GMAT Focus Quant: Every Question Type With Worked Examples

Quick Answer: GMAT Focus Quant is a 45-minute, 21-question Problem Solving-only section scored 60–90. The cut content is what defines the new test: Geometry is gone from Quant, Data Sufficiency moved to Data Insights, and Sentence Correction was removed entirely from Verbal. What's left is a tighter syllabus — arithmetic, algebra, word problems, number properties, ratios and percents, exponents and roots, statistics, and combinatorics — which means a focused 6-week study plan now reaches a 78+ score (top-15% percentile) for most diligent test-takers.

Category: MBA Admissions

GMAT Focus Quant is a 45-minute, 21-question Problem Solving-only section scored 60–90. The cut content is what defines the new test: Geometry is gone from Quant, Data Sufficiency moved to Data Insights, and Sentence Correction was removed entirely from Verbal. What's left is ...

Key Statistics

  • 21 questions / 45 min — ≈2:08 per question, no calculator (Source: GMAC)
  • 0 geometry questions — Geometry was removed in Feb 2024 (Source: GMAC official guide)
  • 78+ — Quant score that puts you in the top 15% (Source: GMAC percentile tables)

GMAT Focus Quant is a 45-minute, 21-question Problem Solving-only section scored 60–90. The cut content is what defines the new test: Geometry is gone from Quant, Data Sufficiency moved to Data Insights, and Sentence Correction was removed entirely from Verbal. What's left is a tighter syllabus — arithmetic, algebra, word problems, number properties, ratios and percents, exponents and roots, statistics, and combinatorics — which means a focused 6-week study plan now reaches a 78+ score (top-15% percentile) for most diligent test-takers. ### Key statistics - **21 questions in 45 minutes** — average 2:08 per question (GMAC) - **Score range 60–90**, with 78+ in the top 15% of test-takers - **No geometry, no data sufficiency** in this section — both removed in Feb 2024 - **No calculator** — bring your mental math ## What's actually tested The post-Feb 2024 Quant syllabus is tighter than most prep books reflect. Eight content areas, in roughly the frequency you'll see them on the official Focus practice tests: | Topic | Approx. share of section | Notes | |-------|--------------------------|-------| | Word problems | 22% | Translation, age, mixture, distance/rate | | Number properties | 18% | Divisibility, primes, evens/odds, units digits | | Algebra | 16% | Linear systems, quadratics, inequalities | | Arithmetic | 14% | Fractions, decimals, percent change | | Ratios and percents | 12% | Proportional reasoning, percent of percent | | Exponents and roots | 8% | Same-base manipulation | | Statistics | 6% | Mean, median, range, standard deviation concept | | Combinatorics and probability | 4% | Slot method, basic prob rules | If you came from a classic GMAT prep book, **delete the geometry chapter from your study plan**. It is not on Quant. (Geometry concepts can still surface in Data Insights — see the [Data Insights guide](/blog/gmat-focus-data-insights-section-complete-strategy-2026).) ## Worked example: number properties > *Problem.* If `n` is a positive integer and `n!` is divisible by `28` but not by `56`, what is the smallest possible value of `n`? **Solution.** `28 = 2² × 7`. `56 = 2³ × 7`. So `n!` must contain at least two 2s and one 7, but not three 2s along with the 7. The smallest factorial containing a 7 is `7!` — but `7!` contains `2⁴`, which makes it divisible by `56`. So we need an even smaller story. There is no `n` where `n!` contains exactly `2² × 7` and no more, because as soon as `n ≥ 7`, you've already accumulated `2⁴` from `7! = 7 × 6 × 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 × 1`. **Answer: no such `n` exists.** This is a classic Focus number-properties trap — the right answer is sometimes "none" or "cannot be determined." ## Worked example: word problem > *Problem.* A jar contains red and blue marbles in the ratio `3:5`. After 12 red marbles are added, the ratio becomes `3:4`. How many blue marbles are in the jar? **Solution.** Let original red = `3k`, blue = `5k`. After adding 12 reds: `(3k + 12) / 5k = 3/4`. Cross-multiply: `4(3k + 12) = 15k` → `12k + 48 = 15k` → `k = 16`. **Blue = 5k = 80.** Word problems on Focus reward setup speed; spend 30 seconds on translation, then arithmetic. ## Worked example: percents > *Problem.* A stock fell 20% in March, then rose 25% in April. What was the net change? **Solution.** Start at `100`. After March: `80`. After April: `80 × 1.25 = 100`. **Net change: 0%.** This "down X%, up Y%" pattern appears in roughly one of every two Focus exams — memorize that down-20-up-25 returns to the original. ## What top scorers do differently 1. **Use the bookmark feature deliberately.** Flag any question that takes more than 2:30 of thinking. Skip, finish the section, return. 2. **Translate first, calculate second.** Most word problem errors are translation errors — write the equation cleanly before manipulating. 3. **Memorize the squares to 30 and the cubes to 15.** Saves 10–15 seconds per arithmetic question. 4. **Drill number properties last.** It's the highest-density topic and the one most students underprepare. Aim for 95% accuracy on number-properties drills before test day. For unlimited practice, see [WitPrep's free practice library](/free-practice) and the [GRE-to-GMAT calculator](/gre-to-gmat-calculator) if you're cross-shopping the GRE. ## Common questions See the FAQ section above. ## Sources 1. GMAC, *GMAT Focus Edition Official Guide* (2025) 2. GMAC, *GMAT Focus Percentile Rankings* (2025) ### Going deeper: how to fold this into a 12-week GMAT Focus plan A 12-week study plan that actually moves your Focus score from a baseline diagnostic to a target score has four phases — and the topic of "GMAT Focus Quant" sits squarely inside Phase 2. **Phase 1 (weeks 1–2): diagnose and rebuild fundamentals.** Take an official GMAC practice test cold, read every wrong-answer explanation, and rebuild any topic where you missed more than one question — usually number properties, percent/ratio, and core reading comprehension. **Phase 2 (weeks 3–7): question-type mastery.** This is where the strategy in this article pays off. Drill the question type until your accuracy is over 80% on a fresh, untimed set, then introduce timing. **Phase 3 (weeks 8–10): mixed timed sets and section-level pacing.** Use the GMAC Official Practice Tests on the actual on-screen interface (not a PDF) so the answer-edit feature, the bookmarking workflow, and the Data Insights calculator become muscle memory. **Phase 4 (weeks 11–12): polish and taper.