GRE Study Courses — Free Prep, Score Guide & 8-Week Plan

Best free GRE study courses and resources. Full exam format, 8-week study plan, Verbal and Quant tips, plus free practice tests by section.

GRE Study Courses — Free Prep, Score Guide & 8-Week Plan

The GRE market is crowded with prep options — paid courses, free resources, self-study books, and everything in between. Figuring out which GRE study courses are actually worth your time (and money) is genuinely difficult, especially when you're already stretched thin with graduate school applications.

This guide cuts through the noise. You'll find a breakdown of the major online GRE prep options, a comparison of what each type of course delivers, a realistic study schedule, and plenty of free practice resources you can use right now — no subscription required.

Bottom line up front: Most students who hit 160+ on Verbal and 162+ on Quant don't need an expensive course — they need a structured plan and high-quality practice questions. This guide shows you exactly how to build that without spending $1,000.

What GRE Study Courses Actually Offer

Before picking a course, you need to understand what you're actually buying. GRE prep courses generally fall into three categories:

Self-Paced Online Courses (Most Common)

These are pre-recorded video lessons plus question banks. You set your own schedule, work at your own pace, and pay a flat fee for access (typically 1-6 months). Magoosh, Manhattan Prep, and Kaplan all offer this format. Prices range from $150 to $450 depending on the provider and subscription length.

What you get: structured content, progress tracking, and often adaptive practice. What you don't get: accountability, live instruction, or personalized feedback on your Analytical Writing essays.

Live Online Classes

Scheduled sessions with a live instructor, usually in groups of 10-30 students. These run $500-$1,500 depending on the provider and number of sessions. They work well for students who need structure and accountability — if you know you won't study without a commitment forcing you, the price may be worth it.

The downside: you're locked into a schedule, the pace may not match yours, and you're paying a premium for a format that doesn't suit everyone.

Tutoring

One-on-one instruction is the most personalized option and the most expensive — typically $100-$200/hour, often totaling $1,500-$3,000+ for a complete prep package. Tutoring makes the most sense if you've already done substantial self-study and have specific, persistent weaknesses you can't resolve on your own.

The Best Free GRE Study Resources

Here's something the test prep industry doesn't advertise loudly: ETS (the company that makes the GRE) offers genuinely excellent free prep materials. Two full-length practice tests — POWERPREP Online — are available at no cost through your ETS account. These are the highest-fidelity GRE practice tests available. They use real retired GRE questions and score you on the same scale as the real exam.

Start with one POWERPREP test as your baseline. Your score tells you how much you need to improve — and that determines whether you need a paid course at all.

Beyond POWERPREP, the GRE Verbal Reasoning practice test and GRE Quantitative Reasoning practice test give you targeted question practice for each section. These are the areas where drilling specific question types pays off most.

What Gre Study Courses Actually Offer - GRE - Graduate Record Examinations certification study resource
SectionQuestionsTime
Verbal Reasoning27
Quantitative Reasoning27
Analytical Writing1
Total118

How to Build Your Own GRE Study Plan

A 3-month study plan is the sweet spot for most students — enough time to see real improvement without burning out. Here's how to structure it based on your starting score and target.

Step 1: Take a Baseline Test

Before you spend a single hour studying, take a full-length practice test under real timing conditions. Use ETS POWERPREP 1 for this. Your baseline score tells you the actual gap between where you are and where you want to be — and that gap determines your study intensity.

A 5-point gap (e.g., 155 to 160 on Verbal) requires a very different plan than a 15-point gap (145 to 160). Don't waste 3 months of intensive prep if you only need 6 weeks of targeted work.

Step 2: Identify Your Section Priority

Most programs care more about one section than the other. If you're applying to STEM programs, your Quant score will matter more. For humanities and social science programs, Verbal often carries more weight. Check the score averages for your target programs — many post them publicly — and prioritize accordingly.

Step 3: Build Your Weekly Schedule

The biggest predictor of GRE improvement isn't the course you use — it's consistency. Students who study 10-15 hours per week consistently for 8-12 weeks outperform those who cram 30 hours in two weeks before the exam. Here's a realistic weekly structure that works:

  • Monday/Wednesday/Friday: Concept study — video lessons or textbook content, 45-60 minutes
  • Tuesday/Thursday: Timed practice — 20 questions under exam conditions, then thorough review
  • Saturday: Longer session — full practice section or mini practice test, 90 minutes
  • Sunday: Review and weak-spot work — revisit any question types you're still missing

This schedule gives you 6-8 hours per week, which is enough to see meaningful score gains within 3 months.

