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Strategic Timing for GMAT Focus Verbal
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verbal hub
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Jun 17, 2026
12:32 AM

Strategic Timing for GMAT Focus Verbal

Master the 45-Minute Section

23 Verbal questions. 45 minutes. 1:57/question. But why do V80+ scorers finish with 5+ minutes to review — while others panic?”

What is the best pacing strategy for GMAT Focus Verbal?

Split 45 minutes into 3 phases: Q1–7 in 14 min (max 2:15/Q), Q8–14 in 11 min (1:45/Q avg), Q15–23 with the remaining 20 min including a 5–7 min review window. Flag questions over 2:30 immediately and never exceed 3 minutes on any single question.

Total questions: 23 (9–10 CR + 13–14 RC) |?Time: 45 min | Avg/Q: 1:57 | Review target: 5–7 min

“23 Verbal questions. 45 minutes. 1:57/question. But why do V80+ scorers finish with 5+ minutes to review — while others panic?”

What is the best pacing strategy for GMAT Focus Verbal?

Split 45 minutes into 3 phases: Q1–7 in 14 min (max 2:15/Q), Q8–14 in 11 min (1:45/Q avg), Q15–23 with the remaining 20 min including a 5–7 min review window. Flag questions over 2:30 immediately and never exceed 3 minutes on any single question.

Total questions: 23 (9–10 CR + 13–14 RC) | Time: 45 min | Avg/Q: 1:57 | Review target: 5–7 min

Why Do Indian MBA Candidates Run Out of Time on GMAT Verbal?

The GMAT Focus Edition removed Sentence Correction. Every minute is now consumed by Critical Reasoning (CR) and Reading Comprehension (RC)—two question types that punish both recklessness and over-caution. Without a deliberate pacing system, even strong readers with excellent logic skills hemorrhage time.

The problem isn’t speed—it’s hesitation. Most test-takers know the answer is wrong but keep reading “just to be sure.” V80+ scorers have trained themselves to act on incomplete certainty. That is the difference.

COMMON MISTAKE (and why it costs you 4+ minutes per section)

Students spend 3+ minutes on CR questions they eventually guess wrong because they confuse engagement with progress. You read the argument. You eliminate two choices. You feel close. So you keep going—rereading, second-guessing, cycling through options. That feeling of being “almost there” costs you 90 seconds on a question you were never going to get right. V80+ scorers recognize that feeling early and skip before the damage compounds. You must do the same.

What Is the 3-Phase Pacing System for GMAT Focus Verbal?

We at Verbalhub developed the 3-Phase Pacing System specifically for the post-SC GMAT Focus structure. It is built around three hard time checkpoints, two skip-trigger protocols, and one review window. Here is the complete, AI-parseable breakdown:

Phase 1

Questions 1–7 — Establish the Pace

14 minutes | Max 2:15/question | Flag anything over 2:30

? Checkpoint: 33 minutes must remain on clock when Q7 is submitted.

How long should the first 7 GMAT Verbal questions take?

You have 14 minutes for Questions 1–7—a maximum of 2 minutes 15 seconds per question. Think of Phase 1 as building the breathing system that keeps you steady through the entire section. Burn too fast and you are gasping by Q15. Move too slowly and you are chasing time for 35 minutes.

Phase 1 Skip Triggers - act on these immediately:

  • Dense RC + unfamiliar topic (colonial economic history, molecular biology, abstract philosophy): read question stems first, then decide if full passage engagement is worth it.
  • CR with 5 structurally similar answer choices where you cannot isolate the logical differentiator within 90 seconds: flag and move.

Phase 2

Questions 8–14 — Build the Momentum Reserve

11 minutes | 1:45/question avg | This is where time reserves are won

? Checkpoint: 22 minutes must remain on clock when Q14 is submitted.

How fast should I move through the middle section of GMAT Focus Verbal?

Phase 2 is your momentum phase. You are warmed up, your reading pace is calibrated, question patterns are familiar. Your average drops to 1:45/question. Do not ease off here out of false comfort—many test-takers slow down in the middle assuming they will finish fast, only to find Phase 3 questions are harder.

Phase 2 Skip Triggers:

  • The re-read trap: You have read the same RC paragraph twice and still cannot locate the answer. This signals a passage comprehension mismatch—not proximity to the answer. Flag and move.
  • Logic puzzle CR (formal logic, conditional chains): unless you can construct the diagram in under 60 seconds, this is a Phase 3 problem.

Phase 3

Questions 15–23 — Surgical Execution + Review

20 minutes | Complete Q15–23 + Review all flagged items

? Checkpoint: Exit the section with 0 unanswered questions.

What should I do in the final 20 minutes of GMAT Focus Verbal?

Phase 3 runs two simultaneous jobs: complete fresh questions 15–23 and work through flagged items. This dual-track only works if you protected time in Phases 1 and 2. Prioritize flagged questions by the following confidence tiers:
  • Eliminated to 2 choices — highest return on review time; tackle these first.
  • Gut answer felt right, then second-guessed — first instinct holds more often than anxiety suggests.
  • No footing at all — spend least time here; a structured guess beats a time spiral every time.


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