GMAT Percentile Calculator 2026

Use this GMAT percentile calculator to convert a current GMAT total score into its official percentile rank using GMAC's July 2025 score table.

GMAT Percentile Calculator

Convert a current GMAT total score into its official percentile rank using GMAC's July 2025 current-score concordance data.

Official percentile

86.7%
Using official GMAC percentile data for score 645.

Score used

645

Current GMAT / Focus Edition scale

Classic GMAT equivalent

690-700

Official concordance range on the old 200-800 scale

Official band

80%-88%

625-645 on the current score scale

Nearby scorePercentileClassic equivalent
62579.2%680
63581.9%680-690
64586.7%690-700
65590.5%700-710
66592.1%710-720
GMAC updates GMAT percentiles annually in the third quarter. Your scaled score does not change, but its percentile can move slightly as the testing population changes.

This GMAT percentile calculator is the official-data part of the GMAT scoring puzzle.

Unlike a section-based score calculator, a percentile lookup does not require guesswork about how Quant, Verbal, and Data Insights combine into a total score.

If you already know your current GMAT total score, percentile is the cleanest thing to look up.

What GMAT Percentile Means

Your GMAT percentile tells you what percentage of test-takers you scored higher than.

Examples:

  • 50th percentile means you scored higher than half of test-takers
  • 86.7th percentile means you scored higher than 86.7% of test-takers
  • 99th percentile means you are near the very top of the testing pool

GMAC explicitly frames percentile as the right way to interpret competitiveness.

That matters even more now because the current GMAT uses a different total score scale than the retired Classic GMAT.

Why Percentile Matters More Than Raw Score Alone

On the current GMAT:

  • the total score scale is 205-805
  • section scores run 60-90
  • schools see both your scaled score and your percentile

GMAC also says direct point-to-point comparison between the current GMAT and the old GMAT 10th Edition is not appropriate, because the scales are different.

So percentile is the better comparison tool when you want to answer questions like:

  • "How competitive is my score?"
  • "How does my current GMAT compare with old GMAT discussions online?"
  • "What does a 645 or 685 actually mean in context?"

Official Current GMAT Percentile Context

GMAC's 2025 score-explained flyer groups current GMAT scores into these official percentile bands:

Current GMAT total scoreOfficial percentile band
655-80591%-100%
625-64580%-88%
605-61572%-78%
565-59552%-69%
515-55532%-49%
435-50511%-28%
205-4250%-9%

For exact lookups, the row-level table is better than these summary bands.

For example, in the official July 2025 table:

  • 645 = 86.7th percentile
  • 655 = 90.5th percentile
  • 685 = 95.8th percentile
  • 565 = 50.9th percentile

645 Is The New 700

GMAC's own current score guidance still uses the shorthand line:

  • 645 is the new 700

That statement is really about percentile alignment.

The official concordance table shows:

  • 645 current GMAT aligns with the old 690-700 range in the concordance rows
  • the associated percentile is 86.7%

So when people say "645 is the new 700," they mean those scores are comparable in admissions context, not that the scales are numerically interchangeable.

Why Percentiles Can Change Over Time

This is one point many applicants miss:

  • your scaled score is fixed once reported
  • your percentile can change later

GMAC updates percentile values annually in the third quarter based on the more recent testing population.

That means a 645 stays a 645, but the percentile attached to it can shift slightly from one year to the next.

GMAC also notes that schools have access to updated percentile information, so a small year-to-year change is normal.

GMAT Percentile Calculator vs GMAT Score Calculator

Use the GMAT percentile calculator when:

  • you already know your total score
  • you want an official percentile lookup
  • you want the old-GMAT equivalent range

Use the GMAT score calculator when:

  • you only know your section scores
  • you want a section-based estimate of your total score
  • you want the official percentile attached to that estimate

Use the GMAT score conversion tool when:

  • you want to compare a current GMAT score directly against the retired Classic GMAT scale

What Schools Actually See

GMAC's official score-report documentation says schools receive:

  • your total score
  • your section scores
  • the percentile for each

So if you are trying to interpret how strong your score looks in practice, percentile is not just a side statistic. It is part of the reporting context admissions teams already understand.

Official Sources Used

FAQ

Is this percentile calculator official?

The lookup data is official GMAC data. The page is our interface around that official data.

Why does the tool snap to a nearby score?

Official current GMAT total scores are reported every 10 points and end in 5, so there is no official score like 642 or 651.

Does percentile matter more than raw score?

For interpretation and cross-version comparison, usually yes. Raw score tells you the scale point. Percentile tells you how competitive that point is in the testing population.

Should I compare current and old GMAT scores directly?

No. GMAC says direct comparison is not appropriate because the exams are not on a common score scale. Use percentile-based concordance instead.

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