The Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) is a series of tests that everyone who enlists in the U.S. military has to take. It allows the military to determine what job an enlisted person is suited for.

The Armed Services Qualification Test (AFQT) score is derived from four of the nine subtests of the ASVAB: Paragraph Comprehension (PC), Word Knowledge (WK), Mathematics Knowlege (MK), and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR). 

History of the ASVAB

When Congress passed the Selective Service Act in 1948, it required the Department of Defense to develop a uniform screening test to be used by all of the services.This was the first iteration of the AFQT, 100 multiple choice questions, with each branch of the service setting its own standards for minimum required scores. 

The DoD refined the test, standardizing it across all the branches during the 1960s. The ASVAB was officially introduced in 1976 as the test used across the U.S. military. 

Why the AFQT Is Important

The present-day AFQT score is the most important ASVAB score, because it determines whether you can join the military service of your choice. Each of the services branches has set its own minimum AFQT scores.

The AFQT score is a percentile score. What does that mean? In 1997, a study known as the “Profile of American Youth” was conducted by the Department of Defense in cooperation with the Department of Labor. DOD administered the ASVAB to around 12,000 individuals, ranging in age from 16 to 23.

Your AFQT score is a comparison of how well you scored on the four subtests, compared to those who took the ASVAB as part of the 1997 survey. In other words, if you have an AFQT score of 70, that means you scored as well or better than 70 percent of those 12,000 folks.

AFQT Categories

The military divides AFQT scores into the following categories. The lower your category number, the more attractive candidate you are to the military for enlistment:

Category I - 93-99Category II - 65-92Category IIIA - 50-64Category IIIB - 31-49Category IVA - 21-30Category IVB - 16-20Category IVC - 10-15Category V - 0-9

In the early 1990s, Congress passed a law stating that no Category V recruits could be accepted for enlistment in any of the military services, and no more than 20 percent of accessions could be in Category IV. Additionally, Congress required that any Category IV accessions had to be high school diploma graduates (no GEDs).

However, the military services have even stricter standards for enlistment.

Computing an AFQT Score

To compute your AFQT score, the military takes your Verbal Expression (VE) score and doubles it. They then add it to your Mathematics Knowledge (MK) and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR) raw scores. The Formula is 2VE+MK+AR. The then compare the result to a table to derive your AFQT percentile score.

Note that a raw score is not the same as the standard scores you see on your ASVAB score sheet. On the ASVAB, harder questions are worth more points than easier questions. The raw score is the total number of points you earned on that particular ASVAB subtest. You won’t know what your raw score is because the military doesn’t include that information on the ASVAB score sheet.

2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile 2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile

80-120 1 204 50

121-124 2 205 51

125-127 3 206 52

128-131 4 207-208 53

132-134 5 209 54

135-137 6 210 55

138-139 7 211 56

140-142 8 212 57

143-144 9 213 58

145-146 10 214 59

147-148 11 215 61

149-150 12 216 62

151-153 13 217 63

154 14 218 64

155-156 15 219 65

157-158 16 220 66

159-160 17 221 67

161-162 18 222 68

163-164 19 223 69

165 20 224 70

166-167 21 225 71

168-169 22 226 72

170-171 23 227 73

172 24 228 74

173-174 25 229 75

175 26 230 76

176-177 27 231 77

178 28 232 78

179-180 29 233 79

181 30 234 80

182 31 235 81

183-184 32 236 82

185 33 237 83

186 34 238-239 84

187-188 35 240 85

189 36 241 86

190 37 242 87

191 38 243 88

192 39 244 89

193 40 245 90

194 41 246 91

195-196 42 247 92

197 43 248 93

198 44 249 94

199 45 250 95

200 46 251 96

201 47 252 97

202 48 253 98

203 49 254-320 99

Watch Now: Which Branch of the Military Is Right For You?

