Free University Admission Practice Tests
Practice for the University Practice with practice tests organized by subject, topic, and difficulty level.
Preparing to apply to a university in English, whether abroad or through an international program? Practice with over 1,000 tests and 10,000 questions that cover the core reasoning skills most admissions assessments measure: math, reading, writing, and scientific thinking.
Every answer comes with a step-by-step AI explanation, so you can diagnose weak spots without a tutor. Pick a section below and choose your difficulty - easy, medium, or hard.
Practice modes
Study mode: Answer questions and receive immediate feedback with detailed explanations. Use AI tutor Dani to resolve any doubts.
Exam mode: Simulate real conditions with a time limit per subject. Explanations are shown at the end.
Integrated AI Tutor
Dani, your AI tutor, is available during practice to explain concepts, resolve doubts, and guide you step by step through each question.
Frequently asked questions
Who are these practice tests for?
Students studying in English who are preparing for university admission - whether for programs in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, or any country that uses English-language admission assessments. Content is adapted from US-style standardized testing but the focus is on general reasoning, not any single official exam.
How is this different from ACT prep?
The underlying question bank overlaps with ACT material because the reasoning skills tested (math, reading comprehension, grammar, data analysis) are universal. However, this International track is framed for a global audience - no US-college-specific references. If you are specifically preparing for the ACT, switch to the United States version.
Do I need to create an account?
No. You can start practicing right away. Your progress is saved locally in your browser.
How does the AI tutor work?
After each answer it shows you the full solution, explains why the correct option is right, and breaks down why the other choices are wrong - so each mistake becomes a targeted lesson.