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GRE percentiles determine how graduate programs compare you to thousands of other applicants—yet most test-takers fundamentally misunderstand what their percentile rankings actually mean. A 163 Verbal score might sound impressive, but does it represent 89th percentile performance this year or 91st percentile two years ago? That distinction matters when competitive programs set their admissions thresholds.

This guide eliminates the confusion. You’ll learn exactly how percentiles are calculated, why they fluctuate annually, what percentile benchmarks different program types actually require, and how to strategically interpret your scores for application decisions.

Last updated: Dec 2025

Generated with AI and Author: Vector illustration showing GRE score distribution curve with percentile markers

Table of Contents


Contents

Why Percentiles Matter More Than You Think

Graduate admissions committees don’t just look at your scaled GRE scores. They compare your percentile rankings against their typical admitted student profiles.

Here’s what makes percentiles crucial. When a program states their average admitted student scored 163 on Verbal Reasoning, that number tells only part of the story. The percentile—which reveals how that 163 compares to all other test-takers—provides the context admissions committees actually use for evaluation.

Most applicants make a critical error. They assume a “good score” is static—that 160 always means the same thing. In reality, a 160 Verbal that represented 85th percentile performance five years ago might represent 82nd percentile today as the test-taking population becomes more competitive.

The Three Reasons Percentiles Trump Scaled Scores

Percentiles account for score inflation. As more international students take the GRE with intensive preparation, median scores creep upward. Your scaled score stays constant, but your percentile ranking shifts downward if you’re not keeping pace with improving competition.

Percentiles enable fair comparison across test administrations. ETS uses percentiles specifically because they allow comparing test-takers who sat for different exam versions under different conditions. A program can’t meaningfully compare raw scores from March 2023 versus November 2025, but percentiles normalize that comparison.

Percentiles communicate relative competitiveness instantly. Admissions committees reviewing hundreds of applications need quick assessment tools. Percentile rankings immediately signal whether you’re in the top 10%, middle 50%, or bottom quartile of test-takers—information that shapes initial screening decisions.

Generated with AI and Author: Infographic showing how percentile rankings influence admissions decisions
How graduate programs use percentile thresholds to screen applications. Programs typically establish minimum percentile cutoffs (often 70th-80th percentile) for initial review, with competitive applicants typically exceeding 85th percentile in their program’s priority section.

Understanding Percentile Volatility

ETS recalculates percentile rankings annually using a three-year trailing score pool. This methodology means your percentile can shift even though your scaled score remains unchanged.

Consider a concrete example. A 165 Quantitative score represented 89th percentile in 2020. By 2023, that same 165 represented 86th percentile. The score didn’t change—the comparison pool became more competitive as increasing numbers of well-prepared international applicants took the test.

This volatility creates strategic implications. If you’re evaluating whether to retake the GRE, you need current percentile data, not outdated benchmarks. A program stating they seek “85th percentile Quant scores” means something different today than it did three years ago in terms of the actual scaled score required.

How Programs Actually Use Your Percentile Rankings

Graduate programs employ percentiles in three distinct ways during admissions review. Understanding these applications helps you interpret your competitive positioning.

Initial screening thresholds. Many competitive programs—though they rarely publicize this—establish percentile cutoffs for preliminary review. Applications below these thresholds (often 70th-80th percentile depending on program selectivity) may receive limited consideration unless exceptional compensating factors exist.

Cohort balancing. Admissions committees use percentiles to ensure their admitted class maintains competitive academic profiles. Programs track median percentiles of admitted students and make marginal acceptance decisions partly based on how each candidate affects these statistics.

Funding allocation. This often-overlooked reality significantly impacts many applicants. Programs frequently employ higher percentile thresholds for fellowship and assistantship awards than for basic admission. You might gain acceptance with 75th percentile scores but need 85th+ percentile performance to receive funding offers.

The strategic takeaway: percentiles function as much more than informational statistics. They represent the actual currency of admissions evaluation—the metric programs use to make critical screening, acceptance, and funding decisions.


GRE Percentiles Fundamentals

A percentile ranking indicates the percentage of test-takers who scored lower than you. If you achieve 80th percentile on Verbal Reasoning, you performed better than 80% of all test-takers in the comparison pool.

