ASVAB Practice Test
540 original practice questions across 9 subtests — including AFQT math/verbal, mechanical/electrical, auto/shop, and Assembling Objects spatial reasoning. Pick a subtest, run an AFQT drill, or take the full timed mock test. Free. No account required.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many questions and subtests are on this ASVAB practice test?
This trainer holds 540 original practice questions across 9 subtests: Arithmetic Reasoning, Word Knowledge, Paragraph Comprehension, Mathematics Knowledge, General Science, Auto & Shop, Mechanical Comprehension, Electronics Information, and Assembling Objects. You can drill a single subtest, run an AFQT-only drill, or take a full timed mock test.
Which subtests actually count for enlistment?
Your enlistment eligibility comes from the AFQT score, which is built from only four subtests: Arithmetic Reasoning, Mathematics Knowledge, Word Knowledge, and Paragraph Comprehension. The other subtests do not affect whether you qualify to enlist — they feed the line (composite) scores that decide which jobs you qualify for. If the AFQT is your bottleneck, prioritize those four.
What is the difference between the AFQT and line scores?
The AFQT (drawn from AR, MK, WK, and PC) is the enlistment gate — the percentile every branch uses to decide if you can join. Line or composite scores combine different subtests, including the technical ones like Mechanical Comprehension, Electronics Information, Auto & Shop, and General Science, and determine which specific MOS or rating you qualify for. High AFQT, low technical scores can still lock you out of certain jobs.
Do practice-test scores predict my real ASVAB score?
Treat practice results as a training signal, not a prediction. These questions match the format and difficulty of the real subtests, but this is a browser tool with an original question bank — it does not compute an official AFQT percentile or line score, and no practice test guarantees your real result. Use it to find weak subtests and build timing, then confirm readiness with official materials.
How should I use this to prep?
Start by drilling one subtest at a time to find where you are weak, using the instant feedback to learn from misses. If enlistment eligibility is the goal, run the AFQT drill to focus on the four subtests that count for it. When you are consistent, take the full timed mock test to build pacing under a clock — the real ASVAB is timed, and running out of time hurts as much as not knowing the answer.