National Medical Admission Test (Philippines)

Required medical school entrance exam for the Philippines (CEM-administered). 2 days. Part I: Verbal (75 Q), Inductive Reasoning (40 Q), Quantitative (50 Q), Perceptual Acuity (40 Q) — 200 min. Part II: Biology, Physics, Social Science, Chemistry (50 Q each) — 200 min. Percentile-ranked nationally.

Advanced Philippines University & Higher Ed 405 questions 400 min 50 distinct variants
Start free practice test → View study course

NMAT Philippines exam at a glance

405
Questions
400
Minutes total
2
Sections
50
Variants

NMAT Philippines section breakdown

Sample question

According to the passage, the topic is best described as:

Start the full test → to attempt 405 questions across 2 sections.

Frequently asked questions

What is the NMAT Philippines exam pattern?
National Medical Admission Test (Philippines) contains 405 questions across 2 sections: Part I — Cognitive (205 Q · 200 min), Part II — Sciences (200 Q · 200 min). Total duration is 400 minutes.
Does NMAT Philippines have negative marking?
No — NMAT Philippines has no negative marking. Each correct answer is worth 1 mark.
How is NMAT Philippines scored?
Scaled score range: 0 to 99. NMAT Philippines (percentile 1-99).
How can I practise NMAT Philippines for free?
Wrexa Edge offers free full-length NMAT Philippines mock tests with instant scoring, detailed explanations, and 50 distinct variants. Sign up for free at Wrexa Edge and start practising in under a minute.
What is the difficulty level of NMAT Philippines?
NMAT Philippines is rated Advanced difficulty on Wrexa Edge. Required medical school entrance exam for the Philippines (CEM-administered). 2 days. Part I: Verbal (75 Q), Inductive Reasoning (40 Q), Quantitative (50 Q), Perceptual Acuity (40 Q) — 200 min. Part II: Biology, Physics, Social Science, Chemistry (50 Q each) — 200 min. Percentile-ranked nationally.

Related exams

Ready to ace NMAT Philippines?

Join thousands of candidates practising on Wrexa Edge. Free signup, 50 variants per exam, instant scoring.

Start practising free →