ABCs of the ASVAB - Computing VE / AFQT Scores

How the ASVAB Score Is Computed

ABCs of the ASVAB

Air Force ASVAB Composite Scores

Army ASVAB Aptitude Test Qualifications and Standards

ASVAB Scores Required For Navy Ratings (Jobs)

USMC Enlisted Job Qualifications and ASVAB Scores

Can You Retake the ASVAB?

U.S. Military Enlistment Standards

The Different Types of ASVAB Tests

The Enlistment Process of the U.S. Air Force

Expectations and Advice for Meeting the Military Recruiter

Careers for Women in the Military

What to Expect on Your First Visit to MEPS

Pros and Cons of Joining the Navy

ASVAB Sample Questions

Home

Entertainment

Careers

Activities

Humor

About Us Advertise Careers Privacy Policy Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use EU Privacy

LiveAbout is part of the Dotdash Meredith publishing family.

When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies

The Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) is a series of tests that everyone who enlists in the U.S. military has to take. It allows the military to determine what job an enlisted person is suited for.

The Armed Services Qualification Test (AFQT) score is derived from four of the nine subtests of the ASVAB: Paragraph Comprehension (PC), Word Knowledge (WK), Mathematics Knowlege (MK), and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR). 

History of the ASVAB

When Congress passed the Selective Service Act in 1948, it required the Department of Defense to develop a uniform screening test to be used by all of the services.This was the first iteration of the AFQT, 100 multiple choice questions, with each branch of the service setting its own standards for minimum required scores. 

The DoD refined the test, standardizing it across all the branches during the 1960s. The ASVAB was officially introduced in 1976 as the test used across the U.S. military. 

Why the AFQT Is Important

The present-day AFQT score is the most important ASVAB score, because it determines whether you can join the military service of your choice. Each of the services branches has set its own minimum AFQT scores.

The AFQT score is a percentile score. What does that mean? In 1997, a study known as the “Profile of American Youth” was conducted by the Department of Defense in cooperation with the Department of Labor. DOD administered the ASVAB to around 12,000 individuals, ranging in age from 16 to 23.

Your AFQT score is a comparison of how well you scored on the four subtests, compared to those who took the ASVAB as part of the 1997 survey. In other words, if you have an AFQT score of 70, that means you scored as well or better than 70 percent of those 12,000 folks.

AFQT Categories

The military divides AFQT scores into the following categories. The lower your category number, the more attractive candidate you are to the military for enlistment:

Category I - 93-99Category II - 65-92Category IIIA - 50-64Category IIIB - 31-49Category IVA - 21-30Category IVB - 16-20Category IVC - 10-15Category V - 0-9

In the early 1990s, Congress passed a law stating that no Category V recruits could be accepted for enlistment in any of the military services, and no more than 20 percent of accessions could be in Category IV. Additionally, Congress required that any Category IV accessions had to be high school diploma graduates (no GEDs).

However, the military services have even stricter standards for enlistment.

Computing an AFQT Score

To compute your AFQT score, the military takes your Verbal Expression (VE) score and doubles it. They then add it to your Mathematics Knowledge (MK) and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR) raw scores. The Formula is 2VE+MK+AR. The then compare the result to a table to derive your AFQT percentile score.

Note that a raw score is not the same as the standard scores you see on your ASVAB score sheet. On the ASVAB, harder questions are worth more points than easier questions. The raw score is the total number of points you earned on that particular ASVAB subtest. You won’t know what your raw score is because the military doesn’t include that information on the ASVAB score sheet.

2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile 2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile

80-120 1 204 50

121-124 2 205 51

125-127 3 206 52

128-131 4 207-208 53

132-134 5 209 54

135-137 6 210 55

138-139 7 211 56

140-142 8 212 57

143-144 9 213 58

145-146 10 214 59

147-148 11 215 61

149-150 12 216 62

151-153 13 217 63

154 14 218 64

155-156 15 219 65

157-158 16 220 66

159-160 17 221 67

161-162 18 222 68

163-164 19 223 69

165 20 224 70

166-167 21 225 71

168-169 22 226 72

170-171 23 227 73

172 24 228 74

173-174 25 229 75

175 26 230 76

176-177 27 231 77

178 28 232 78

179-180 29 233 79

181 30 234 80

182 31 235 81

183-184 32 236 82

185 33 237 83

186 34 238-239 84

187-188 35 240 85

189 36 241 86

190 37 242 87

191 38 243 88

192 39 244 89

193 40 245 90

194 41 246 91

195-196 42 247 92

197 43 248 93

198 44 249 94

199 45 250 95

200 46 251 96

201 47 252 97

202 48 253 98

203 49 254-320 99

Watch Now: Which Branch of the Military Is Right For You?

