ISEE Exam Timetable: Complete Guide for Independent School Admissions
Plan the Independent School Entrance Exam with confidence. This guide explains ISEE testing seasons, levels, section timing, registration options, fees, score reports, retake planning, and a realistic prep calendar for students applying to Grades 2–12.
What Is the ISEE?
The ISEE stands for the Independent School Entrance Exam. It is an admissions assessment created by ERB for students applying to independent schools, private schools, boarding schools, and some selective programs. The exam is used for applicants to Grades 2 through 12, and it gives schools a common academic measure to review alongside grades, interviews, recommendations, essays, extracurricular activities, and the overall application profile.
The ISEE is different from regular school tests because it is designed for an admissions context. It does not simply ask whether a student remembers a chapter from a textbook. It checks how well the student reads, reasons, solves unfamiliar problems, manages time, and handles pressure. For older students, the exam includes verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, reading comprehension, mathematics achievement, and an essay. For younger Primary Level students, the exam is shorter and focuses on early reading, math, and, for Primary 2, auditory comprehension.
Important planning rule: ISEE is not a single fixed national-date exam like the SAT or ACT. Families search for available seats based on location, testing format, school administration, and testing season. That means the “best” ISEE date depends on your application deadline and whether you want room for a retake.
Why schools use ISEE scores
Independent schools use the ISEE because it gives them a standardized comparison point across many different elementary and middle schools. A student’s classroom grades can vary based on school curriculum, grading style, teacher expectations, and course difficulty. ISEE scores provide a more consistent academic signal, especially in reading, mathematics, and reasoning.
However, an ISEE result is only one part of the admissions process. A strong score can help, but it does not replace fit, character, teacher recommendations, classroom performance, writing samples, interviews, and the school’s own enrollment priorities. The best strategy is to prepare seriously without treating the exam as the entire application.
Best for
Families applying to independent day schools, boarding schools, private schools, and selective programs that request or accept ISEE scores.
Test focus
Reading, vocabulary, quantitative reasoning, math achievement, academic stamina, time management, and organized writing for older levels.
Key benefit
The ISEE gives students multiple testing opportunities because it is offered across three testing seasons during the school year.
2026–2027 ISEE Exam Timetable
The ISEE uses a testing season model. Students may test once in each season. This matters because retake planning is based on seasons, not simply on the number of weeks between tests.
| Testing Season | 2026–2027 Months | Best Use | Retake Planning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spring/Summer 2026 | April, May, June, July 2026 | Early applicants, diagnostic attempt, families starting before the main admissions rush | Can leave Fall 2026 and Winter 2026–2027 available for later attempts |
| Fall 2026 | August, September, October, November 2026 | Most common first serious attempt for families applying for 2027 admission | Allows a Winter retake before many January deadlines |
| Winter 2026–2027 | December 2026, January, February, March 2027 | Retake season, late first attempt, or deadline-driven application submission | Usually the most important backup window for January and February school deadlines |
| Spring/Summer 2027 | April, May, June, July 2027 | Early planning for the next admissions cycle, rolling admissions, or younger students testing early | Can be used as a low-pressure first attempt before Fall 2027 |
No universal exact date list: ISEE test dates are searchable through the ISEE registration system. A family may see different dates depending on city, country, school site, at-home proctoring availability, Prometric availability, paper vs online format, and whether a school has opened a private test administration.
Recommended ISEE admissions timeline
For most students applying to independent schools with winter application deadlines, the strongest timeline is:
May–July 2026: Research and diagnostic phase
Confirm target schools, note application deadlines, identify whether each school accepts ISEE, and take a low-pressure diagnostic to understand vocabulary, reading, and math gaps.
August–September 2026: Skill-building phase
Study foundations. Build vocabulary habits, review arithmetic and algebra basics, practice reading stamina, and begin short timed sets.
October–November 2026: First serious attempt
Register early for a Fall ISEE date. This is often the best first official attempt because it leaves Winter available for a retake.
