The GMAT Focus Edition — which fully replaced the previous GMAT format in February 2024 — is the primary admissions exam for MBA and graduate management programs at more than 7,700 programs worldwide. For applicants with ADHD, anxiety, learning disabilities, or other documented conditions, the exam’s three timed sections place specific demands on processing speed, sustained attention, and data reasoning that can prevent performance from reflecting actual ability.
The Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) provides accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act to ensure the exam measures business school readiness rather than the impact of a disability. We provide comprehensive psychological evaluations structured specifically to meet GMAC’s documentation requirements — giving you the strongest possible basis for approval.
Schedule a Free Consultation Call 617-680-5488The GMAT Focus Edition: What Changed and Why It Matters for Accommodations
Since February 2024, the GMAT Focus Edition has been the only version of the exam administered worldwide. If you are reading guidance about GMAT accommodations written before 2024, some of the procedural and structural details may be outdated.
The Focus Edition has three sections: Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights — each 45 minutes, for a total testing time of approximately 2 hours and 15 minutes (plus breaks). Compared to the previous GMAT, the Focus Edition:
- Is shorter overall, but more intensively paced within each section
- Includes a new Data Insights section combining data sufficiency, multi-source reasoning, table analysis, graphics interpretation, and two-part analysis — placing higher demands on flexible attention and rapid data processing
- Allows section order selection by the test taker, which has implications for pacing strategies relevant to some conditions
- Is available both at test centers and online with remote proctoring — accommodations are available in both formats, though specific options may vary
What GMAC Requires That Other Testing Organizations Don’t
GMAC’s accommodation review is notably more applicant-driven than LSAC’s or AAMC’s. Rather than a centralized documentation portal with a standardized form, GMAC requires applicants to submit a Test Accommodation Request through their mba.com account — and the documentation requirements, while rigorous, allow more flexibility in format than some other organizations.
What GMAC consistently requires across all accommodation requests:
- A diagnosis from a qualified licensed professional using current diagnostic criteria
- Documentation that the condition substantially limits a major life activity compared to most people in the general population — not simply that the condition exists
- Evidence that the condition specifically affects performance under the timed, computer-adaptive conditions the GMAT creates
- A clear rationale linking the documented deficit to the specific accommodation requested
- Current documentation — GMAC generally requires evaluation within the past three to five years
GMAT vs. GRE: A Note for Applicants Considering Both
Many business school applicants consider both the GMAT and the GRE (administered by ETS). While both exams accept accommodations for similar conditions, the review processes differ — GMAC and ETS conduct independent reviews, and approval on one does not transfer to the other. A comprehensive evaluation from our practice is structured to support accommodation requests on both exams if needed, which avoids the cost and time of two separate evaluations.
How We Document Your Condition for GMAC
GMAT Accommodations for ADHD
ADHD is the most common basis for GMAT accommodation requests, and GMAC applies careful scrutiny — in part because ADHD documentation varies enormously in quality. A diagnosis letter from a prescribing psychiatrist, while clinically appropriate for treatment, does not meet GMAC’s evidentiary standard. What GMAC needs is objective performance data demonstrating that ADHD produces measurable impairment under the specific conditions of a timed, computer-adaptive exam.
The GMAT Focus Edition’s Data Insights section is particularly relevant here — its multi-source, multi-format structure places heavy demands on the same cognitive systems ADHD disrupts: working memory, sustained attention, and cognitive flexibility under time pressure. Our evaluations document these impairments using performance-based measures rather than self-report alone.
Representative measures: Conners Continuous Performance Test-3 (CPT-3), WAIS-IV/V Processing Speed and Working Memory Indices, Barkley Adult ADHD Rating Scale (BAARS-IV), Conners Adult ADHD Rating Scales (CAARS), Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function — Adult (BRIEF-A), Trail Making Test A/B.
GMAT Accommodations for Anxiety
Anxiety-based accommodation requests require demonstrating that the condition produces functional cognitive impairment under exam conditions — not simply that test-taking is stressful. Subjective distress alone is insufficient. GMAC reviewers look for evidence that anxiety measurably impairs processing speed, working memory, or sustained attention in ways that extended time or a separate testing environment would address.
For candidates with performance anxiety or panic disorder specifically, the computer-adaptive format of the GMAT creates a particular dynamic: each question’s difficulty adjusts in real time based on prior responses, which means error recovery requires both cognitive flexibility and emotional regulation simultaneously. Anxiety that disrupts this recovery process is documentable and clinically meaningful for GMAT purposes.
