This sample mirrors the Verbal Reasoning section of the current GMAT™ Focus Edition: 23 questions to be completed in 45 minutes, drawn only from Reading Comprehension and Critical Reasoning (the Focus Edition no longer tests Sentence Correction).
Each question has five answer choices, A through E, and exactly one is correct. Choose the best available answer; on Critical Reasoning, that means the choice that most precisely does what the question asks. Tap a choice to select it — nothing is marked right or wrong until you submit.
To simulate test conditions, set a timer for 45 minutes and work without pausing. When you are done, press Submit & see results at the bottom: you will then see your score, the correct answer to every question, and an explanation of why it is right. Your work stays on this page only and is not saved or sent anywhere.
Section
Reading Comprehension
Passages 1–3 · Questions 1–10
Passage 1Social Science
For decades, economists treated differences in firm productivity as largely a function of capital intensity and workforce skill, assuming that managerial competence diffused freely across an industry once a superior method had been demonstrated. Recent large-scale surveys of manufacturing plants in a dozen countries complicate this assumption. The data reveal a persistent dispersion in management quality—measured through structured interviews assessing target-setting, monitoring, and incentive design—not only between countries but among plants within the same country, industry, and even ownership group.
What sustains this dispersion? One explanation emphasizes informational frictions: managers frequently overrate their own practices, and absent precise external benchmarks they perceive no reason to change. When researchers provided a randomized subset of textile firms with free consulting that diagnosed specific weaknesses, the adopting plants raised output without proportionate increases in inputs, and the gains persisted for years. That persistence is itself informative; had the relevant knowledge been genuinely free, competitors would presumably have closed the gap unaided.
A second explanation locates the friction in the labor market rather than the information environment. Well-managed firms tend to delegate authority, which is valuable only when middle managers can be trusted and monitored. Where the supply of educated managers is thin, or where weak contract enforcement makes owners reluctant to cede control to non-family members, even a firm that recognizes the value of delegation may rationally decline to adopt it. On this account, poor management is less a mistake than an adaptation to a constraining environment.
The two explanations carry different policy implications. If informational frictions dominate, the diffusion of benchmarking data and consulting could yield large returns. If the binding constraints are instead institutional, such interventions would produce only transient effects, and durable improvement would require changes to the surrounding market for managerial talent and the legal infrastructure that governs it.
Questions 1–4 refer to the passage above.
1Reading Comprehension — Main Idea
The primary purpose of the passage is to
Why
The passage opens with a phenomenon (persistent dispersion in management quality), then lays out two explanations—informational frictions and labor-market/institutional constraints—and closes by noting that they “carry different policy implications.” That is exactly choice (D). (B) overstates the case: the author never endorses the first explanation over the second. (C) is wrong because the author keeps the two explanations as live alternatives rather than reconciling them. (A) and (E) seize on details (the consulting study; managerial supply) and mistake them for the whole purpose.
2Reading Comprehension — Inference
The passage indicates that the persistence of the productivity gains following the consulting intervention is significant because it
Why
The author writes that the persistence is “informative” because, “had the relevant knowledge been genuinely free, competitors would presumably have closed the gap unaided.” Gains that last therefore imply the knowledge was not freely available—choice (A). (D) and (E) contradict the point (persistent gains mean rivals did not catch up). (B) (“all”) and (C) (“absent”) are far stronger than anything the passage supports.
3Reading Comprehension — Detail
According to the second explanation discussed in the passage, a firm operating where contracts are weakly enforced might decline to delegate authority because
Why
The passage states that “weak contract enforcement makes owners reluctant to cede control to non-family members,” because delegation “is valuable only when middle managers can be trusted and monitored.” That is choice (E). (D) twists the passage's language about trust and monitoring into an unstated claim about “monitoring practices.” (A), (B), and (C) are not supported.