December 2026–January 2027: Retake or final submission
Use the Winter season if the first result is below target or if a test-day issue occurred. Leave enough score-report time before application deadlines.
February–March 2027: Late-cycle testing
Useful for schools with later deadlines, waitlist updates, rolling admissions, or students whose application timeline starts late.
ISEE Levels by Application Grade
The ISEE level is determined by the grade to which the student is applying, not the grade the student is currently attending. This is one of the most common mistakes families make during registration.
| ISEE Level | Student Applying To | Main Sections | Total Testing Time | Essay? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary 2 | Grade 2 | Auditory Comprehension, Reading, Mathematics | 53 minutes + one 5–10 minute break | No |
| Primary 3 | Grade 3 | Reading, Mathematics | 54 minutes + one 5–10 minute break | No |
| Primary 4 | Grade 4 | Reading, Mathematics | 60 minutes + one 5–10 minute break | No |
| Lower Level | Grades 5 or 6 | Verbal Reasoning, Quantitative Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, Mathematics Achievement, Essay | 2 hours 20 minutes + two 5–10 minute breaks | Yes, unscored |
| Middle Level | Grades 7 or 8 | Verbal Reasoning, Quantitative Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, Mathematics Achievement, Essay | 2 hours 40 minutes + two 5–10 minute breaks | Yes, unscored |
| Upper Level | Grades 9, 10, 11, or 12 | Verbal Reasoning, Quantitative Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, Mathematics Achievement, Essay | 2 hours 40 minutes + two 5–10 minute breaks | Yes, unscored |
Example: A student currently in Grade 6 who is applying to Grade 7 should take the Middle Level ISEE. A student currently in Grade 8 applying to Grade 9 should take the Upper Level ISEE.
What changes from level to level?
The testing level changes because the exam must match the academic readiness expected for the grade of entry. Primary levels are shorter and more developmentally appropriate. Lower Level introduces the full admissions-test structure but with fewer questions than Middle and Upper. Middle and Upper levels have the same section timing and number of questions, but the difficulty of content and norm group expectations differ.
Primary Level
Designed for younger applicants. The test is shorter, has fewer sections, and does not include an essay.
Grades 2–4 Shorter test No essayLower Level
Designed for students applying to upper elementary or early middle school. It introduces the full five-part structure.
Grades 5–6 Essay included 2h 20mMiddle & Upper
Designed for middle school and high school applicants. These levels require stronger stamina and stricter pacing.
Grades 7–12 160 questions 2h 40mOfficial ISEE Section Timing
Use the tables below to understand exactly how long each ISEE level takes. The time pressure is real, especially in Verbal Reasoning and Quantitative Reasoning, where students often have less than one minute per question.
Primary Level Timing
| Level | Section | Questions | Time | Approx. Time Per Question |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary 2 | Auditory Comprehension | 6 | 7 minutes | 70 seconds |
| Primary 2 | Reading | 18 | 20 minutes | 67 seconds |
| Primary 2 | Mathematics | 24 | 26 minutes | 65 seconds |
| Primary 3 | Reading | 24 | 28 minutes | 70 seconds |
| Primary 3 | Mathematics | 24 | 26 minutes | 65 seconds |
| Primary 4 | Reading | 28 | 30 minutes | 64 seconds |
| Primary 4 | Mathematics | 28 | 30 minutes | 64 seconds |
Lower, Middle, and Upper Level Timing
| Level | Section | Questions / Prompt | Time | Approx. Time Per Question |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Verbal Reasoning | 34 questions | 20 minutes | 35 seconds |
| Lower | Quantitative Reasoning | 38 questions | 35 minutes | 55 seconds |
| Lower | Reading Comprehension | 25 questions | 25 minutes | 60 seconds |
| Lower | Mathematics Achievement | 30 questions | 30 minutes | 60 seconds |
| Lower | Essay | 1 prompt | 30 minutes | 30 minutes total |
| Middle / Upper | Verbal Reasoning | 40 questions | 20 minutes | 30 seconds |
| Middle / Upper | Quantitative Reasoning | 37 questions | 35 minutes | 57 seconds |
| Middle / Upper | Reading Comprehension | 36 questions | 35 minutes | 58 seconds |
| Middle / Upper | Mathematics Achievement | 47 questions | 40 minutes | 51 seconds |
| Middle / Upper | Essay | 1 prompt | 30 minutes | 30 minutes total |
Section-by-section purpose
Verbal Reasoning
This section measures vocabulary, word relationships, and verbal reasoning. Students usually see synonym questions and sentence-completion questions. The pace is fast, so students should not overthink every word. The goal is to eliminate clearly wrong choices, use context, and keep moving.
