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Gifted Test Grades K–12

Free NNAT Practice Test

The Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test (NNAT) measures nonverbal reasoning and general problem-solving using geometric shapes and patterns. No reading, writing, or language required — it's used nationwide to identify gifted students across all language backgrounds.

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Grades K–12
Grade Range
4 Question Types
Test Sections
~30 min
Test Duration
NAI Score
Score Format

All Resources

Everything You Need to Prepare

Practice Questions
8 free questions
Flashcards
5 key terms
Study Guide
On this page
Books
2 study guides
Articles
2 guides

Test Structure

What the NNAT Covers

Each question type tests a distinct visual reasoning skill. Understanding the breakdown helps you focus your child's preparation on the areas that matter most.

Pattern Completion

Identify the missing piece that completes a geometric pattern. Tests visual reasoning and attention to spatial relationships.

Reasoning by Analogy

Figure out how shapes in a 3×3 matrix relate to each other, then find the missing shape. The most common NNAT question type.

Serial Reasoning

Find the rule governing a sequence of shapes changing across rows and columns. Requires holding multiple patterns in mind simultaneously.

Study Strategy

Prep Tips for Parents

1
Draw patterns together

Sketch grids on paper and ask your child to complete the pattern. This mirrors the exact NNAT format and builds visual thinking muscles.

2
Use pattern block toys

Physical pattern blocks, tangrams, and Tetris-style puzzles develop spatial reasoning better than any worksheet.

3
Practice with jigsaw puzzles

100+ piece jigsaw puzzles strengthen the visual completion skills tested in Pattern Completion questions.

4
Play 'what's different?' games

Show two nearly identical images and ask what changed. This sharpens detail-detection skills used in all NNAT question types.

5
Solve problems silently

The NNAT is nonverbal — train your child to solve problems visually, not by talking through them. Silent, visual problem-solving is the goal.

Study Materials

Recommended Books

Handpicked study guides to complement your online practice. Affiliate links — we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

NNAT Test Prep Book

NNAT2 Test Prep: Grade 2 Gifted and Talented Workbook

Full-length NNAT practice tests with all four question types. Includes answer explanations and scoring guides.

NNAT Practice Tests Book

Practice Tests for the Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test

Multiple NNAT practice tests across levels B, C, and D with detailed parent scoring guides.

Try a Question

See How You Do

Sample Question Nonverbal

Which shape completes the pattern?

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NNAT Articles

Comparison

CogAT vs NNAT: Which Gifted Test Is Harder?

Both test reasoning ability but in very different ways. Learn which test your district uses, how they score, and how to prep for each.

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Study Strategy

NNAT Prep Guide for Parents: What to Expect and How to Help

A plain-English guide to the four question types, what scores mean, and the most effective ways to prepare your child.

Read article →

View all articles →

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the NNAT?

The Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test (NNAT) is a gifted screening test using geometric shapes and patterns. No reading or language is required, making it one of the fairest tests for students from diverse backgrounds.

What grades take the NNAT?

The NNAT is administered in grades K–12, though gifted screening most commonly happens in grades 2–3. Different NNAT levels (A–G) correspond to different grade ranges.

What is a good NNAT score?

Scores are reported as a Naglieri Ability Index (NAI) with a mean of 100. A score at the 95th percentile or above (roughly NAI 125+) typically qualifies for gifted programs.

Does the NNAT require reading?

No — the NNAT is entirely nonverbal. All questions use shapes, patterns, and figures. This makes it ideal for English language learners and students with language-based learning differences.

How long does the NNAT take?

Approximately 30 minutes — one of the shorter gifted tests, which is why many districts use it as a screener before longer assessments.