4Reading Comprehension — Function
The author's statement that poor management may be “less a mistake than an adaptation to a constraining environment” primarily serves to
Why
The sentence summarizes the upshot of the second (institutional) explanation: if delegation is rationally avoided given the environment, then weak management is a sensible response rather than an error—choice (B). It does not rank the two explanations (A), introduce a new one (C), challenge measurement (D), or claim all policy is futile (E—the final paragraph in fact describes interventions that could help).
Passage 2Natural Science
Microscopic marine algae, or phytoplankton, draw carbon dioxide from surface waters during photosynthesis; when they die, a fraction of their carbon-rich remains sinks into the deep ocean, where it can stay sequestered for centuries. This “biological pump” is constrained in large regions of the ocean not by sunlight or by the major nutrients nitrogen and phosphorus, which are abundant there, but by the scarcity of iron, a micronutrient essential to photosynthesis. The observation prompted a provocative proposal: seeding such waters with soluble iron might trigger vast plankton blooms that would draw down atmospheric carbon and counteract warming.
Early small-scale experiments confirmed that added iron does induce blooms. Yet inducing a bloom is not the same as sequestering carbon. For the scheme to work, the carbon fixed at the surface must actually sink and remain isolated from the atmosphere; if the bloom is instead consumed by grazers near the surface, or if the sinking organic matter is respired back into carbon dioxide in shallow water, little net sequestration occurs. Measuring the fraction that reaches the deep ocean has proven far harder than measuring the bloom itself, and the few experiments designed to track export have yielded modest and variable results.
Critics raise a further concern. Large blooms can deplete the very nutrients that downstream ecosystems depend upon, and their decay can create oxygen-poor zones hostile to marine life. Proponents counter that these effects, while real, may be acceptable if the climatic benefit is large and if seeding is confined to regions where ecological disruption is minimal. The dispute, however, cannot be settled by appeals to plausibility; it turns on quantities—how much carbon is durably exported per unit of iron added—that remain poorly constrained by the available evidence.
Questions 5–7 refer to the passage above.
5Reading Comprehension — Main Idea
The passage is primarily concerned with
Why
Across its three paragraphs the passage sets out the proposal, then separates what experiments have shown (iron induces blooms) from what they have not (how much carbon is durably exported), and ends by saying the dispute hinges on still-uncertain quantities. That weighing of established versus uncertain is choice (C). (A) overgeneralizes (“throughout the world's oceans”; the passage says “large regions”). (B) takes a side the author does not take. (D) is background only. (E) is wrong—the author leaves the dispute unresolved.
6Reading Comprehension — Inference
The passage suggests that demonstrating that added iron “does induce blooms” is insufficient to establish the proposal's viability primarily because
Why
The second paragraph states that “inducing a bloom is not the same as sequestering carbon”: if the bloom is eaten near the surface or respired in shallow water, the carbon returns to the atmosphere and little is stored—choice (D). (E) reverses the passage (grazers are precisely a way the carbon escapes). (A), (B), and (C) raise issues the passage does not make central to this point.
7Reading Comprehension — Detail
The author indicates that the dispute between proponents and critics ultimately depends on
Why
The final sentence is explicit: the dispute “turns on quantities—how much carbon is durably exported per unit of iron added.” That is choice (B). (A) (“any … whatsoever”) is too absolute. (C) and (E) are details, and (D) misstates the issue—the mechanism of the pump is not in question.
Passage 3Humanities
Historians long portrayed the craft guilds of medieval and early modern Europe as obstacles to economic growth: monopolistic associations that suppressed competition, restricted entry, and resisted technological change in order to protect their members' incomes. On this view, the gradual erosion of guild privileges was a precondition for the industrial expansion that followed. Recent scholarship has complicated, though not entirely overturned, this picture.
Revisionists point out that guilds performed functions that markets of the period struggled to supply on their own. By certifying that a craftsman had completed a recognized apprenticeship, guilds furnished a signal of quality to buyers who could not easily assess goods before purchase. By enforcing standards and adjudicating disputes among members, they reduced the transaction costs of exchange in an era of weak public courts. And by organizing training, they helped transmit skills that were difficult to codify and could be acquired only through prolonged practice under a master. Where these functions were valuable, the revisionists argue, guilds may have raised rather than lowered economic efficiency.