ABCs of the ASVAB - Computing VE / AFQT Scores

How the ASVAB Score Is Computed

ABCs of the ASVAB

Air Force ASVAB Composite Scores

Army ASVAB Aptitude Test Qualifications and Standards

ASVAB Scores Required For Navy Ratings (Jobs)

USMC Enlisted Job Qualifications and ASVAB Scores

Can You Retake the ASVAB?

U.S. Military Enlistment Standards

The Different Types of ASVAB Tests

The Enlistment Process of the U.S. Air Force

Expectations and Advice for Meeting the Military Recruiter

Careers for Women in the Military

What to Expect on Your First Visit to MEPS

Pros and Cons of Joining the Navy

ASVAB Sample Questions

When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies

The Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) is a series of tests that everyone who enlists in the U.S. military has to take. It allows the military to determine what job an enlisted person is suited for.

The Armed Services Qualification Test (AFQT) score is derived from four of the nine subtests of the ASVAB: Paragraph Comprehension (PC), Word Knowledge (WK), Mathematics Knowlege (MK), and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR). 

History of the ASVAB

When Congress passed the Selective Service Act in 1948, it required the Department of Defense to develop a uniform screening test to be used by all of the services.This was the first iteration of the AFQT, 100 multiple choice questions, with each branch of the service setting its own standards for minimum required scores. 

The DoD refined the test, standardizing it across all the branches during the 1960s. The ASVAB was officially introduced in 1976 as the test used across the U.S. military. 

Why the AFQT Is Important

The present-day AFQT score is the most important ASVAB score, because it determines whether you can join the military service of your choice. Each of the services branches has set its own minimum AFQT scores.

The AFQT score is a percentile score. What does that mean? In 1997, a study known as the “Profile of American Youth” was conducted by the Department of Defense in cooperation with the Department of Labor. DOD administered the ASVAB to around 12,000 individuals, ranging in age from 16 to 23.

Your AFQT score is a comparison of how well you scored on the four subtests, compared to those who took the ASVAB as part of the 1997 survey. In other words, if you have an AFQT score of 70, that means you scored as well or better than 70 percent of those 12,000 folks.

AFQT Categories

The military divides AFQT scores into the following categories. The lower your category number, the more attractive candidate you are to the military for enlistment:

Category I - 93-99Category II - 65-92Category IIIA - 50-64Category IIIB - 31-49Category IVA - 21-30Category IVB - 16-20Category IVC - 10-15Category V - 0-9

In the early 1990s, Congress passed a law stating that no Category V recruits could be accepted for enlistment in any of the military services, and no more than 20 percent of accessions could be in Category IV. Additionally, Congress required that any Category IV accessions had to be high school diploma graduates (no GEDs).

However, the military services have even stricter standards for enlistment.

Computing an AFQT Score

To compute your AFQT score, the military takes your Verbal Expression (VE) score and doubles it. They then add it to your Mathematics Knowledge (MK) and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR) raw scores. The Formula is 2VE+MK+AR. The then compare the result to a table to derive your AFQT percentile score.

Note that a raw score is not the same as the standard scores you see on your ASVAB score sheet. On the ASVAB, harder questions are worth more points than easier questions. The raw score is the total number of points you earned on that particular ASVAB subtest. You won’t know what your raw score is because the military doesn’t include that information on the ASVAB score sheet.

