Start Practice
Menu

What is the ASVAB?

An overview of the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery, who takes it, and why it matters for your military career.

Start Free Practice Test
Home About ASVAB What is the ASVAB?

Overview

The ASVAB (Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery) is the standardized test used by all branches of the United States military to assess a recruit's potential. First introduced in 1968, the test has evolved from a paper-based exam into the CAT-ASVAB — a computerized adaptive test that adjusts difficulty based on your responses in real time.

Every person who enlists in the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, or Space Force takes the ASVAB. Your scores determine two things: whether you qualify to enlist at all (via the AFQT composite) and which specific career fields you're eligible for (via line scores).

The Nine Sections

The ASVAB consists of nine separately timed sections, each testing a different domain:

  • Arithmetic Reasoning (AR) — Multi-step math word problems
  • Word Knowledge (WK) — Vocabulary and synonyms
  • Paragraph Comprehension (PC) — Reading comprehension
  • Mathematics Knowledge (MK) — Algebra and geometry
  • General Science (GS) — Biology, chemistry, physics, earth science
  • Electronics Information (EI) — Electrical circuits and principles
  • Mechanical Comprehension (MC) — Forces, machines, physics
  • Auto & Shop Information (AS) — Vehicle systems and tools
  • Assembling Objects (AO) — Spatial reasoning

AFQT vs Line Scores

The first four sections (AR, WK, PC, MK) make up the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT) — a percentile score from 1 to 99 that determines whether you qualify to enlist. Each branch sets its own minimum (Army: 31, Navy: 31, Marines: 32, Air Force: 36, Coast Guard: 36, Space Force: 36).

Your remaining sections combine with the AFQT four into composite line scores — like General Technical (GT), Electronics (EL), and Mechanical Maintenance (MM). These composites determine which specific career fields (MOS, AFSC, ratings) you qualify for within your branch.

The AFQT gets you in the door. Your line scores decide which room you walk into.

How to Prepare

The ASVAB tests high school-level knowledge across verbal, math, and technical domains. The most effective preparation strategy is to identify your weakest AFQT section and drill it — since the AFQT determines enlistment eligibility, improving your lowest section has the highest return on time invested.

Practice tests with real scoring give you the most accurate picture of where you stand and where to focus your study time.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does ASVAB stand for?

ASVAB stands for Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery. It is a multi-aptitude test used by all branches of the U.S. military to determine qualification for enlistment and job placement.

How many sections does the ASVAB have?

The ASVAB has nine separately timed sections: Arithmetic Reasoning, Word Knowledge, Paragraph Comprehension, Mathematics Knowledge, General Science, Electronics Information, Mechanical Comprehension, Auto & Shop Information, and Assembling Objects.

Is the ASVAB hard?

The ASVAB tests high school-level knowledge. Difficulty depends on your background — the math and verbal sections are the most important since they determine your AFQT score. Most people who prepare with practice tests score well enough to enlist.

Can you retake the ASVAB?

Yes. You can retake the ASVAB after one calendar month. After your first retest, you must wait another calendar month. Subsequent retests require a six-month wait.

Related Topics

How Scoring Works
How AFQT percentile, line scores, and composite scores work together to determine your eligibility and career options.
Read more
Study Resources
Proven study strategies, recommended materials, and tips for maximizing your ASVAB score.
Read more
Test Day Logistics
What to expect on test day: MEPS locations, timing, what to bring, CAT-ASVAB vs paper format.
Read more
History of the ASVAB
The evolution of military aptitude testing from World War I to the modern computerized adaptive test.
Read more