** Take one final official practice test 7–10 days out, identify the last two or three weak areas, and stop drilling new content 48 hours before test day. This phased structure is what separates students who jump 60+ Focus points from those who plateau. The most common failure mode: skipping Phase 1, "saving" official practice tests for later, and then arriving at test day having never used the real Focus interface. ### Common pitfalls and how to avoid them The biggest mistake test takers make on this topic is treating GMAT Focus prep like classic-GMAT prep. The Focus Edition rewards different behaviors. The answer-edit feature changes how you should triage hard questions: skip the killer, mark it, and come back. The shorter format means fatigue management matters less and pacing matters more — every minute lost to a brutal question is a minute you do not have to recover. And because Data Insights now contributes equally to your total, ignoring it (as test takers used to ignore IR) caps your score below the 645/700 line. A second pitfall is **over-relying on third-party question banks**. Independent prep companies are not allowed to scrape GMAC's question pool, so their "GMAT-style" questions drift in style and difficulty. For the last 6–8 weeks before your test, your timed practice should be 80%+ official GMAC content (Official Guide, Official Practice Tests, Question Bank). ### Building the right cadence around test day According to GMAC's application trends data, about 70% of MBA applicants take the test more than once. Plan for that. Schedule your first attempt 8–10 weeks out from your earliest application deadline so you have time for one retake without rushing the rest of your application. ### Score benchmarks for top MBA programs (Focus scale) What you are aiming for matters as much as how you study. Here is what current GMAT Focus medians look like at top MBA programs, drawn from the most recent published class profiles and converted to the Focus scale where schools still report on the legacy 800 scale: - **M7 schools (Stanford, Harvard, Wharton, Booth, Kellogg, MIT, Columbia):** Focus median in the 685–720 band (legacy equivalent: 728–740). A 705 Focus puts you at parity with the median; a 645 keeps you in the conversation if other parts of your application are strong. - **Top-15 schools (Tuck, Yale, Ross, Stern, Darden, Duke, Haas, UCLA, McCombs):** Focus median in the 645–685 band (legacy 700–720). A 645 here puts you at the median. - **Top-25 schools:** Focus median in the 615–655 band (legacy 680–710). A 605 keeps you competitive. Adcoms at every top program will tell you that the GMAT score is one of many data points — but data points have weight, and the Focus median is the single most-quoted number in admissions decisions for borderline applicants. If you are within 10 Focus points of your target school's median, focus your remaining time on essays, recommendations, and interview prep instead of grinding for one more retake. ### What to do in the next 7 days Strategy is only useful if it changes what you do tomorrow. Here is a one-week action plan to convert the ideas in this article into a measurable score lift on "GMAT Focus Quant": **Day 1:** Take a focused 20-question diagnostic on the question type or topic discussed above, untimed. Score it. Log every miss with two notes: which step in the framework broke down, and what you would do differently next time. **Day 2:** Re-read the framework section above. Build a one-page cheat sheet in your own words — handwritten, not typed. The act of summarizing in your own words is what moves the framework from short-term to long-term memory. **Day 3:** Drill 30 timed questions of the same type, but at 1.25× the official pace. The 25% time buffer lets you slow down at the decision points (where the framework matters) and speed up on the mechanical steps. **Day 4:** Rest from new content. Review your wrong-answer log from days 1 and 3. Look for the *single most common mistake type* — that is your highest-leverage fix. **Day 5:** Drill 30 timed questions at the official pace. Track accuracy and average time per question. The goal is 80%+ accuracy at official pace by end of week. **Day 6:** Take a mixed-section practice set so the topic does not live in isolation. Real test conditions never give you 30 of the same question type in a row. **Day 7:** Reflect. Did your accuracy on this question type move up? If yes, lock in the cheat sheet and rotate to your next weakest topic. If no, the issue is usually one of three things: incomplete fundamentals (back up to a content review), poor timing discipline (drill at 1.25× longer), or test anxiety (practice with a stopwatch on the desk). This 7-day micro-cycle is the building block. Stack 6–8 of these cycles and you have the foundation of a 60-day plan that actually moves the needle. A note on tracking: the single most underrated tool in standardized-test prep is a structured wrong-answer log. After every drill session, write down the question stem (or a paraphrase), why you missed it, and the rule or framework you should have applied. Review the log weekly. By week 4 the patterns become impossible to miss — and the patterns are where the points are. Test takers who skip the log routinely plateau; test takers who keep one consistently jump 50–100 points on the GMAT Focus, 5–10 points on each GRE section, and 80–150 points on the Digital SAT total. One last reminder: official content beats third-party content for the final 30 days of prep, every single time. Save your highest-quality official practice material for the back half of your study window so your final timed sections mirror the real test as closely as possible. The score reports from those final sessions are the best signal of test-day readiness — far better than any third-party "predictor" tool, and they will give you the calibration you need to walk into test day knowing exactly what score to expect within a 20-point margin. A final word on test-day execution. Once you have done the prep work, the actual test day comes down to two skills: pacing discipline and triage. Pacing discipline is the willingness to keep moving when a question is taking too long. Triage is the judgment to know which questions are worth fighting for and which are worth a confident guess so you can come back. Both skills are built only by full-length timed practice under realistic conditions — a quiet room, no phone, an actual stopwatch. Build that habit in the last three weeks and your test-day performance will track your practice scores within 30 points. ### Further reading on WitPrep - [free GMAT Focus practice library](/free-practice) - [MBA rankings hub with current Focus medians](/mba-rankings) - [GMAT-to-GRE score conversion table](/gmat-to-gre-conversion-table) - [GRE vs GMAT comparison for MBA applicants](/gre-vs-gmat) - [Data Insights deep-dive](/blog/gmat-focus-data-insights-section-complete-strategy-2026) - [score-700+ playbook](/blog/how-to-score-700-plus-gmat-focus-edition-from-600-baseline) --- **Sources cited in this article:** GMAC, ETS, College Board, Desmos, and Graduate Management Admission Council (2024) — see the full source list below for direct links to each citation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is GMAT Focus Quant easier than the classic GMAT Quant?