Skeptics of the revisionist account do not deny that guilds supplied such services, but question whether the services required the exclusionary privileges that guilds in fact possessed. A body could in principle certify quality or train apprentices without also holding the legal power to bar non-members from practicing a trade. The persistence of that exclusionary power, the skeptics contend, is better explained by the guilds' interest in limiting competition than by any contribution to efficiency. The revisionists' functional benefits and the traditional view's monopolistic costs are thus not mutually exclusive; the live question is which predominated, and under what conditions—a question that the surviving records, weighted toward the affairs of the guilds themselves, do not straightforwardly answer.
Questions 8–10 refer to the passage above.
8Reading Comprehension — Main Idea
The primary purpose of the passage is to
Why
The passage lays out the traditional view, the revisionist response, and the skeptics' rejoinder, then states that the two sides are not mutually exclusive and that “the live question is which predominated”—a question the records do not settle. That is choice (A). (C) and (D) take sides the author does not. (E) is the skeptics' position, not the author's purpose, and is overstated. (B) describes a detail mentioned only in passing.
9Reading Comprehension — Inference
The skeptics described in the final paragraph would be most likely to agree with which of the following statements?
Why
The skeptics concede that guilds supplied useful services but argue that “a body could in principle certify quality or train apprentices without also holding the legal power to bar non-members”—choice (D). (A) and (C) contradict the skeptics' explicit concession. (B) contradicts the passage (markets “struggled to supply” these functions). (E) is too strong and is not the skeptics' claim.
10Reading Comprehension — Function
The author's observation that the surviving records are “weighted toward the affairs of the guilds themselves” functions primarily to
Why
The clause appears immediately after the author names the “live question” of which effect predominated, and explains why that question is hard to answer: the evidence that survives is skewed toward the guilds' own perspective—choice (E). It does not endorse either side (A, B), introduce overlooked evidence (C), or make a point about training records (D).
Section
Critical Reasoning
Questions 11–23
11Critical Reasoning — Weaken
A city's transit authority noted that, after it installed real-time arrival displays at bus stops along its busiest route, ridership on that route increased by 12 percent over the following year. The authority concluded that the displays, by reducing passengers' uncertainty about waiting times, had made the service more attractive and thereby increased ridership.
Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the authority's conclusion?
Why
The conclusion is causal: the displays raised ridership. (B) supplies a powerful alternative cause—service nearly doubled in frequency over the same year—that could fully account for the 12 percent rise, undercutting the claim that the displays were responsible. (C) actually strengthens the argument by ruling out a general upward trend. (E) offers only a “modest” alternative and is far weaker than (B). (A) and (D) concern cost and accuracy, not what caused the increase.
12Critical Reasoning — Assumption
Pharmaceutical researchers have developed a compound that, in laboratory tests, kills the bacterium responsible for a common livestock infection. The company plans to market the compound as a feed additive, reasoning that farmers who add it to their animals' feed will reduce the incidence of the infection in their herds and thereby lower their veterinary costs.
The company's reasoning depends on which of the following assumptions?
Why
The evidence is that the compound kills the bacterium in the lab; the plan is to deliver it through feed. The argument quietly assumes the compound still works once eaten—choice (C). Negate it (the compound loses its effect when ingested) and the plan collapses, the hallmark of a required assumption. (A) (“more effective than any”) and (B) (“largest single source”) are too strong and unnecessary. (D) concerns marketing uptake, not the logic that the additive would reduce infection. (E) addresses a long-run risk the immediate conclusion does not require.
13Critical Reasoning — Strengthen
Nutritionists have observed that people who regularly eat breakfast tend to weigh less, on average, than people who habitually skip it. Some have inferred that eating breakfast helps regulate appetite throughout the day, leading those who eat it to consume fewer total calories.
Which of the following, if true, most strengthens this inference?