This definition sounds simple but contains important nuances. The percentile doesn’t tell you what percentage of questions you answered correctly—it exclusively indicates relative performance against other test-takers.

The Mathematical Relationship: Raw, Scaled, and Percentile Scores

Your GRE score undergoes three transformations from test completion to final report. Understanding each stage clarifies what percentiles actually measure.

Raw scores represent the number of questions you answered correctly within each section. These raw counts never appear on your score report and vary based on which specific questions the adaptive algorithm presented to you.

Scaled scores convert raw performance into the standardized 130-170 scale for Verbal and Quantitative Reasoning (and 0.0-6.0 scale for Analytical Writing). This conversion accounts for difficulty differences between question sets, ensuring fairness across different test administrations.

Percentile rankings then compare your scaled score to the performance distribution of all test-takers over the previous three years. ETS publishes these concordance tables annually, updating them to reflect the current test-taking population.

📊 Table: Understanding GRE Score Transformations

This table illustrates the three-stage journey your GRE performance takes from raw responses to final percentile ranking. Each stage serves a specific psychometric purpose in ensuring fair, standardized evaluation.

Score Type What It Represents Scale/Range Appears on Report? Changes Over Time?
Raw Score Number of questions answered correctly Varies by section (typically 20-40 questions) No No—locked when you complete test
Scaled Score Standardized performance accounting for difficulty V/Q: 130-170
AW: 0.0-6.0
Yes—primary score reported No—fixed value for your test
Percentile Rank Performance relative to all test-takers 1st-99th percentile Yes—appears alongside scaled scores Yes—recalculated annually by ETS

How ETS Calculates Percentile Rankings

ETS employs a trailing three-year score pool methodology. When they publish updated percentile concordance tables each year, they include data from test-takers over the previous 36 months.

This approach balances stability and currency. A single-year snapshot might introduce artificial volatility from temporary demographic shifts, while a longer timeframe could incorporate obsolete data that no longer reflects current test-taker populations.

The calculation process works like this. ETS identifies all test-takers who achieved each scaled score (130, 131, 132… through 170 for Verbal and Quantitative). They then determine what percentage of the entire pool scored below each threshold. A score achieving 165 where 88% of test-takers scored lower receives 88th percentile ranking.

Why Percentiles Change Year Over Year

Your scaled score remains permanent, but its percentile ranking shifts as ETS updates their comparison pool. Two primary factors drive these changes.

Demographic composition shifts. The international test-taking population has grown substantially, particularly from countries with intensive test preparation cultures. When more well-prepared test-takers enter the pool, median performance increases, compressing percentile distributions at the high end.

Rolling three-year window effects. As ETS drops the oldest year of data and incorporates the newest year, any systematic trends in test-taker performance affect percentile calculations. If 2022 test-takers scored higher on average than 2019 test-takers, the 2023 percentile tables will reflect this improvement.

Practical implication: when researching program requirements or comparing your scores to published admissions statistics, verify the data year. A program’s “average 85th percentile Verbal” from 2021 admitted students likely requires a higher scaled score today to achieve equivalent percentile ranking.

Section-Level vs. Total Score Percentiles

Your score report includes separate percentile rankings for Verbal Reasoning, Quantitative Reasoning, and Analytical Writing. These section-specific percentiles matter more than any “total score percentile” calculation.

Here’s why this distinction proves critical. Different graduate programs prioritize different sections. STEM programs weight Quantitative percentiles heavily while viewing Verbal percentiles as secondary tiebreakers. Humanities programs invert this emphasis. Professional programs often examine score balance across sections.

No official “total GRE percentile” exists. While you could theoretically calculate a combined percentile by adding your Verbal and Quantitative scaled scores, admissions committees don’t evaluate applications this way. They examine section-specific percentiles independently, assessing each against their program’s priorities.

Generated with AI and Author: Infographic showing which GRE sections different graduate fields prioritize
Different graduate fields prioritize GRE sections differently. STEM programs emphasize Quantitative percentiles, Humanities programs focus on Verbal and Writing percentiles, Social Sciences typically require balanced performance, and Professional programs evaluate holistic profiles. Understanding these priorities helps you interpret your competitive positioning.

