GMAT Superscore is coming, and it could change how candidates think about retesting, performance anxiety, and an imperfect test day.
In this episode of Inside the GMAT, GMAC Zach sits down with Charles Bibilos, founder of GMAT Ninja, to explain what GMAT Superscore means in practice.
Charles breaks down how a superscore combines your strongest Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights section scores across multiple eligible exam attempts. He also explains which candidates are most likely to benefit, why an uneven test day no longer needs to feel catastrophic, and how business schools may interpret a candidate's testing history.
They also discuss some of the early misconceptions surrounding GMAT Superscore—including the idea that candidates should study for one section at a time or repeatedly take the exam in an attempt to game the system.
You'll learn:
How GMAT Superscore is calculated
When a superscore may differ meaningfully from your best single-attempt score
Why candidates should still prepare for all three sections
How superscoring may help candidates manage test-day anxiety
Why score improvement and multiple attempts are not viewed negatively by schools
How financial access and testing context may affect the conversation
What questions remain about how schools will report and use superscores
Charles's three biggest pieces of advice for candidates
The biggest takeaway: prepare to perform your best across the entire exam—but remember that one difficult section or one bad stretch of questions does not have to erase everything you accomplished that day.
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