2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile 2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile

80-120 1 204 50

121-124 2 205 51

125-127 3 206 52

128-131 4 207-208 53

132-134 5 209 54

135-137 6 210 55

138-139 7 211 56

140-142 8 212 57

143-144 9 213 58

145-146 10 214 59

147-148 11 215 61

149-150 12 216 62

151-153 13 217 63

154 14 218 64

155-156 15 219 65

157-158 16 220 66

159-160 17 221 67

161-162 18 222 68

163-164 19 223 69

165 20 224 70

166-167 21 225 71

168-169 22 226 72

170-171 23 227 73

172 24 228 74

173-174 25 229 75

175 26 230 76

176-177 27 231 77

178 28 232 78

179-180 29 233 79

181 30 234 80

182 31 235 81

183-184 32 236 82

185 33 237 83

186 34 238-239 84

187-188 35 240 85

189 36 241 86

190 37 242 87

191 38 243 88

192 39 244 89

193 40 245 90

194 41 246 91

195-196 42 247 92

197 43 248 93

198 44 249 94

199 45 250 95

200 46 251 96

201 47 252 97

202 48 253 98

203 49 254-320 99

Watch Now: Which Branch of the Military Is Right For You?

The Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) is a series of tests that everyone who enlists in the U.S. military has to take. It allows the military to determine what job an enlisted person is suited for.

The Armed Services Qualification Test (AFQT) score is derived from four of the nine subtests of the ASVAB: Paragraph Comprehension (PC), Word Knowledge (WK), Mathematics Knowlege (MK), and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR). 

History of the ASVAB

When Congress passed the Selective Service Act in 1948, it required the Department of Defense to develop a uniform screening test to be used by all of the services.This was the first iteration of the AFQT, 100 multiple choice questions, with each branch of the service setting its own standards for minimum required scores. 

The DoD refined the test, standardizing it across all the branches during the 1960s. The ASVAB was officially introduced in 1976 as the test used across the U.S. military. 

Why the AFQT Is Important

The present-day AFQT score is the most important ASVAB score, because it determines whether you can join the military service of your choice. Each of the services branches has set its own minimum AFQT scores.

The AFQT score is a percentile score. What does that mean? In 1997, a study known as the “Profile of American Youth” was conducted by the Department of Defense in cooperation with the Department of Labor. DOD administered the ASVAB to around 12,000 individuals, ranging in age from 16 to 23.

Your AFQT score is a comparison of how well you scored on the four subtests, compared to those who took the ASVAB as part of the 1997 survey. In other words, if you have an AFQT score of 70, that means you scored as well or better than 70 percent of those 12,000 folks.

AFQT Categories

The military divides AFQT scores into the following categories. The lower your category number, the more attractive candidate you are to the military for enlistment:

  • Category I - 93-99Category II - 65-92Category IIIA - 50-64Category IIIB - 31-49Category IVA - 21-30Category IVB - 16-20Category IVC - 10-15Category V - 0-9

In the early 1990s, Congress passed a law stating that no Category V recruits could be accepted for enlistment in any of the military services, and no more than 20 percent of accessions could be in Category IV. Additionally, Congress required that any Category IV accessions had to be high school diploma graduates (no GEDs).

However, the military services have even stricter standards for enlistment.

Computing an AFQT Score

To compute your AFQT score, the military takes your Verbal Expression (VE) score and doubles it. They then add it to your Mathematics Knowledge (MK) and Arithmetic Reasoning (AR) raw scores. The Formula is 2VE+MK+AR. The then compare the result to a table to derive your AFQT percentile score.

Note that a raw score is not the same as the standard scores you see on your ASVAB score sheet. On the ASVAB, harder questions are worth more points than easier questions. The raw score is the total number of points you earned on that particular ASVAB subtest. You won’t know what your raw score is because the military doesn’t include that information on the ASVAB score sheet.

