GMAT Focus prep

Free GMAT questions every day, the same for everyone, explained

PrepLattice publishes a fresh set of five GMAT Focus questions every day, free for every signed-up member. The same five questions go to everyone that day, drawn from Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights with a mix that rotates day to day, with a full explanation on every miss and your history saved. It is the simplest way to build the daily practice habit the GMAT rewards.

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What the daily question set is

Every day PrepLattice releases a five-question cohort set, drawn from the three GMAT Focus sections with a mix that rotates day to day. Everyone who completes the set that day answers the same five questions, which makes the daily set a shared reference point: if you compare notes with another candidate, you are discussing the same items.

The daily set refreshes each day. Your results and your miss explanations are saved to your account, so your history accumulates as you go. There is no scoring penalty for taking your time; the daily set stays open until it refreshes for the next day. You can approach the daily set as quickly or as deliberately as you choose, and you can come back to your saved misses at any time to review the explanations again.

Why daily practice beats weekend cramming

The GMAT tests reasoning under time pressure, and reasoning skills build differently from content knowledge. A student who reads a chapter of notes can recall it the following week. A student who practices the reasoning a problem type requires has to actually do that reasoning repeatedly, under conditions that become familiar only through repetition, before it becomes automatic. That kind of fluency does not accumulate from a single long session.

Five questions a day over sixty days is three hundred questions. More importantly, it is sixty days of the brain retrieving and applying specific reasoning patterns, which is what builds the automaticity that exam conditions require. A candidate who practices daily is also less likely to arrive at the exam having let weeks pass since their last serious rep. The daily set is designed to be the minimum effective dose: enough volume to build and maintain the skill, small enough to fit into a day that includes a job or a class or both.

How the explanations turn misses into learning

The daily set is not just five questions. It is five questions plus a full explanation on every miss. The explanation tells you what you picked, why that answer is wrong, what the correct reasoning looks like, and what to watch for the next time that reasoning pattern appears. It is not a repeat of the solution; it is a teaching artifact built around the specific error you made.

Over time, the pattern of your misses becomes informative. If you are consistently missing Data Sufficiency questions, the explanation archive shows you a body of evidence about which reasoning step is failing. If your Verbal accuracy is higher in the morning than at the end of a long day, the saved history reflects that. The daily set combined with its explanations is a diagnostic tool running in the background of your prep, building a picture of where you are without requiring you to schedule a formal review session.

What the daily set does not do

The daily set is a cohort set, not an adaptive one. It does not auto-target your individual weak areas. The five questions are the same for everyone that day, which means on a given day the set might land heavily on a question type you are strong in, or it might expose a gap you did not know you had. Both outcomes are useful, and neither is planned.

If you want to drill a specific question type or difficulty band in Quant or Verbal, the custom-set builder is the right tool: it assembles a set that targets exactly the area your miss history flags. For Data Insights, the full-length mocks cover the complete section under real timing. Both are Committed plan features. The daily set is the free, open-to-everyone baseline, and it is the right place to start before you know which areas need the most targeted work.

How to sign up and start

The daily set is available to every signed-up PrepLattice member at no cost. There is no credit card involved in signing up for the free plan. You create an account, and the current day's five questions are available immediately. Your history starts accumulating from your first set, so there is no advantage to waiting.

If you complete today's set and want to keep going, you will see the next day's set when it releases. Between now and then, your saved history and miss explanations are available in your account. When you are ready to go deeper on a particular section or question type, or to try a full-length mock, the Committed plan is available whenever you want it. It is a one-time payment with no auto-renewal.

Free GMAT questions every day: FAQ

How many free GMAT questions does PrepLattice give each day?
Five questions per day, free for every signed-up member. The daily set is drawn from Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights, with the mix rotating day to day, and it is the same five questions for everyone that day. It refreshes daily.
Do I need a credit card to access the free daily questions?
No. The free Daily Five requires only a PrepLattice account, which is free to create. There is no credit card required to sign up and no payment needed to access the daily questions. The Committed plan, which adds the custom-set builder and full-length mocks, is a separate paid option.
Are the daily questions adaptive to my weak areas?
No. The daily set is a cohort set: the same five questions for everyone each day, not targeted to individual gaps. Your results and miss explanations are saved so you can see which areas you keep missing, but the free daily set does not auto-select questions based on that history. Targeted drilling by question type and difficulty in Quant and Verbal is a Committed plan feature through the custom-set builder.
What happens if I miss a question?
Every missed question in the daily set comes with a full explanation: what you picked, why it is wrong, what the correct reasoning looks like, and what to watch for the next time. The explanation is saved to your account alongside your result, so you can review it later and watch your miss pattern change over time.
Can I do the daily questions at any time of day?
Yes. The daily set stays open until it refreshes for the next day, and there is no scoring penalty for taking your time. You can approach the five questions whenever works in your day.
What sections do the daily questions cover?
The daily set draws from all three GMAT Focus sections: Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights. The section mix and the question types rotate day to day, so all three sections come up regularly across the rotation.
Is PrepLattice affiliated with GMAC?
No. PrepLattice is an independent test-preparation service and is not affiliated with or endorsed by GMAC, the organization that administers the GMAT. GMAT and GMAT Focus are trademarks of GMAC, used here only to name the exam these questions are designed to prepare you for.

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Free GMAT Question of the Day — Daily GMAT Practice | PrepLattice