- Most important skills: vocabulary, context clues, word roots, logical fit.
- Common challenge: spending too long on one unfamiliar word.
- Best strategy: make a fast educated guess when choices are narrowed down.
Quantitative Reasoning
This section measures mathematical thinking more than routine calculation. Students may need to compare quantities, recognize patterns, interpret data, and reason through unfamiliar problems. It rewards flexible thinking and number sense.
- Most important skills: estimation, logic, proportional reasoning, data interpretation.
- Common challenge: treating every problem like a long schoolwork calculation.
- Best strategy: look for shortcuts, test answer choices, and use estimation.
Reading Comprehension
This section tests how well a student understands passages, inferences, main ideas, vocabulary in context, tone, structure, and details. Older students must manage both reading time and question time carefully.
- Most important skills: main idea, inference, evidence, vocabulary in context.
- Common challenge: rereading too much without a question target.
- Best strategy: read actively, mark key shifts, and return to the passage for evidence.
Mathematics Achievement
This section is closer to school-based mathematics achievement. It checks whether the student has mastered grade-appropriate math content. For many students, this is the section where systematic practice produces the clearest improvement.
- Most important skills: arithmetic accuracy, algebra basics, geometry, measurement, data, problem solving.
- Common challenge: careless errors under time pressure.
- Best strategy: practice clean scratch work and learn when to skip and return.
Essay
The essay is included for Lower, Middle, and Upper Level students. It is not part of the numeric score, but schools receive it. This makes the essay important because it gives admissions readers a direct sample of the student’s writing voice, organization, maturity, and ability to respond to a prompt.
- Most important skills: clear position, organized paragraphs, specific examples, readable style.
- Common challenge: writing a generic response with no concrete details.
- Best strategy: plan for 4–5 minutes, write for about 22 minutes, revise for 3–4 minutes.
Time Per Question: The Math Behind the ISEE Clock
Time pressure is one of the biggest reasons students underperform on the ISEE. The test is not only checking what the student knows. It is also checking whether the student can make reasonable decisions under a strict clock.
The universal pacing formula is:
For example, Middle and Upper Level Verbal Reasoning gives 40 questions in 20 minutes:
This means a student cannot treat every question equally. The best test-takers quickly identify which questions deserve time and which questions should be guessed, marked mentally, and revisited only if time remains.
Pacing checkpoints
A pacing checkpoint tells the student where they should be at a certain time. The formula is:
If a Lower Level student is 10 minutes into Verbal Reasoning, the target question number is:
So after 10 minutes, that student should be around question 17. If they are only on question 10, they are behind pace and need to move faster or guess more strategically.
Fastest section
Middle/Upper Verbal Reasoning allows about 30 seconds per question. Vocabulary preparation and fast elimination matter.
Most stamina-heavy
Middle/Upper Mathematics Achievement has 47 questions in 40 minutes. Accuracy and pacing must work together.
Most evidence-based
Reading Comprehension requires enough time to return to the passage and verify answers with evidence.
ISEE Registration Options, Deadlines & Fees
ISEE registration is normally handled through an online parent account. Families can search for dates, locations, testing formats, score recipients, and accommodations. Register early because popular test dates and school sites can fill quickly during the fall admissions season.