Percentile Precision and Rounding

ETS reports percentiles as whole numbers (73rd percentile, not 72.6th percentile). This rounding creates clustering effects where multiple scaled scores may share the same percentile ranking.

At the high end of the score distribution, this clustering becomes pronounced. For Quantitative Reasoning, scores from 168-170 all typically fall within the 95th-99th percentile range. The test essentially “caps out” in its ability to differentiate top performers through percentile rankings.

This ceiling effect matters for highly competitive STEM programs. When most admitted students score 168-170 Quantitative (all showing 95th+ percentile), programs can’t use Q percentiles to distinguish between candidates. They instead rely on other application components to make admissions decisions among this high-scoring pool.


Current Percentile Distributions Across All Sections

ETS publishes updated percentile concordance tables annually, typically in late summer. These tables convert each scaled score to its corresponding percentile ranking based on the previous three years of test-taker data.

The distributions vary significantly across sections. Understanding these patterns helps you accurately assess your competitive positioning and identify realistic improvement targets.

Verbal Reasoning Percentile Distribution

Verbal Reasoning shows relatively normal distribution characteristics with clear differentiation across the full score range. The section effectively separates test-takers at all performance levels.

Key Verbal percentile thresholds (2024-2025 data): A score of 150 typically represents approximately 48th-50th percentile—true median performance. The distribution shows steady progression with roughly 2-3 percentile points per scaled score point through the middle ranges.

At 155 Verbal, you’ve reached approximately 69th percentile—solidly above average but not yet “competitive” for selective programs. The 160 threshold represents roughly 82nd-84th percentile, which many programs cite as their informal minimum for serious consideration.

High Verbal scores show strong differentiation. A 165 typically achieves 95th-96th percentile, while 167 reaches 98th percentile. Even single-point improvements at this level meaningfully shift percentile rankings because relatively few test-takers achieve these scores.

📊 Table: Verbal Reasoning Score-to-Percentile Concordance

Current percentile rankings for Verbal Reasoning scaled scores, based on 2024-2025 ETS data. Use this reference to understand your performance relative to all test-takers and to set realistic improvement targets.

Scaled Score Percentile Rank Performance Category Competitive For
170 99th Exceptional Top humanities PhD programs
167 98th Exceptional Elite humanities/social sciences programs
165 96th Excellent Highly selective humanities programs
163 93rd Excellent Competitive humanities/mixed programs
160 84th Above Average Solid programs across most fields
157 76th Above Average Mid-tier programs, sufficient for many STEM
155 69th Above Average Baseline for most competitive programs
152 57th Average Less selective programs
150 49th Average Median performance
145 27th Below Average May require retake for competitive programs

Quantitative Reasoning Percentile Distribution

Quantitative Reasoning exhibits compressed high-end distribution—a pattern that significantly affects interpretation for STEM applicants. Multiple high scaled scores cluster within narrow percentile ranges.

The compression problem: Scores from 165-170 all fall within the 89th-99th percentile range. This six-point scaled score span represents only 10 percentile points, meaning each scaled score point moves you just 1-2 percentile points.

This compression stems from the large population of well-prepared international test-takers who routinely achieve near-perfect Quantitative scores. For competitive STEM programs, the practical impact is that Quantitative percentiles lose discriminatory power at the high end.

Key Quantitative percentile thresholds: A score of 152 represents approximately 50th percentile—median performance. Reaching 160 achieves roughly 76th percentile, which remains below target for competitive STEM programs despite being well above average.

The critical threshold for STEM applicants typically sits at 165 Quantitative (89th-90th percentile). Many competitive engineering and physical science programs treat this as an informal minimum. Elite programs often see median admitted student scores of 168-170 (95th-99th percentile), though these percentiles can’t differentiate within that high-scoring population.


📊 Table: Quantitative Reasoning Score-to-Percentile Concordance

Current percentile rankings for Quantitative Reasoning scaled scores, based on 2024-2025 ETS data. Note the compressed distribution at high score ranges where multiple scores share similar percentile rankings.

