What Is the ASVAB?

The Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) is a standardized aptitude test used by all branches of the U.S. military. It was developed to measure a recruit's potential in various cognitive and technical skill areas — and to predict how well they'll perform in specific military occupational roles.

The ASVAB isn't a knowledge test in the way a school exam is. It tests aptitude — your natural ability to learn and apply concepts in areas like math, science, mechanics, and verbal reasoning. That means preparation matters. You can improve your score with focused studying, even if you haven't been in a classroom for years.

Quick fact: Over 1 million people take the ASVAB every year. It's administered at Military Entrance Processing Stations (MEPS), at high schools through the Student ASVAB program, and at some recruiting offices as a practice pre-test.

What's on the ASVAB? The 10 Subtests Explained

The ASVAB is made up of 10 subtests, each measuring a different aptitude area. Your performance on these subtests produces both your overall AFQT score (for enlistment eligibility) and individual line scores (for job qualification).

Subtest Abbreviation What It Tests AFQT?
Arithmetic ReasoningARWord problems using basic math✓ Yes
Word KnowledgeWKVocabulary and word meaning✓ Yes
Paragraph ComprehensionPCReading and understanding passages✓ Yes
Math KnowledgeMKAlgebra, geometry, number theory✓ Yes
General ScienceGSBiology, chemistry, physics, earth scienceNo
Electronics InformationEICircuits, electrical systems, radioNo
Auto & Shop InformationASVehicles, tools, woodworkingNo
Mechanical ComprehensionMCGears, pulleys, levers, physics conceptsNo
Assembling ObjectsAOSpatial reasoning and assemblyNo
Verbal ExpressionVEComposite of WK + PC✓ Yes

The four subtests that make up your AFQT score are: Arithmetic Reasoning (AR), Math Knowledge (MK), Word Knowledge (WK), and Paragraph Comprehension (PC). These are the ones that determine whether you can enlist at all. The remaining subtests determine which jobs you qualify for.

What Is the AFQT Score — and Why Does It Matter?

Your AFQT (Armed Forces Qualification Test) score is the most important number that comes out of your ASVAB. It's expressed as a percentile from 1 to 99, and it tells the military how you performed compared to a nationally representative sample of 18–23-year-olds.

An AFQT of 50 means you scored better than 50% of that reference group. A 99 means you scored better than 99% — it's rare, and it opens every door. A score below the branch minimum means you can't enlist without retaking the test.

Minimum AFQT Scores by Branch

BranchMinimum AFQT (Standard)With GED
Army3150
Navy3550
Air Force3665
Marines3250
Space Force3665
Coast Guard4050

Important: These are minimums, not targets. Most recruiters prefer scores of 50+, and many desirable jobs require line scores well above these minimums. Aim higher than the floor.

Line Scores: What Determines Your Job Options

Beyond your AFQT, each branch uses combinations of ASVAB subtests called line scores to determine which specific jobs you qualify for. Different branches use different line score formulas and names, but the concept is the same: certain subtests are weighted for certain job families.

Common Army Line Scores

  • GT (General Technical): AR + VE — used for most technical and leadership roles, including Special Forces (minimum GT of 110)
  • ST (Skilled Technical): GS + MK + EI + WK — used for technical and science-oriented MOSs
  • EL (Electronics): GS + AR + MK + EI — used for electronics and communications jobs
  • MM (Mechanical Maintenance): AS + MC + EI + GS — used for vehicle and mechanical maintenance MOSs
  • OF (Operations/Food): VE + MC — used for food service and operational support roles

Navy ratings, Air Force AFSCs, and Marine MOSs all have their own line score systems. Your recruiter will explain which subtests matter most for your target job — but ideally you should know this before you walk into the recruiting office.

The Two Versions of the ASVAB

There are two main versions of the test you'll encounter:

CAT-ASVAB (Computerized Adaptive Test)

This is the version taken at MEPS (Military Entrance Processing Stations). It adapts to your performance — if you answer correctly, the next question gets harder. If you answer incorrectly, the next question gets easier. This adaptive design means the test can accurately measure your ability in fewer questions than a fixed paper test.

The CAT-ASVAB is the official version. Your MEPS score is the one that counts for enlistment and job selection.

Student ASVAB (Paper & Pencil)

This version is administered at high schools and some recruiting offices. It's a fixed-length test — same questions for everyone, in a fixed order. Scores from the Student ASVAB are valid for enlistment purposes and transfer to MEPS. If you take it at school and score high enough, you may be able to skip the ASVAB at MEPS entirely.

What Happens on ASVAB Test Day at MEPS?