What Gre Study Courses Actually Offer - GRE - Graduate Record Examinations certification study resource
1
Baseline + diagnostics
  • POWERPREP 1 full test (timed)
  • Score breakdown by question type
  • Identify top 3 weak areas
  • Begin GRE vocab: 10 words/day
2
Verbal foundations
  • Text completion strategies
  • Reading comprehension question types
  • GRE Text Completion practice test
  • Vocab: 70 words total
3
Quant foundations
  • Arithmetic and number properties review
  • GRE Arithmetic practice test
  • Quantitative comparison strategies
  • GRE Quantitative Comparison practice test
4
Analytical Writing
  • Analyze an Issue essay structure
  • Write 2 timed essays (30 min each)
  • GRE Issue Essay practice test
  • Review ETS essay scoring rubric
5
Advanced Verbal
  • Sentence equivalence strategies
  • Dense reading comprehension passages
  • GRE Reading Comprehension practice test
  • Vocab review: 200 words to date
6
Advanced Quant
  • Algebra and functions deep work
  • Data interpretation practice
  • GRE Algebra practice test
  • GRE Data Interpretation practice test
7
Full practice + gaps
  • POWERPREP 2 full test (timed)
  • Compare to baseline — measure improvement
  • Targeted work on remaining weak areas
8
Consolidation
  • 2-3 section-level practice tests
  • No new material — lock in strategies
  • Final vocab review
  • Book exam date if not yet scheduled

GRE Verbal: Where Most Students Should Spend Time

Verbal Reasoning is where most test-takers have the most room to grow — and where targeted practice delivers the best return. The section has three question types, each requiring a slightly different approach.

Reading Comprehension accounts for the largest chunk of Verbal questions. You'll see long passages (3-4 paragraphs) and short passages (1 paragraph), plus questions about the passage's main idea, the author's argument, logical structure, and vocabulary in context. The GRE Reading Comprehension practice test is the most efficient way to build this skill.

Text Completion gives you a sentence or short paragraph with 1-3 blanks and asks you to fill them with the correct words from multiple choice options. These questions heavily reward vocabulary — the words in the answer choices are often obscure, and you can't eliminate them if you don't know what they mean. Build vocabulary systematically, not randomly. The GRE Text Completion and Equivalence practice test covers both TC and SE question types.

Sentence Equivalence gives you a single sentence with one blank and six answer choices — you must pick two words that both complete the sentence correctly with roughly equivalent meaning. These are sneaky; the correct pair isn't always the most impressive-sounding option.

GRE Quant: It's Not As Hard As It Looks

The GRE Quant section tests arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and basic data analysis — nothing beyond high school math. What makes it difficult isn't the math itself; it's the way the questions are designed to trap you into mistakes. Quantitative Comparison questions are particularly deceptive.

Work through the GRE Quantitative Comparison Strategies practice test to get comfortable with the format. The key insight: for QC questions, you're not solving for a numerical answer — you're determining which quantity is greater, or whether it depends on the variable. That's a different cognitive task than standard computation.

Geometry shows up less than students expect, but when it does appear, it tends to be on harder questions. The GRE Plane and Coordinate Geometry practice test is worth a pass even if geometry isn't your weak spot.

Analytical Writing: The Section You're Probably Underestimating

Many students neglect the Analytical Writing section because it's scored separately (0-6) and most programs set their minimum bar at 4.0. But programs at the top of your list often screen for 4.5+, and a weak essay score can work against you in a competitive applicant pool.

The good news: the AW section is the most coachable part of the GRE. ETS publishes the complete pool of Issue and Argument prompts. You know exactly what you might be asked. Practice writing essays from real prompts, time yourself at 30 minutes, and have someone with strong writing skills give you honest feedback.

The GRE Analyze an Issue Essay practice test gives you question sets in this format — and the GRE Argument Analysis Essay practice test covers the Argument task, which requires a different approach (critiquing a given argument rather than defending a position).

How to Build Your Own Gre Study Plan - GRE - Graduate Record Examinations certification study resource
Pass: 150
130170
Below Average
Average
Competitive
Top Programs

Free vs. Paid GRE Courses: An Honest Assessment

Paid courses are worth it if you struggle with self-direction, need structured accountability, or have specific weaknesses that free materials haven't fixed after 4+ weeks of targeted work. If none of those describe you, you can build an extremely effective GRE prep plan for free.

Here's the honest breakdown:

  • Free resources that are genuinely excellent: ETS POWERPREP tests, the official GRE prep materials on ETS.org, Khan Academy's arithmetic and algebra content, and practice tests on this site.
  • Paid resources that add real value: Magoosh's question explanations are particularly clear for students who struggle to understand why an answer is correct. Manhattan Prep's 5 lb. Book of GRE Practice Problems is the best question bank you can buy (around $35).
  • Paid resources that are mostly marketing: Most premium course packages priced above $500 include primarily video content and question banks that aren't meaningfully better than cheaper alternatives.

If you have $50-$100 to spend on GRE prep, buy the Manhattan 5 lb. book and a 6-month Magoosh subscription. That combination is more than enough for most students.

Start Your GRE Practice Now

The most important thing you can do today isn't pick the perfect course — it's start practicing. Take the GRE Verbal Reasoning practice test to get a feel for the question types, then run through the GRE Quantitative Reasoning practice test to identify your baseline comfort with Quant. You'll know within 30 minutes exactly where to focus your early study time.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.