Why Can’t I Pass My GED Test?

Struggling with the GED doesn’t mean you’re incapable it highlights fixable barriers. Here are the most common reasons, backed by GED Testing Service data and educator insights:

  1. Weak foundational skills. The GED tests high-school-level math, reading, science, and social studies. If algebra, fractions, or reading comprehension feel shaky, you’re likely scoring below the 145 passing threshold per subject. Over 40% of test-takers fail math first due to gaps from years out of school.
  2. Poor test prep strategy. Cramming or using outdated materials wastes time. The GED changed in 2022 new question types (drag-and-drop, fill-in-the-blank) require targeted practice. Only 1 in 3 repeat test-takers pass without structured study (GED Analytics, 2024).
  3. Test anxiety or time mismanagement. The computer-based exam is timed (e.g., 90 minutes for Reasoning Through Language Arts). Panic or slow pacing drops scores; 25% of failures cite running out of time.
  4. Life barriers. Work, childcare, or lack of a quiet study space derail consistency. Adults juggling responsibilities study 60% fewer hours than needed (NCES, 2023).
  5. Misunderstanding the scoring. You don’t need perfection 145/200 per test passes, and “college-ready” (165+) isn’t required. Many quit after one low score, unaware retakes are unlimited (with 60-day waits in some states).

Fix it:

  • Take a free GED practice test at GED.com to pinpoint weak subjects.
  • Use official GED Ready® tests ($8 each) to predict readiness.
  • Study 10–15 hours weekly for 8–12 weeks via free platforms (Khan Academy, GED Academy) or local adult-ed classes.
  • Practice timed sections and deep breathing for anxiety.
  • Retake one subject at a time $30–$40 per test in most states.

You can pass. Identify your hurdle, build a plan, and track progress. One subject at a time, you’re closer than yesterday.