Scaled Score Percentile Rank Performance Category Competitive For
170 97th-99th Exceptional Elite STEM programs (note: limited differentiation)
168 95th-96th Exceptional Top-tier engineering/physical sciences
167 93rd-94th Excellent Highly competitive STEM programs
165 89th-90th Excellent Competitive STEM programs (common threshold)
163 85th-86th Above Average Solid STEM programs, excellent for social sciences
160 76th-78th Above Average Mid-tier STEM, competitive for humanities
157 67th-69th Above Average Less selective STEM, strong for humanities
155 61st-63rd Average Sufficient for most humanities programs
152 49th-51st Average Median performance
148 36th-38th Below Average May require retake for competitive programs

Analytical Writing Percentile Distribution

Analytical Writing employs a 0.0-6.0 scale in half-point increments, creating a fundamentally different percentile structure than Verbal and Quantitative sections. The distribution reveals several counterintuitive patterns.

The midpoint paradox: A score of 4.0—the mathematical midpoint of the 0-6 scale—represents approximately 56th-58th percentile, not 50th percentile. This occurs because few test-takers score at the extreme low or high ends, compressing the distribution toward the middle ranges.

More significantly, the writing section shows minimal differentiation in how programs interpret scores. While a 6.0 technically represents 99th percentile performance, most programs treat anything above 4.5 (approximately 82nd percentile) as “sufficient writing ability.”

Key Analytical Writing thresholds: A score of 3.5 represents approximately 42nd percentile—below median but not dramatically so. However, many competitive programs view 3.5 as concerning, preferring 4.0 (56th percentile) as minimum acceptable performance.

The critical threshold sits at 4.5 (82nd percentile). This score signals strong analytical writing ability to most programs. Scores of 5.0 (93rd percentile) and above provide minimal additional benefit for most applications, though humanities PhD programs may value the distinction.

Generated with AI and Author: Infographic showing how programs interpret Analytical Writing scores differently than V/Q
Analytical Writing interpretation differs from Verbal and Quantitative sections. Programs typically establish a minimum threshold (usually 4.0-4.5) rather than seeking maximum scores, with humanities PhD programs representing the main exception that values high writing percentiles.

Percentile Distribution Patterns and What They Reveal

Examining percentile distributions across all three sections reveals systematic patterns about the GRE test-taking population and how different sections function.

Verbal shows normal distribution. The percentile progression roughly follows a bell curve with clear differentiation at all levels. This indicates the section effectively measures a broad range of verbal reasoning abilities without significant ceiling or floor effects.

Quantitative shows right-skewed distribution. The concentration of high scores (compression at 165-170) indicates many test-takers achieve near-maximum performance. This skew reflects both the international test-taking population’s strong quantitative preparation and possible test ceiling limitations.

Analytical Writing shows compressed middle distribution. The clustering of scores between 3.5-5.0 suggests the scoring rubric effectively captures most test-takers’ writing ability within a narrow range, with genuinely exceptional or deficient performance being relatively rare.

These distribution patterns directly inform application strategy. For Verbal, every score point matters throughout the range. For Quantitative, reaching 165+ is critical for STEM fields, but improvements beyond 168 provide diminishing percentile returns. For Writing, reaching 4.5 satisfies most programs’ requirements, with additional improvements offering limited benefit except for humanities PhD applicants.


Scaled Scores vs. Percentiles—Critical Distinctions

Confusion between scaled scores and percentile rankings represents one of the most common misunderstandings among GRE test-takers. While both appear on your score report, they measure fundamentally different things and serve distinct purposes.

Your scaled score quantifies your absolute performance on the test you took. Your percentile ranking quantifies your relative performance compared to all other test-takers. This distinction creates several counterintuitive scenarios that affect application strategy.

Why Your Scaled Score Stays Constant But Your Percentile Changes

When you complete the GRE, your scaled scores become permanent. A 163 Verbal remains 163 Verbal whether you review your score report tomorrow or three years from now. The score measures what you achieved on that specific test administration.

Your percentile ranking, however, reflects a moving target. As ETS updates their three-year comparison pool annually, the same 163 Verbal score shifts to a different percentile ranking based on how more recent test-takers performed.

Real example of percentile drift: A test-taker scoring 165 Quantitative in October 2020 received 89th percentile ranking. That same 165 Quantitative score represented 86th percentile by October 2023. The performance didn’t change—the comparison population became more competitive.