Representative measures: Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI) or MMPI-3 with validity scales, WAIS-IV/V Processing Speed Index, cognitive efficiency measures under time pressure.
GMAT Accommodations for Learning Disabilities
Dyslexia and related reading disorders qualify for GMAT accommodations when objective testing demonstrates a specific learning disorder with deficits in decoding, fluency, or comprehension that are not explained by general cognitive ability. The Verbal Reasoning and Data Insights sections both place significant demands on rapid text processing, making reading fluency deficits particularly relevant to GMAT performance.
Representative measures: Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement (WJ-IV), Wechsler Individual Achievement Test (WIAT-4), Test of Word Reading Efficiency-2 (TOWRE-2), Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing-2 (CTOPP-2), WAIS-IV/V for cognitive benchmarking.
What We Measure — and What It Documents for GMAC
| Domain | Representative Measures | What It Documents for GMAC |
|---|---|---|
| Cognitive Ability | WAIS-IV/V Full Scale and Index Scores | Baseline intelligence; discrepancy analysis for LD |
| Processing Speed | WAIS-IV/V PSI, Symbol Search, Coding, Trail Making A | Primary support for extended time requests |
| Working Memory | WAIS-IV/V WMI, Digit Span, Arithmetic | Multi-source data handling; Focus Edition Data Insights |
| Sustained Attention | CPT-3, TOVA | ADHD endurance over full exam administration |
| Executive Functioning | D-KEFS, BRIEF-A, Trail Making B | Cognitive flexibility; set-shifting between question formats |
| Reading and Achievement | WJ-IV, WIAT-4, TOWRE-2 | Dyslexia and reading fluency documentation |
| Phonological Processing | CTOPP-2 | Reading disorder at the phonological level |
| Anxiety and Mood | BAI, STAI, PAI or MMPI-3 | Anxiety severity; functional cognitive impact under pressure |
| Personality / Validity | PAI, MMPI-3 with validity scales | Clinical credibility; rules out symptom exaggeration |
What GMAC Typically Grants with Appropriate Documentation
⏱ Extended Time — 50%
Time-and-a-half on all sections. The most commonly approved accommodation. Requires documented processing speed, reading fluency, or attentional deficits with clear functional impact on timed performance.
⏱⏱ Extended Time — 100%
Double time on all sections. Requires stronger quantitative evidence — typically significant impairment across multiple domains or co-occurring conditions with compounding effect on timed performance.
🔇 Separate Testing Room
Private or reduced-distraction environment for candidates with documented attentional dysregulation, anxiety, or sensory sensitivities that are meaningfully worsened by the standard testing center environment.
☕ Extra Breaks
Additional or extended breaks between sections for candidates with documented conditions affecting stamina, self-regulation, or physical needs during a testing session.
🖥 Assistive Technology
Screen magnification, text-to-speech, and other approved assistive tools for candidates with visual impairments or specific reading disabilities. Subject to GMAC’s approved technology list.
📝 Other Format Modifications
Enlarged text, alternative input devices, and other modifications for physical or sensory disabilities. Available in both test center and online formats, though options may vary by delivery mode.
What a GMAT Accommodation Request Looks Like in Practice
A 27-year-old management consultant with a strong academic record contacted us eight weeks before his target GMAT date. He had been managing ADHD since college with medication and had performed well in a demanding professional environment — but had consistently underperformed on timed practice exams relative to his preparation level, particularly on the Data Insights section, which he described as overwhelming due to the volume of information to process simultaneously under time pressure.
He had no formal psychoeducational evaluation. His only documentation was a psychiatrist’s medication management records, which he had assumed would be sufficient. After a brief free consultation, it was clear that GMAC’s standards would require objective testing data, not prescription records.
Our evaluation confirmed ADHD, Combined Presentation, with processing speed in the 19th percentile and working memory in the 24th percentile — both significantly below what his verbal and reasoning scores would predict. CPT-3 results showed characteristic ADHD intrasubject variability in response time — a pattern directly relevant to the Data Insights section’s multi-format structure. The evaluation report addressed this connection explicitly, linking his measured processing speed and working memory deficits to the specific cognitive demands of the GMAT Focus Edition’s most challenging section.
GMAC approved 50% extended time and a separate testing room on first submission, within ten business days. He sat for the exam six weeks after our initial consultation.
The case illustrates two things that come up consistently: medication management records, however thorough, do not substitute for a psychoeducational evaluation; and the documentation that gets approved is the documentation that directly connects measured deficits to the exam’s specific task demands — not general impairment statements.