Testing location options
At-Home Testing
Remote online testing from home with proctoring. Families must check device and internet requirements before test day.
Grades 2–12 Online IndividualAt-School Testing
Testing hosted by a school. It may be online or paper, depending on the administration offered by that site.
Grades 2–12 Group Paper or onlineIn-Office Testing
Testing through professional educational testing offices. Availability and group size vary by location.
Grades 2–12 Group or individual Variable formatPrometric Centers
Professional test centers for Grades 5–12 using the online format. A parent or guardian must follow test-center rules.
Grades 5–12 Online In-personFee guide by testing type
The fees below are included as a planning reference. Always verify the final fee during official registration because fees, site availability, and policy details can change.
| Testing Type | Grades 2–4 | Grades 5–12 | Important Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| At-home, school-administered | $130 | $165 | Proctored by trained school faculty or staff where available. |
| At-home, ERB-administered | $185 | $240 | Remote administration by ERB proctors. |
| At-school online or paper | $130 | $165 | Online registration closes closer to the test date than paper registration. |
| At-school late paper registration | $175 | $210 | Late paper registration may be available 20 to 14 days before the test date. |
| At-school walk-in paper registration | $190 | $225 | Only when the school provides a walk-in code. |
| In-office group testing | $185 | $225 | Availability and format vary by testing office. |
| In-office individual testing | $210 | $255 | Limited availability; useful for families needing a smaller setting. |
| Prometric Test Center | Not listed for Primary | $250 | Grades 5–12 only; online registration required. |
| Phone registration fee | +$35 | +$35 | Register online when possible to avoid this additional fee. Phone registration is not available for Prometric. |
Registration timing rules to remember
- Online at-school tests: registration may be available until 3 or more days before the test date.
- Paper at-school tests: standard registration may require 21 or more days before the test date.
- Late paper registration: may be available between 20 and 14 days before the test date.
- Walk-in paper registration: may be available less than 13 days before the test date only if the site provides a walk-in code.
- Prometric: families must register online, and the center may host other tests at the same time.
Fee waiver note: ISEE fee waivers may be available for families with financial need. Fee waiver questions should generally be directed to the school or schools to which the student is applying.
ISEE Scores, Stanines & Score Reports
ISEE scoring is not the same as a classroom test score. A student does not receive a simple percentage grade such as 82%. Instead, the report gives several score types that help schools compare the student with other ISEE test-takers at the same grade level.
Score report timing
Online test scores
Usually ready in 3 to 5 days.
Paper test scores
Usually ready in 5 to 10 days.
Score recipients
Families can choose score recipients. Schools receive complete score reports, not selected sections only.
What the ISEE score report shows
| Score Type | Meaning | Parent-Friendly Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Raw Score | Number of questions answered correctly | This is the starting point, but it is not usually the main number schools focus on. |
| Scaled Score | A converted score from 760 to 940 for each scored section | Allows scores to be compared across different test forms. |
| Percentile Rank | Shows how the student compares with students in the ISEE norm group | A 70th percentile means the student scored as well as or better than 70% of the comparison group. |
| Stanine | A 1–9 score band derived from percentile performance | 1 is lowest, 5 is broadly middle, and 9 is highest. Admissions teams often look at stanine patterns across sections. |
| Essay | Unscored writing sample sent to schools | Schools may review it to evaluate writing maturity and organization. |
Raw score formula
The ISEE has no penalty for wrong answers, so the raw score for a section is simply:
If a student answers 30 questions correctly in a 40-question section, the raw score is 30. Incorrect answers do not subtract points:
This creates a simple but important strategy:
Answer every question. A blank answer cannot earn credit. A guessed answer still has a chance of being correct. If time is running out, students should use smart elimination and fill in remaining questions.
