Assessment Planner

Before you spend a dollar on tests, make a plan.

Answer four honest questions and we'll give you one clear starting point — what to study first, at what pace, and exactly where to go next. No scores, no pressure.

1Tell us your date goal and your weakest subject.
2Share how many hours you have each week.
3Get one start-here plan you can print.
Your plan in 4 steps

Build your study plan

Fill in the form below. Your answers stay in this browser — nothing is sent or saved to a server.

1.When do you want to test?
Pick a target date, or estimate how many weeks away it is. Not sure yet? That's fine — skip it.
— or —
2.Which subject(s) feel hardest?
Choose all that apply. We'll start your plan here.
3.How many hours can you study each week?
Be honest — a realistic plan is one you'll actually keep.
4.Where are you right now?
This sets your very first move.
Guidance only — this does not predict an actual GED score.
Your starting point

This plan is study guidance only. It is not a GED score or a prediction of passing. Official scores use a 100–200 scale; you need 145+ per subject. For official dates, fees, and registration, always use GED.com.

An honest plan saves you money. Practice first, pay later — only buy the official tests once you're truly ready.

You've got a plan. Now start practicing.

Practice is free. Begin with your weakest subject today and watch how fast you improve.