum-or-near-maximum score is impressive but does not by itself guarantee admission to elite MBA programs, because top schools admit on the strength of the entire application. A 745 Focus combined with strong professional achievement and a clear post-MBA goal is a more competitive profile than 805 with a thin work history.
Focus Edition vs Legacy GMAT: The 645 = 700 Concordance
The Focus Edition launched in November 2023 and replaced the legacy GMAT entirely by February 2024. Three changes matter for scoring. First, the composite scale shifted from 200 to 800 (in 10-point steps) to 205 to 805 (also 10-point steps), so the same percentile rank produces different composite numbers on each edition. Second, sections changed: Focus drops the standalone Analytical Writing and Integrated Reasoning sections, replaces them with a Data Insights section (60 to 90 scaled), and reweights Verbal to remove Sentence Correction. Third, the percentile distribution recalibrated against a fresh sample of test-takers.
The simplest concordance fact to remember: Focus 645 corresponds to roughly the same percentile as legacy 700. That mapping has produced the popular framing "645 is the new 700" among MBA applicants and admissions consultants. Both scores place you around the 88th percentile (Focus 645 at 64th can be misleading; the actual percentile-equivalent of legacy 700 is closer to Focus 685). The concordance widget in the calculator above uses GMAC's official Focus-to-Legacy comparison table, so entering a Focus composite returns the legacy equivalent at the same percentile rank, not the same raw scaled-score sum.
For applications, schools accept either scale. A program that lists "GMAT 700 average" on its class profile typically means the legacy 700 standard. If you scored Focus 685 (legacy 700-equivalent), you meet that benchmark. If you scored Focus 645 with no further context, your raw composite is below 700 by the surface comparison but at roughly the same percentile, so it competes on equal footing in a class-percentile sense.
GMAT to GRE Conversion: When Either Test Works
Most full-time MBA programs accept both GMAT and GRE scores, and the GRE has been gaining share among MBA applicants over the past several admissions cycles. GMAC and ETS publish a joint comparison tool that maps composites between the tests. A legacy GMAT 700 (Focus 685) maps to roughly a GRE 330 V+Q sum. A 650 GMAT to GRE 324. A 600 GMAT to GRE 318. The conversion is approximate because the two tests measure overlapping but not identical skills.
Quantitative-heavy applicants (engineers, finance professionals, anyone with strong math fundamentals) typically score relatively better on the GMAT Quant section, which tests reasoning under time pressure on data-sufficiency-style questions. Applicants with strong verbal reasoning or non-traditional backgrounds typically score relatively better on GRE Verbal, which uses straightforward vocabulary and reading comprehension. If you have time to take both as practice tests, the cross-test concordance in the calculator above shows your equivalent on the other test so you can directly compare your current performance.
What's a Good GMAT Score for MBA Admissions?
The honest answer is that a good GMAT score depends entirely on which programs you target and how the rest of your application reads. Three thresholds give you a practical framework.
M7 MBA Target Scores (Stanford, Wharton, HBS, Booth, Kellogg, Columbia, MIT Sloan)
M7 schools have reported recent class medians around 735 on Focus Edition (730 on legacy). Middle 80% ranges typically run from 685 to 765 Focus. A working target for a competitive M7 application is 685 or higher on Focus or 700 or higher on legacy, placing you in the top 12% of test-takers. Stanford GSB has historically reported the highest median (around 740 on Focus, 738 on legacy), with Wharton and HBS close behind. Below those benchmarks you are not disqualified, but the rest of your application carries more weight: undergraduate GPA, work experience, recommendations, and the personal essay all matter more.
Top 20 MBA Working Target
Programs ranked roughly 8 through 20 (Tuck, Yale SOM, Ross, Darden, NYU Stern, Anderson, McCombs, Tepper, Foster, Marshall, Fuqua, Kenan-Flagler) have reported class medians in the 685 to 715 Focus range (700 to 730 legacy). The 700-legacy benchmark (or 685 on Focus, the percentile-equivalent) has been a long-standing applicant target because programs in this tier accept lower scores when the rest of the application is strong, but admit rates climb noticeably once your composite hits the 88th percentile or higher. A 685 Focus or 700 legacy puts you at the top-20 working baseline.
Top 50 MBA Floor
Beyond the top 20, regional MBA programs at strong public universities and private business schools accept a broader composite range. Most top-50 programs admit applicants in the 645 to 685 Focus range (660 to 700 legacy), with class medians clustering around 660 on Focus and 680 on legacy. State flagship programs (Texas McCombs, Indiana Kelley, Michigan State Broad, Penn State Smeal) frequently admit applicants at 605 to 645 Focus when the candidate brings strong professional experience and a defined post-MBA career path. The 645 Focus or 660 legacy threshold is a working floor for top 50 candidacy.
How GMAC Builds the GMAT Score (and Why It's Not Exact)
GMAC keeps the production scoring algorithm proprietary for a reason: making it public would expose the test to gaming. What we know is structural. Each Focus Edition section uses an item-response theory model that adjusts for question difficulty as you answer. Easy correct answers raise your scaled score less than hard correct answers; missed easy questions damage your scaled score more than missed hard questions. The model produces a scaled section score (60 to 90) that places your performance against the historical reference group, accounting for the specific mix of questions you saw on test day.
The composite formula on Focus is published and linear, but the section scores feeding into it are not directly auditable. This calculator uses the published composite formula and recent GMAC percentile tables, but cannot replicate the section-level IRT adjustments. Use it for practice-test scoring (where a self-administered raw count is the input), score-target planning (where an applied target composite is the input), and cross-edition or GRE comparison. For an official score, take the actual GMAT through Pearson VUE or an at-home Online Whiteboard administration, and consult GMAC's exam scores page for the current year's tables.
How to Use the Backward Score Solver
The backward solver answers a different question than the forward calculator. Instead of "what is my composite given these section scores," it asks "what section scores do I need to reach this composite." Enter any target composite from 205 to 805 (Focus) or 200 to 800 (Legacy), and the tool returns the average per-section score required at that target, plus the cross-edition and GRE equivalents at that level.
Consider Maya, an applicant targeting Wharton's reported Focus median of 735. The backward solver returns: Q 88, V 88, DI 88 (average per-section to reach 735, since the formula applies symmetric weighting). Maya can compare those targets against her practice-test section breakdowns to identify the largest gap. If her recent practice averages are Q 84, V 82, DI 78, the solver makes the gap concrete: she needs roughly +4 on Quant, +6 on Verbal, and +10 on Data Insights to hit her target. Because the GMAT applies equating across forms, these targets are estimates, not guarantees, and actual requirements vary by 5 to 10 points depending on the specific test form. The backward solver is a planning tool, not a promise.
A second example: Daniel scored Q 78, V 82, DI 75 on a recent practice test, producing a 645 composite. He targets a 685 (legacy 700-equivalent). The solver shows he needs roughly Q 82, V 82, DI 82 average to reach 685. Looking at his weakest section (DI at 75), Daniel can prioritize Data Insights practice over additional Quant work, since closing that gap delivers the largest composite gain per study hour. Section balance matters: at high scores, raising your weakest section pays off more than pushing your strongest section higher.