Why a “good ISEE score” depends on the school
There is no single universal ISEE score that guarantees admission. Selective schools may expect stronger stanines, but they also read the full application. Some schools may care deeply about balanced section performance. Others may be more flexible if the student has strong grades, recommendations, interviews, or special talents.
A practical approach is to ask each target school how it uses ISEE scores. Some schools publish typical score ranges. Others avoid giving a cutoff because they use holistic review. Either way, the student’s goal should be to show academic readiness without sacrificing the quality of the rest of the application.
Interactive ISEE Planning Tools
Use these simple tools to identify the correct level, calculate pacing, and plan a safe test date before application deadlines.
Level Finder
Select the grade the student is applying to.
Pace Calculator
Choose a section to see the time available per question.
Deadline Planner
Enter a school application deadline and score format to estimate the latest safer testing window.
8-Week ISEE Prep Timetable
A good ISEE prep plan should improve skill, timing, and confidence without exhausting the student. The schedule below works best when the student studies 4 to 5 days per week in shorter, focused blocks.
| Week | Main Focus | What to Do | Parent Checkpoint |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Diagnostic and baseline | Take a level-appropriate diagnostic. Identify weak sections and timing issues. | Do not judge the first score emotionally. Use it as data. |
| Week 2 | Vocabulary and arithmetic cleanup | Begin daily vocabulary, review fractions, decimals, ratios, percents, and basic operations. | Track repeated careless errors separately from concept gaps. |
| Week 3 | Reading comprehension | Practice main idea, inference, vocabulary in context, and evidence-based answers. | Ask the student to prove answers with a line or detail from the passage. |
| Week 4 | Quantitative reasoning | Practice comparison, estimation, patterns, and multi-step word problems. | Reward good reasoning, not just correct answers. |
| Week 5 | Mathematics achievement | Review geometry, measurement, data, algebra readiness, and word problems. | Build an error notebook with the exact reason for each mistake. |
| Week 6 | Timed section sets | Run short timed drills for each section. Practice skip-and-return strategy. | Watch pacing. A student who knows the material may still lose points by moving too slowly. |
| Week 7 | Full-length simulation | Take one full test under realistic timing, including breaks and essay if applicable. | Review stamina, snack plan, sleep, and emotional regulation. |
| Week 8 | Final polish | Review error patterns, memorize key strategies, do light practice, and avoid cramming. | Keep the final 48 hours calm. Confidence matters. |
Weekly study balance
A balanced weekly schedule for Lower, Middle, and Upper Level students might look like this:
Where \(V\) is Verbal Reasoning, \(Q\) is Quantitative Reasoning, \(R\) is Reading Comprehension, \(M\) is Mathematics Achievement, \(E\) is Essay practice, and Review is time spent correcting mistakes. For many students, review is the highest-value part of prep because it turns mistakes into future points.
Recommended rhythm: Short, consistent study sessions often work better than long weekend cramming. For younger students, 20–35 minute sessions may be enough. For Middle and Upper Level students, 45–75 minute sessions with focused goals are usually more productive.
ISEE Test-Day Checklist
Test-day success depends on preparation and logistics. A student can lose confidence quickly if the family is rushed, confused about the location, missing required materials, or unsure about the start time.
Before test day
- Confirm test date, time zone, location, and format.
- Review the verification letter or confirmation email.
- Check required identification and parent/guardian rules.
- For at-home testing, test devices, cameras, internet, and room setup.
- Sleep well and avoid heavy cramming the night before.
On test morning
- Eat a steady breakfast.
- Arrive early or log in early.
- Bring approved materials only.
- Use breaks to reset, breathe, and refocus.
- Do not discuss hard questions during breaks.
During the test
- Answer every question because there is no wrong-answer penalty.
- Skip quickly when a question is taking too long.
- Use elimination before guessing.
- Keep scratch work clean for math.
- Stay calm if one section feels difficult.
At-home testing reminder
At-home ISEE testing can be convenient, but it requires extra technical preparation. Families should check device requirements, internet stability, room rules, camera requirements, and the test start time in the correct time zone. International families should be especially careful with time-zone conversions.