2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile 2VE+MK+AR AFQT Percentile

80-120 1 204 50

121-124 2 205 51

125-127 3 206 52

128-131 4 207-208 53

132-134 5 209 54

135-137 6 210 55

138-139 7 211 56

140-142 8 212 57

143-144 9 213 58

145-146 10 214 59

147-148 11 215 61

149-150 12 216 62

151-153 13 217 63

154 14 218 64

155-156 15 219 65

157-158 16 220 66

159-160 17 221 67

161-162 18 222 68

163-164 19 223 69

165 20 224 70

166-167 21 225 71

168-169 22 226 72

170-171 23 227 73

172 24 228 74

173-174 25 229 75

175 26 230 76

176-177 27 231 77

178 28 232 78

179-180 29 233 79

181 30 234 80

182 31 235 81

183-184 32 236 82

185 33 237 83

186 34 238-239 84

187-188 35 240 85

189 36 241 86

190 37 242 87

191 38 243 88

192 39 244 89

193 40 245 90

194 41 246 91

195-196 42 247 92

197 43 248 93

198 44 249 94

199 45 250 95

200 46 251 96

201 47 252 97

202 48 253 98

203 49 254-320 99

Watch Now: Which Branch of the Military Is Right For You?

Watch Now: Which Branch of the Military Is Right For You?

  • ABCs of the ASVAB - Computing VE / AFQT Scores

  • How the ASVAB Score Is Computed

  • ABCs of the ASVAB

  • Air Force ASVAB Composite Scores

  • Army ASVAB Aptitude Test Qualifications and Standards

  • ASVAB Scores Required For Navy Ratings (Jobs)

  • USMC Enlisted Job Qualifications and ASVAB Scores

  • Can You Retake the ASVAB?

  • U.S. Military Enlistment Standards

  • The Different Types of ASVAB Tests

  • The Enlistment Process of the U.S. Air Force

  • Expectations and Advice for Meeting the Military Recruiter

  • Careers for Women in the Military

  • What to Expect on Your First Visit to MEPS

  • Pros and Cons of Joining the Navy

  • ASVAB Sample Questions

ABCs of the ASVAB - Computing VE / AFQT Scores

ABCs of the ASVAB - Computing VE / AFQT Scores

How the ASVAB Score Is Computed

How the ASVAB Score Is Computed

ABCs of the ASVAB

ABCs of the ASVAB

Air Force ASVAB Composite Scores

Air Force ASVAB Composite Scores

Army ASVAB Aptitude Test Qualifications and Standards

Army ASVAB Aptitude Test Qualifications and Standards

ASVAB Scores Required For Navy Ratings (Jobs)

ASVAB Scores Required For Navy Ratings (Jobs)

USMC Enlisted Job Qualifications and ASVAB Scores

USMC Enlisted Job Qualifications and ASVAB Scores

Can You Retake the ASVAB?

Can You Retake the ASVAB?

U.S. Military Enlistment Standards

U.S. Military Enlistment Standards

The Different Types of ASVAB Tests

The Different Types of ASVAB Tests

The Enlistment Process of the U.S. Air Force

The Enlistment Process of the U.S. Air Force

Expectations and Advice for Meeting the Military Recruiter

Expectations and Advice for Meeting the Military Recruiter

Careers for Women in the Military

Careers for Women in the Military

What to Expect on Your First Visit to MEPS

What to Expect on Your First Visit to MEPS

Pros and Cons of Joining the Navy

Pros and Cons of Joining the Navy

ASVAB Sample Questions

ASVAB Sample Questions

Home

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Activities

Humor

About Us Advertise Careers Privacy Policy Editorial Guidelines Contact Terms of Use EU Privacy

LiveAbout is part of the Dotdash Meredith publishing family.

Home

Home

Entertainment

Careers

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Humor

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  • Careers

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LiveAbout is part of the Dotdash Meredith publishing family.

When you visit the site, Dotdash Meredith and its partners may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Cookies collect information about your preferences and your devices and are used to make the site work as you expect it to, to understand how you interact with the site, and to show advertisements that are targeted to your interests. You can find out more about our use, change your default settings, and withdraw your consent at any time with effect for the future by visiting Cookies Settings, which can also be found in the footer of the site. Cookies Settings Reject All Accept Cookies