50 Questions · 12 Minutes · Free

Wonderlic-Style Cognitive Ability Test

The famous 12-minute, 50-question speed-vs-accuracy test format used by NFL teams since the 1970s. Mixed verbal, numerical, logical and spatial items. Free to take, no signup required.

50 mixed-format questions
Used by NFL teams since 1970s
Instant score & percentile
Table of Contents
50
Questions
12:00
Time limit
~21
Population avg
~24
NFL avg

What is the Wonderlic test?

The Wonderlic Cognitive Ability Test is a 50-question, 12-minute pre-hire cognitive screening assessment developed by E. F. Wonderlic in 1937. It became famous outside hiring contexts when the NFL adopted it at the Combine in the 1970s — every drafted player has taken some version of it since.

The format is its defining feature: fifty questions, twelve minutes, one number out of fifty. Items mix verbal (analogies, vocabulary, sentence completion), numerical (arithmetic, series, word problems), logical (deduction, syllogism), and spatial reasoning. Difficulty rises through the test — most takers don't finish all 50.

Mental processing speed is part of what gets measured here, alongside reasoning ability. That trade-off — accuracy versus speed under pressure — is the heart of the format and is why a Wonderlic score correlates so strongly with full-scale IQ and with job performance in cognitively demanding roles.

Wonderlic-style, not the official test

This test is created by IQ-EXAMS.COM and uses 50 original items modeled on the published format of the Wonderlic Cognitive Ability Test. The actual Wonderlic test items are commercial copyrighted property of Wonderlic Inc. Our percentile and occupational comparisons are based on publicly available studies and the publisher's own published norms.

12:00
Time Pressure
Verbal
15 items
Numerical
15 items
Logical
10 items
Spatial
10 items

From factory floors to the NFL

Eldon F. Wonderlic developed the test in 1937 as a graduate student at Northwestern University. His original goal was practical: give employers a fast, cheap way to estimate a job candidate's general cognitive ability without committing to a 90-minute clinical battery. The first commercial customers were factories, then offices through the 1940s and 50s.

The leap into popular culture happened in 1968, when Tom Landry's Dallas Cowboys started using the Wonderlic to evaluate draft prospects. The rest of the league followed through the 1970s, and by the 1990s every NFL Combine attendee was taking it. Player scores started leaking — and once they did, the test became something the public couldn't stop talking about.

Famous Wonderlic scores from the NFL include:

  • Pat McInally — 50/50. The Harvard-educated Cincinnati Bengals punter remains the only documented player to score a perfect 50 at the Combine (1975).
  • Ryan Fitzpatrick — 48/50. The journeyman quarterback's near-perfect score helped him stand out at the 2005 Combine.
  • Mike Mamula — 49/50. The defensive end's score was so high it changed how teams used the Wonderlic in evaluation.
  • The lower-end leaks have been more controversial — many of the historically-cited single-digit scores are unverified, and Wonderlic Inc. has publicly disputed several of them. The morbid public fascination with these stories is, fairly or unfairly, a big part of why the term "Wonderlic" became searchable.

Average scores by NFL position — based on figures cited across multiple sources — generally rank offensive linemen and quarterbacks near the top (high 20s), with running backs and cornerbacks lower (high teens). This isn't a statement about intelligence by position; it reflects who NFL scouts choose to draft into different roles.

Take the test in four steps

1

Click Start

The 12-minute countdown begins immediately. There's no warm-up.

2

Answer 50 mixed items

Verbal, numerical, logical and spatial. Skip and return; pace yourself.

3

Auto-submit on timeout

When the timer hits 00:00 the test submits whatever you have.

4

See your score & percentile

Instantly. Optional $7.99 unlock for the full PDF report.

What your Wonderlic score means

Population mean is approximately 21 out of 50, with a standard deviation of about 7. Roughly 68% of test-takers score between 14 and 28.

0–13
Below average
Below the 16th percentile of the general population.
14–20
Low average
Within roughly one standard deviation below the mean.
21–28
Average to above
Population mean is 21. NFL Combine average is roughly 24.
29–34
Well above average
Approximately the 84th–98th percentile range.
35–50
Exceptional
Top ~2% of test-takers. A perfect 50 is extraordinarily rare.

Average Wonderlic scores by occupation

Drawn from publicly cited sources (Wonderlic publisher norms, academic reviews, and NFL Combine reporting). Treat these as approximate population averages, not cut-offs.

OccupationAvg score
Chemist / scientist31
Lawyer / attorney30
Programmer / software engineer29
MBA / business graduate28
Bank manager / executive27
Reporter / journalist26
Teacher (secondary)26
Police officer22
NFL player (Combine average)~24
General population mean21
Skilled trades19
Customer-facing retail17

Numbers above are population averages, not minimum requirements. Individuals vary widely within every occupation.

