Free Numerical Reasoning Test

A free numerical reasoning test in the format employers use — percentages, ratios, averages and data tables. Instant score, a breakdown by skill, and a worked explanation for every answer.

By The TrainThinking Team · Educators & reasoning-assessment specialists · Updated June 17, 2026

20 questions · instant result

You'll work through questions on percentages, ratios, averages, rates and data tables. After each one you get the answer and a worked explanation. A basic calculator is fine — the skill is choosing the right calculation. Nothing is uploaded; only your score is saved on this device.

What a numerical reasoning test measures

Numerical reasoning tests — used across graduate schemes and job recruitment — measure how well you interpret numbers and data and draw correct conclusions under time pressure. The maths itself is GCSE-level; the challenge is reading each question accurately and choosing the right calculation.

The core skills

SkillWhat it covers
PercentagesPercentage of, percentage change, adding tax or a discount.
Ratios & proportionSharing in a ratio, scaling recipes, map scales, worker-days.
AveragesMeans, and working back from a target average.
RatesSpeed, pay, flow and output per unit of time.
Data tablesReading values from a table and combining them.

How to improve your score

Learn percentage change and ratio sharing cold, always check what units the answer needs, and be wary of tempting options that come from a common slip (for example, treating a 10% rise then a 10% fall as no change — it is actually a 1% fall). Reviewing the worked explanation for every item, as this test gives you, builds both speed and accuracy.

More practice

Numerical reasoning is one of several aptitude formats. Try the verbal reasoning test and the logical reasoning test to round out your preparation.

This test is for practice and self-assessment. It is not an official aptitude exam; your result estimates your skill on these questions.

Frequently asked questions

What is a numerical reasoning test?

A numerical reasoning test measures how well you interpret numbers and data — percentages, ratios, averages and figures presented in tables or charts — and draw correct conclusions under time pressure. It is widely used in graduate and job recruitment.

Can I use a calculator in a numerical reasoning test?

Most real tests allow a basic calculator, and many supply one on screen. The challenge is choosing the right calculation, not doing heavy arithmetic — so practise spotting what each question is actually asking.

How can I pass a numerical reasoning test?

Learn the core operations cold (percentage change, ratios, reading tables), check what units the answer needs, and watch for distractor options that result from a common slip. Reviewing the worked explanation for each item, as this test provides, builds speed and accuracy.

Is the numerical reasoning test free?

Yes. It is completely free, needs no sign-up, and your answers stay in your browser — only your best score is saved locally so you can retake it.

Related