Why
The inference is causal—that breakfast curbs later eating. (E) is direct experimental support: when breakfast is assigned at random and other factors are held similar, breakfast eaters eat less later, exactly the proposed mechanism. (C) weakens the inference by offering a rival explanation (exercise, not appetite, lowers weight). (D) weakens it by suggesting reverse causation (weight-conscious people skip breakfast). (A) and (B) are irrelevant to total calorie intake.
14Critical Reasoning — Evaluate
A regional newspaper introduced a paid digital subscription, placing most of its online articles behind a paywall while keeping a selection freely accessible. In the year after the change, the paper's total digital advertising revenue fell by 8 percent. The publisher concluded that the paywall had harmed the paper's advertising business by reducing the number of readers exposed to ads.
Which of the following would be most useful to determine in evaluating the publisher's conclusion?
Why
The conclusion blames the paywall for the 8 percent advertising drop. (A) tests an alternative cause: if digital ad rates fell industry-wide, the decline would have happened regardless of the paywall, so the answer to (A) swings the argument either way—the mark of a good evaluation question. (B) bears on whether the overall change was profitable, not on whether the paywall caused the ad decline. (C) concerns print, a separate channel. (D) and (E) are tangential to the causal claim.
15Critical Reasoning — Boldface
Manufacturer: For years, our factory has discarded the metal shavings produced as a byproduct of machining, paying a contractor to haul them away. A consultant has now proposed that we install equipment to compress and sell these shavings to a recycler. Although the equipment would be costly, the revenue from selling the shavings would, within three years, exceed the combined cost of the equipment and the haulage fees we would no longer pay. We should therefore install the equipment. But this recommendation overlooks a crucial point: the recycler that currently buys compressed shavings has announced that it will close its only regional facility next year, and no comparable buyer operates nearby.
In the argument, the two portions in boldface play which of the following roles?
Why
The first boldface is a forward-looking claim (revenue will exceed costs within three years) advanced to support installing the equipment. The argument then turns against that recommendation: the second boldface—the buyer is closing—is evidence that undermines the prediction, since the projected revenue depends on a buyer that will no longer exist. That is choice (D). (B) reverses the roles. (A) is wrong because the argument does not endorse the recommendation. (C) and (E) mischaracterize the second portion.
16Critical Reasoning — Explain the Discrepancy
In a large clinical network, hospitals that adopted a new electronic checklist for surgical teams recorded, in the year after adoption, a higher rate of reported surgical complications than hospitals that did not adopt the checklist. Yet the checklist was carefully designed to reduce errors, and several earlier trials had shown that it does reduce the actual occurrence of complications.
Which of the following, if true, most helps to resolve the apparent discrepancy?
Why
The puzzle is that a checklist known to reduce actual complications is associated with more reported complications. (C) dissolves it by separating reporting from reality: the checklist itself prompts staff to record minor complications that used to go undocumented, so the reported rate rises even as the true rate falls. (D) would explain more actual complications at adopting hospitals, contradicting the stipulation that the checklist works, and so fits the facts less well. (A), (B), and (E) leave the contrast unexplained.
17Critical Reasoning — Flaw
Columnist: Advocates of a four-day workweek claim that it would increase employee productivity. They point to a software firm that switched to a four-day week and saw its output per employee rise by 15 percent. But this proves nothing about workplaces in general. The firm in question employs only highly skilled programmers, who are unusually able to compress their work into fewer hours; most jobs are not like this.
The columnist's argument is most vulnerable to criticism on the grounds that it
Why
Showing that the advocates' single example is unrepresentative undermines their support, but it does not show their general claim is false—a weak argument for a conclusion is not a refutation of it. The columnist nonetheless moves from “this proves nothing” to treating the claim as discredited, which is the flaw in (B). (E) misreads the columnist, who does not assert that the four-day week would reduce productivity. (A), (C), and (D) point to issues the columnist does not actually rely on.
18Critical Reasoning — Inference
Between 2010 and 2020, the number of farms in a certain country classified as “small” (under 50 hectares) declined by 18 percent, while the total area of farmland classified as small declined by only 4 percent. Over the same period, the number of “large” farms (over 500 hectares) rose by 9 percent, and the total area they occupied rose by 22 percent.