How to prepare for a Wonderlic test

The Wonderlic rewards two things: knowing the format and not getting stuck. Most first-time takers lose 30–60 seconds early on a single hard problem and never recover the lost time. A practice run alone tends to add a few points.

Five tactical pointers that consistently help:

  • Pace at 14 seconds per item. 50 questions in 720 seconds is exactly 14.4 seconds each. If you've been on a problem for 25 seconds and don't see the path, mark it and move on.
  • Skip the spatial puzzles first if visualization is slow for you. Get the verbal and numerical points banked, then come back.
  • Don't second-guess. Re-checking answers eats time at a worse rate than guessing on a new question. There's no penalty for wrong answers — guess if you must.
  • Mental arithmetic. Most numerical items resolve to two-step calculations. Practice 15% / 20% / 30% of common numbers; practice halving and doubling.
  • Build vocabulary the cheap way. Verbal items lean on synonyms and analogies. A few weeks of word-of-the-day exposure adds measurable points.

Wonderlic vs other tests

No single test gives the whole picture. Here's how the Wonderlic stacks up against the other major adult cognitive assessments.

Wonderlic (this test)

50 items · 12 min · single score 0–50

Speed-vs-accuracy under heavy time pressure. Used in pre-hire screening since 1937 and at the NFL Combine.

You're here →

WAIS-IV

~10 subtests · 60–90 min · 4 index scores + FSIQ

The clinical gold standard. Verbal Comprehension, Perceptual Reasoning, Working Memory, Processing Speed.

Take the WAIS-style test →

Mensa-style

~35 items · 25 min · pattern-heavy

Untimed-feel logic and pattern matching. Used by Mensa selection — emphasis on deep reasoning over speed.

Take the Mensa-style test →

Common questions

The population mean is approximately 21/50 (SD ~7). 21–24 is roughly average, 25–29 is above average, 30–34 is well above, 35+ is exceptional. A perfect 50 has been documented only a handful of times publicly — most famously by Pat McInally at the 1975 NFL Combine.

The NFL Combine average is roughly 24, slightly above the population mean of 21. Averages vary by position — offensive linemen and quarterbacks tend to be higher (24–28); running backs and cornerbacks lower (16–18). High-profile outliers, both ways, drive most of the public discussion.

Strictly speaking, no — it's not labeled an IQ test. But it correlates strongly with general cognitive ability ('g') and full-scale IQ. The publisher's own conversion table maps roughly: Wonderlic 21 ≈ IQ 100; Wonderlic 30 ≈ IQ 120. The 12-minute format prioritizes speed alongside reasoning, which is the main difference from a clinical IQ battery.

Reliability coefficients in published studies fall in the 0.82–0.94 range — comparable to longer cognitive tests. Predictive validity for cognitively demanding job performance is meaningful and well-replicated. The test trades depth for speed: a 12-minute test cannot match the diagnostic richness of a full WAIS-IV evaluation.

The Wonderlic is a 12-minute speeded screening test producing a single number 0–50. The WAIS-IV is a 60–90-minute clinically administered battery producing FSIQ and four index scores (verbal, perceptual, working memory, processing speed). Wonderlic for fast pre-hire screening; WAIS for diagnostic and clinical use. Both correlate strongly with 'g'.

The 12-minute limit is the test's defining feature. Most takers can't finish all 50 questions; the limit forces a speed-vs-accuracy trade-off that's part of what's being measured. Mental processing speed is a meaningful component of general cognitive ability and predicts performance in cognitively demanding roles.

Practice with timed sample questions across all four item types. Build a strict 14-second-per-item pacing instinct. Skip and return rather than burning time on hard items. Drill mental arithmetic (percentages, fractions, simple algebra). A few weeks of word-of-the-day exposure tends to add verbal points. Familiarity with the format alone usually adds a few points to a first-attempt score.

No — this is a Wonderlic-style practice test created by IQ-EXAMS.COM, modeled on the published format of the official Wonderlic Cognitive Ability Test (50 items, 12-minute limit, mixed item types). The actual Wonderlic test items are commercial copyrighted property of Wonderlic Inc.; we use 50 original items in the same general format. Your score under our test is a meaningful indicator under the same time pressure, but it isn't certified by Wonderlic Inc.

About this test. This is a Wonderlic-style test created by IQ-EXAMS.COM, modeled on the published format of the Wonderlic Cognitive Ability Test. Original Wonderlic items are commercial copyrighted property of Wonderlic Inc. and are not used here. Population averages and occupational comparisons referenced on this page are drawn from publicly available studies and the publisher's own published norms.

Ready to take the 12-minute test?

50 questions · 12 minutes · free · instant score & percentile · optional $7.99 PDF report

Start the Timer →
No registration required
Score & percentile shown free
Full report & explanations in PDF

See also

More IQ tests

What every IQ score means

Learn more