Topically yes — geometry is removed and DS moved out — but per-question difficulty is comparable. The shorter section length and the option to bookmark up to 3 questions makes the test more strategic rather than easier overall.

Do I need to memorize geometry formulas for the Focus Edition?

Not for Quant. Geometry concepts can still appear inside Data Insights (e.g., a graphics interpretation showing a coordinate plane), but the dedicated geometry questions are gone.

What's the highest-frequency question type in Focus Quant?

Word problems (translation + algebra) and number properties consistently appear most often — together they make up roughly 50% of the section across the latest official practice tests.

Can I use a calculator on GMAT Focus Quant?

No. The calculator is available only in Data Insights. Quant is mental-math-and-scratchpad only, just like the classic GMAT.

How long should I study for a 78+ Quant score?

Most students reach 78+ with 80–120 hours of focused study spread over 6–8 weeks, assuming a baseline of high-school algebra fluency. Add another 30–40 hours if your baseline is weak.

Sources & References

  1. GMAC: GMAT Focus Edition Official Guide — Graduate Management Admission Council (2025)
  2. GMAC: GMAT Focus Score Conversion — Graduate Management Admission Council (2025)
  3. GMAC: Application Trends Survey — Graduate Management Admission Council (2024)

Vocabulary in this post

  • focus — The center of interest or activity
  • minute — very small
  • statistics — Numerical data collected and classified
  • diligent — Having or showing care and conscientiousness in one's work
  • range — The extent to which something varies; a set of different things

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