The statements above, if true, most strongly support which of the following?
Why
Average small-farm size equals total small-farm area divided by the number of small farms. The number fell much faster (18 percent) than the area (4 percent), so the average area per small farm must have risen—choice (D). (A), (B), and (C) require information about intermediate farms or where lost farmland went, which the passage does not give. (E) introduces profitability, never mentioned.
19Critical Reasoning — Strengthen
Researchers studying a species of songbird found that males with more complex songs fathered more offspring than males with simpler songs. They hypothesized that females prefer to mate with males whose songs are more complex, and that song complexity therefore confers a reproductive advantage.
Which of the following, if true, most strengthens the researchers' hypothesis?
Why
The hypothesized mechanism is a female preference for complex song. (A) provides direct evidence of that preference: females actively gravitate toward complex song even when it is the only variable (recorded playback), supporting the link between complexity and mating success. (D) weakens the hypothesis by offering a rival cause—better territories, not song, could drive reproductive success. (B) only removes one confound without adding positive support; (C) and (E) are neutral or work against the claim.
20Critical Reasoning — Weaken
Editorial: Our state should not raise its minimum wage. When the neighboring state raised its minimum wage two years ago, employment in its restaurant industry grew more slowly over the following year than restaurant employment did in our state, where the wage was left unchanged. Raising the minimum wage evidently suppresses job growth.
Which of the following, if true, most weakens the editorial's argument?
Why
The editorial blames the wage increase for the neighbor's slower job growth. (C) shows that the neighbor's restaurant employment was already growing more slowly before any wage change, so the slower growth reflects a long-standing difference between the states rather than the new policy—removing the basis for the causal claim. (E) is consistent with the argument rather than against it; (A), (B), and (D) do not bear on whether the wage caused the gap.
21Critical Reasoning — Assumption
A national park introduced a permit system limiting the number of hikers allowed on its most popular trail each day. Park managers expect that, by reducing foot traffic, the system will allow the trail's vegetation, which had been damaged by overuse, to recover.
Which of the following is an assumption on which the park managers' expectation depends?
Why
The expectation is that reduced traffic will let the trail's vegetation recover. That presupposes recovery is still possible—choice (E). Negate it (the vegetation is damaged beyond recovery) and reducing traffic cannot achieve the stated goal, so the assumption is required. (D) concerns vegetation on other trails, which is outside the conclusion's narrow claim about the popular trail. (A), (B), and (C) are not necessary to the expectation.
22Critical Reasoning — Explain the Discrepancy
A consumer-electronics company found that when it lowered the price of its flagship headphones by 20 percent, its total revenue from the headphones increased. When it later lowered the price by a further 20 percent, however, its total revenue from the headphones decreased.
Which of the following, if true, best explains why the second price reduction affected revenue differently from the first?
Why
Revenue is price multiplied by quantity. (B) gives the precise reason the two cuts diverged: after the first cut, unit sales rose by more than the price fell, so revenue went up; after the second, sales rose by less than the price fell, so revenue went down. (A) and (C) offer possible background factors but do not explain the difference as directly. (D) concerns cost, not revenue. (E) bears on profit per unit, not total revenue.
23Critical Reasoning — Principle (Application)
Principle: A company is justified in monitoring an employee's work communications only if the employee has been clearly informed in advance that such monitoring may occur and the monitoring is limited to communications made using company-provided systems.
Which of the following judgments most closely conforms to the principle stated above?
Why
The principle permits monitoring only when both conditions hold: advance notice and a company-provided system. (A) satisfies both—an internal chat platform is a company system, and the employee was told at orientation—so the “justified” verdict conforms. (B) fails the company-system condition (a personal account). (E) ignores the notice condition. (C) and (D) reach “not justified” for reasons the principle does not endorse: the principle requires that the employee be informed, not that the employee have actually read the notice (C), and it would already deny justification in (D) because a public site is not a company system, not because of the hours worked.
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