How Far in Advance to Start
We recommend beginning the evaluation process at least eight weeks before your target GMAT date. This allows time for:
- Free consultation — we review your history and determine what testing is needed (Week 1)
- Evaluation sessions — typically one to two sessions conducted virtually or in person (Weeks 2–3)
- Report preparation and delivery — two to three weeks after testing (Weeks 4–5)
- GMAC submission and review — 1 to 3 weeks for GMAC to process (Weeks 6–7)
- Exam scheduling — once approved, you schedule through mba.com (Week 8+)
Remember: you cannot schedule your exam until accommodation approval is confirmed. Do not register for a specific test date before your accommodations are approved — if GMAC’s review takes longer than expected, you may need to reschedule.
GMAT Accommodations: Common Questions
For general questions about the evaluation process and what conditions qualify, see our psychological testing FAQs. These questions focus on what is specific to the GMAT.
The accommodation process through GMAC remains the same regardless of exam format — you still apply through your mba.com account and submit documentation to GMAC directly. The Focus Edition change doesn’t alter the review process or documentation requirements.
What it does affect is how your evaluation should be framed. The Focus Edition’s Data Insights section — combining multi-source reasoning, data sufficiency, graphics interpretation, and two-part analysis — places specific demands on working memory and cognitive flexibility that the previous exam’s format didn’t combine in the same way. A current evaluation that addresses these specific task demands is stronger than one written to the old exam structure. If you have documentation from before 2024 that was written for the previous format, a review during your free consultation will tell you whether it still meets GMAC’s current needs.
In most cases, yes — with some planning. GMAC (GMAT) and ETS (GRE) have separate documentation requirements and conduct independent reviews, so approval on one does not transfer to the other. However, a single comprehensive psychoeducational evaluation from our practice can be written to address both organizations’ standards simultaneously.
If you tell us during your consultation that you plan to apply for accommodations on both exams, we structure the report to satisfy both sets of requirements — which avoids the cost and time of separate evaluations. We then provide a cover letter tailored to each organization’s submission format when you are ready to apply.
No. GMAC requires objective psychometric test data — not medication records or a prescribing clinician’s letter, however thorough. This is one of the most common reasons GMAT accommodation requests are denied or returned for supplementation.
A psychiatrist’s records are clinically valuable and can inform and support our evaluation, but they do not substitute for it. GMAC expects performance-based cognitive testing that documents the specific deficits — processing speed, working memory, sustained attention — that justify the accommodation requested. We incorporate your treatment history into our evaluation, which reduces redundancy in the clinical interview and strengthens the overall report.
Most common accommodations — extended time and extra breaks — are available on the online GMAT Focus Edition with remote proctoring through Pearson VUE. A separate testing room is inherently addressed by taking the exam at home.
However, some accommodations that require physical or technological modifications may only be available at test centers. If your approved accommodations include assistive technology, enlarged print, or other format modifications, confirm with GMAC and Pearson VUE whether those are supported in the online format before scheduling. GMAC’s approval letter will specify which delivery modes are available for your particular set of accommodations.
GMAC treats accommodation information as confidential. Score reports sent to business schools do not indicate whether accommodations were used — your score report is identical to that of any other test taker regardless of testing conditions.
This is a meaningful difference from the LSAT, where extended-time scores are reported separately. GMAT scores are reported on a single scale with no notation of accommodation status, which means requesting accommodations carries no formal disclosure risk with admissions committees.
GMAC generally requires documentation within the past three to five years, though this can vary by condition. For stable, lifelong conditions with extensive prior documentation, some flexibility exists — but in practice we recommend a current evaluation in the large majority of cases, particularly for adult ADHD, where GMAC reviewers are aware that high-achieving professionals often develop compensatory strategies that can make impairment less visible in brief or outdated assessments.
If you have existing documentation that may be borderline in recency, bring it to your free consultation. We will review it and advise honestly on whether it is likely to be accepted or whether a new evaluation is the stronger path.
Yes. GMAC allows resubmission with additional or updated documentation. Denial letters typically identify the specific gap — missing objective test data, insufficient functional rationale, outdated evaluation, or accommodation not linked to a documented deficit. If you have received a denial, contact us before resubmitting. We can review the denial letter and produce targeted supplemental documentation or a new evaluation that directly addresses what GMAC identified, which significantly increases the likelihood of approval on resubmission.
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