This drift typically moves in one direction. As test-taker preparation intensifies globally and more competitive international applicants take the GRE, median scores creep upward. Your fixed scaled score represents an increasingly smaller percentile ranking over time.

Generated with AI and Author: Infographic showing how percentile rankings for the same scaled scores have shifted over five years
Percentile drift over time: how fixed GRE scaled scores have shifted to lower percentile rankings as the test-taking population has become more competitive. Quantitative percentiles show more pronounced drift than Verbal percentiles, while Analytical Writing percentiles remain relatively stable.

When Admissions Committees Prioritize Percentiles Over Scaled Scores

Graduate programs don’t uniformly prefer one metric over the other. The choice depends on how they frame their evaluation standards and what comparisons they need to make.

Programs prioritize percentiles when: They’re comparing applicants across different test administration years, they want to ensure admitted students meet competitive benchmarks relative to current test-taker populations, or they’re establishing initial screening thresholds for large applicant pools.

Many programs publish their expectations using percentile language precisely because it accounts for scoring trend changes. When a program states they seek “85th percentile Quantitative scores,” they’re establishing a consistently competitive benchmark that automatically adjusts as score distributions shift.

Programs prioritize scaled scores when: They’re making fine distinctions between similar candidates, they’re tracking cohort statistics for accreditation or ranking purposes, or they’re evaluating score improvements for applicants who retook the test.

Understanding this dual framework helps you communicate your scores strategically. If your percentile ranking looks stronger than your scaled score (perhaps because you tested during a less competitive period), emphasize the percentile. If your scaled score improved substantially on a retake but percentiles shifted less dramatically, emphasize the scaled score improvement.

The Score Reporting Dilemma: Which Metric to Highlight

Your score report displays both scaled scores and percentiles. When discussing your GRE performance in application materials—personal statements, diversity statements, or supplementary essays—which metric should you reference?

Default to scaled scores for most contexts. Programs are accustomed to evaluating scaled score ranges. Stating “I achieved 165 on Quantitative Reasoning” communicates clearly without requiring the reader to interpret percentile rankings.

Reference percentiles strategically in specific scenarios: When your percentile significantly exceeds expectations for your demographic group or educational background, when explaining why a seemingly moderate scaled score actually represents strong performance, or when addressing score weaknesses by noting you still exceeded median performance.

Avoid percentile-only reporting. Stating “I scored in the 89th percentile on Quantitative” without the scaled score can appear evasive, as though you’re obscuring the actual number. Programs want concrete scaled scores for their records.

📊 Table: When to Emphasize Scaled Scores vs. Percentiles

Strategic guidance for highlighting different metrics in various application contexts. Understanding when each metric serves your interests helps you communicate your GRE performance most effectively.

Context Emphasize Scaled Score When Emphasize Percentile When Report Both When
Score Reporting Forms Always report scaled scores (required) Not applicable—forms request scaled scores If form has space for additional context
Personal Statement You improved score significantly on retake Score overcame significant obstacles/challenges When explaining competitive positioning
Addressing Low Scores Score improved but remains below target Score still exceeds median for your comparison group Providing full context for interpretation
Fellowship Applications Your scores exceed program’s published medians Your percentiles demonstrate top-tier performance Making strongest possible case for funding
Email Inquiries to Programs Always use scaled scores (standard reference) Only if percentile adds meaningful context Rarely necessary in brief inquiries
Discussing with Recommenders Provide scaled scores for accurate LOR context Mention percentile if exceptionally high Help recommenders position you accurately

How Percentile Requirements Trend Over Time

Programs don’t exist in stasis. As application volumes increase and test-taker preparation intensifies, competitive percentile benchmarks gradually creep upward.

A program that historically admitted students with median 80th percentile Verbal scores five years ago may now expect 83rd-85th percentile performance for comparable competitiveness. The program hasn’t necessarily become more selective—the entire applicant pool has shifted.

This trend acceleration has intensified over the past decade. The proliferation of high-quality GRE preparation resources means test-takers arrive increasingly well-prepared. The growth of international applicants from countries with intensive test prep cultures further drives median score improvements.