If you're taking the CAT-ASVAB at MEPS, here's what to expect:

  • You'll arrive at MEPS in the morning (often after a night in a nearby military-arranged hotel)
  • The test is taken in a computer lab — you cannot go back to change answers once submitted
  • You have a time limit for each subtest — don't get bogged down on individual questions
  • Phones are stored in lockers during the exam — you won't have access to calculators or any outside help
  • Results are available immediately — your recruiter will get your scores the same day

Pro tip: There is no penalty for wrong answers on the ASVAB. Never leave a question blank. If you're unsure, make your best guess and move on — leaving it blank guarantees zero points; a guess gives you a chance.

How to Prepare for the ASVAB

The ASVAB is predictable. It covers the same general content areas every time, which means focused preparation produces real score improvements. Here's how to approach it:

1. Start With a Diagnostic

Before you study, take a full practice ASVAB to see where you stand. This tells you which subtests need the most work and where your time is best spent. Don't guess — get real numbers before building your study plan.

2. Prioritize AFQT Subtests First

If your primary goal is to qualify for enlistment, focus on AR, MK, WK, and PC first. These four subtests determine your AFQT. Once you have a comfortable margin above the minimum, broaden to the technical subtests for job-specific prep.

3. Study Every Day — Not Just Before the Test

A structured 30-day study plan with daily sessions outperforms any last-minute cramming approach. The math and vocabulary skills the ASVAB tests take time to build. Give yourself enough runway.

4. Use Quality Practice Tests

Practice with ASVAB-specific materials — not generic standardized test prep. The question styles, content focus, and time constraints on the ASVAB are different from SAT or ACT prep. Use materials written specifically for this test.

5. Don't Neglect the Technical Subtests

If you have a target job in mind that requires strong EL, MM, or ST scores, you need to prepare those subtests too. Many recruits qualify to enlist but then discover they can't get the job they want because they neglected the technical sections. Know your target line scores and prepare accordingly.

Recommended Tools & Resources

  • 📖
    Free ASVAB Practice Questions

    Work through AFQT-style problems with full explanations, organized by subtest — no signup required.

    Start practicing →
  • 📅
    30-Day ASVAB Study Schedule

    A day-by-day study plan built around the subtests that matter most for your AFQT score and target job.

    View the study plan →
  • 💼
    Military Jobs Breakdown

    See which jobs your current practice score would unlock — and which line scores you need to hit your target MOS.

    Explore military jobs →
  • ⚖️
    Branch Comparison Tool

    Different branches weigh ASVAB scores differently. See which branch gives you the best job options at your current score level.

    Compare branches →

Download the Free ASVAB Subtest Cheat Sheet

A one-page reference guide covering every ASVAB subtest, what it tests, which jobs it affects, and the fastest way to improve each section score.

Get the Free Cheat Sheet →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the ASVAB test?
The ASVAB (Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery) is a standardized test used by the U.S. military to determine enlistment eligibility and identify which jobs a recruit qualifies for. It covers 10 subtests across math, verbal, science, and technical skill areas.
How is the ASVAB scored?
Your ASVAB produces an AFQT score — a percentile between 1 and 99 based on four subtests: Arithmetic Reasoning, Math Knowledge, Paragraph Comprehension, and Word Knowledge. Each branch has a minimum AFQT for enlistment. Individual subtests also combine into "line scores" that determine job eligibility.
How long is the ASVAB?
The CAT-ASVAB at MEPS typically takes 1.5 to 2 hours. The paper-and-pencil Student ASVAB taken at schools takes about 3 hours for all 10 subtests. The computerized version is shorter because it adapts to your ability level and requires fewer questions to accurately measure your score.
Can you retake the ASVAB?
Yes. If you take the ASVAB at MEPS and don't qualify, you must wait one calendar month before retaking it. After a second attempt, the wait is six months. Every subsequent retake requires a six-month wait. Use the time between attempts to study — showing up unprepared again is a waste of your retake opportunity.
What is a good ASVAB score?
A score of 50 or higher puts you above average and opens most military jobs. A score of 65+ gives you access to virtually all jobs in any branch. Scores in the 90s are rare and often come with the best signing bonuses and job selection options. Always aim higher than the minimum — it gives you more negotiating power.

Ready to start? Use our free ASVAB practice questions to baseline your score today. Our tools are organized by subtest with worked explanations — so you're not just practicing, you're actually learning the material.

Conclusion

The ASVAB is one of the most important tests you'll take on your path to military service. It's not just about getting in — it's about getting the job, the branch, and the career path that's right for you. The higher your score, the more control you have over that outcome.

The good news: the ASVAB is very learnable. With the right study approach and enough lead time, significant score improvements are realistic for most people. Start early, focus on your weakest areas, and use quality practice materials.

Check out our 30-Day ASVAB Study Schedule if you want a day-by-day plan to get your score where it needs to be. And use our free ASVAB practice tool to start building your skills today — no account needed.

Was this helpful?

Let us know if this guide gave you a clear picture of how the ASVAB works.