Paper vs online format
The ISEE is available in both online and paper formats, but format availability varies by location. The content and timing are designed to be consistent across modalities. The main differences are practical: online students select answers on a device, while paper students use a test booklet and answer document. Lower, Middle, and Upper Level students type the essay online or handwrite it on paper.
Parent Strategy Guide: How to Choose the Best ISEE Date
Choosing the best ISEE date is not about picking the earliest possible seat. It is about balancing readiness, deadlines, retake opportunity, score-report timing, school requirements, and the student’s emotional stamina.
The safest planning formula
Use this simple backward-planning formula:
If a school deadline is January 15 and you are taking a paper test, use 10 days for score reporting and at least 7 extra days as a buffer:
This does not mean December 29 is always available or ideal. It means the family should avoid scheduling much later than that if the school’s January 15 deadline is strict.
Recommended date strategy by situation
| Situation | Best First Attempt | Backup Plan | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Applying to selective schools with January deadlines | October or November | December or early January | Allows a Winter retake while preserving deadline safety. |
| Student is anxious about testing | Earlier Fall date after adequate prep | Winter retake if needed | Knowing there is a second chance can lower pressure. |
| Student needs significant math improvement | Late Fall after structured prep | Winter retake after error-focused review | Math gains require consistent practice, not last-minute cramming. |
| Rolling admissions or later deadlines | Winter or Spring/Summer depending on school | Next available season | Deadline flexibility creates more room for preparation. |
| Applying next year but starting early | Spring/Summer | Fall of the application year | Useful as a low-pressure baseline if the school accepts timing. |
What parents should not do
- Do not schedule the first official test so late that a retake becomes impossible.
- Do not assume all schools have the same score deadline.
- Do not over-test the student without a clear improvement plan between attempts.
- Do not judge the score by classroom grading standards. ISEE percentiles compare students with a competitive applicant pool.
- Do not ignore the essay just because it is unscored. Schools still receive it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does ISEE stand for?
ISEE stands for Independent School Entrance Exam. It is used by many independent schools as part of the admissions process for students applying to Grades 2 through 12.
How many times can a student take the ISEE?
A student may take the ISEE once per testing season. The three seasons are Fall, Winter, and Spring/Summer, which creates up to three testing opportunities during the school year.
Are ISEE test dates the same everywhere?
No. ISEE dates depend on location, test site, school administration, format, at-home availability, and Prometric availability. Families should search official available dates through their parent account.
What is the best month to take the ISEE?
For many families applying to schools with January deadlines, October or November is a strong first attempt because it leaves the Winter season available for a retake. The best month depends on school deadlines and student readiness.
Which ISEE level is used for Grade 9 admission?
Students applying to Grade 9 take the Upper Level ISEE. Upper Level is also used for applicants to Grades 10, 11, and 12.
Is the ISEE essay scored?
The essay is not included in the numeric score report for Lower, Middle, and Upper Level exams. However, it is sent to schools, so students should write a clear, organized response.
Can families choose which ISEE scores to send?
Families can choose score recipients. However, a complete score report is sent to a school; families cannot send only selected sections from one test administration.
How should students prepare for ISEE math?
Students should prepare both Quantitative Reasoning and Mathematics Achievement. Quantitative Reasoning rewards logic, estimation, and problem solving. Mathematics Achievement rewards mastery of grade-appropriate content. The best plan combines concept review, timed practice, and careful error analysis.
Is guessing allowed on the ISEE?
Yes. There is no penalty for incorrect answers, so students should answer every question. If a question is too time-consuming, eliminate wrong options and make the best possible guess.
How long before the application deadline should we test?
For online tests, leave at least 3 to 5 days for scores plus a family buffer. For paper tests, leave at least 5 to 10 days plus a buffer. If the school deadline is strict, schedule earlier rather than later.