Strategic implication: When researching program requirements using historical admissions data, apply an upward adjustment. Published statistics from 3-5 years ago likely understate current competitive benchmarks by 2-5 percentile points, particularly for Quantitative scores in STEM programs.

The Myth of “Total Score Percentiles”

You’ll occasionally encounter discussions of “combined GRE percentiles” or “total score rankings.” These represent fundamental misunderstandings of how the GRE functions.

ETS does not publish or calculate total score percentiles. While your score report shows your Verbal scaled score plus Quantitative scaled score (ranging from 260-340), no official percentile ranking corresponds to this sum.

More importantly, admissions committees don’t evaluate combined percentiles. Programs examine section-specific percentiles independently because different fields prioritize different sections. A 165V/155Q (combined 320) means something entirely different to a literature PhD program than a 155V/165Q (also combined 320) would to an engineering program.

If you calculate an unofficial combined percentile by averaging your section percentiles, you generate a meaningless statistic. A 95th percentile Verbal with 70th percentile Quantitative doesn’t average to “82.5th percentile overall competitiveness”—it represents a profile well-suited for humanities programs and poorly suited for STEM programs.


Frequently Asked Questions

Do GRE percentiles change after I receive my scores?

Your scaled scores remain permanent and never change. However, ETS updates percentile concordance tables annually using a three-year trailing comparison pool. This means the percentile ranking associated with your scaled score may shift in future years as the test-taking population changes. For example, a 165 Quantitative that represented 89th percentile when you tested might represent 86th percentile in updated tables three years later. Programs typically use current percentile tables when evaluating applications, not the percentiles shown on your original score report.

Is 80th percentile good enough for graduate school?

The competitiveness of 80th percentile depends entirely on your target program type and which section achieved that percentile. For Verbal Reasoning, 80th percentile (typically around 159-160 scaled score) represents solidly competitive performance for most STEM programs but falls below target for selective humanities programs. For Quantitative Reasoning, 80th percentile (typically around 162-163 scaled score) may be sufficient for humanities and some social science programs but below target for competitive STEM programs. The specific field and program selectivity matter more than any absolute percentile threshold.

Why is my Quantitative percentile lower than my Verbal percentile despite similar scaled scores?

The test-taking population performs differently across sections, creating distinct percentile distributions. Many international test-takers demonstrate exceptional Quantitative preparation, compressing the high-end distribution. A 165 Quantitative (approximately 89th percentile) and 165 Verbal (approximately 96th percentile) represent similar absolute performance but very different relative performance because fewer test-takers achieve high Verbal scores than high Quantitative scores. This distribution difference reflects the overall test-taking population’s strengths rather than your individual performance.

Should I retake the GRE if my percentiles are slightly below program averages?

The retake decision depends on how far below program averages you fall and which sections need improvement. If you’re within 3-5 percentile points of program medians, retaking may not significantly improve your competitiveness—admissions committees evaluate applications holistically. However, if you’re 10+ percentile points below in a section your target program prioritizes, retaking becomes more compelling. Also consider whether you have clear strategies for improvement and whether your time and resources might better support strengthening other application components like research experience or recommendation letters.

Do percentiles matter more for PhD programs or Master’s programs?

PhD programs typically establish higher percentile thresholds than Master’s programs, particularly for funded positions. PhD admissions committees use GRE percentiles as proxies for research potential and academic preparedness for rigorous doctoral coursework. Many competitive PhD programs expect 85th+ percentile performance in their priority section (Quant for STEM, Verbal for humanities). Master’s programs often accept broader percentile ranges (70th-85th percentile) and weight professional experience or career goals more heavily. The distinction intensifies for funding—PhD programs often reserve fellowships and assistantships for applicants with 90th+ percentile performance.

How do I find current percentile requirements for specific programs?

Programs rarely publish explicit percentile cutoffs, but you can estimate competitive benchmarks through several sources. Many programs publish median or average GRE scores for admitted students—convert these scaled scores to percentiles using current ETS concordance tables. Contact current graduate students or program coordinators to ask about typical score profiles. Examine program ranking and selectivity as indicators—top-10 programs typically expect 90th+ percentile performance in priority sections, while top-50 programs often seek 80th-85th percentile. When researching, prioritize recent data (within past 2 years) since percentile requirements trend upward over time.