Wonderlic Question Types Explained: The 4 Domains
The Wonderlic Personnel Test mixes question types from four cognitive domains, and the test moves between them with no warning. One question is a percentage problem; the next is a sentence rearrangement; the next is a 3D folding puzzle. Recognizing the domain in the first second of seeing a question is one of the highest-leverage skills you can build before test day.
This guide gives you a high-level tour of all four domains - what they test, what an example item looks like, and where to focus if you're short on time.
1. Numerical Reasoning (~24 of 50 items)
The largest domain. These items test mental arithmetic, basic algebra, and quantitative reasoning. No calculator is allowed, so a major part of the difficulty is doing arithmetic quickly and accurately in your head or on scratch paper.
You can expect a mix of:
- Arithmetic word problems - rates, percentages, ratios, simple interest, change-counting
- Number series - identify the rule and find the next or missing term
- Algebraic word problems - age, mixture, work-rate
- Geometry - area, perimeter, volume, angle
- Unit and time conversion
- Charts and tables - extract a value or compare two series
A delivery van travels 180 miles in 3 hours. At the same average speed, how far will it travel in 5 hours?
- A. 240 miles
- B. 270 miles
- C. 300 miles
- D. 320 miles
- E. 360 miles
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Tip: For most numerical word problems, the fastest path is to identify the relationship in one sentence ("rate is constant") and then plug in. Don't set up algebra unless the problem genuinely requires it.
2. Verbal Reasoning (~15 of 50 items)
The second-largest domain. These items test general vocabulary, language logic, and reading comprehension at high-school to early-college level - not specialist or academic vocabulary. If you can read a newspaper comfortably, the verbal section is well within reach.
Common formats:
- Word relationships - are these two words similar, contradictory, or unrelated? Or, which word is the opposite of the target?
- Verbal analogies - classic A:B::C:? format
- Odd-one-out - five items, four belong to a category, one doesn't
- Sentence rearrangement - does a scrambled set of words form a coherent sentence?
- Proverb matching - which two of these proverbs share a meaning?
- General knowledge - brief factual questions on common-knowledge topics
- Calendar and date logic - date offsets, ordering, references
BRIEF is to LENGTHY as ABUNDANT is to:
- A. Plentiful
- B. Scarce
- C. Common
- D. Heavy
- E. Vast
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Tip: For analogies, name the relationship in one sentence before looking at options. "Brief is the opposite of lengthy" makes the answer obvious.
3. Logical Reasoning (~7 of 50 items)
The smallest of the three reasoning domains, but with the highest difficulty variance. About half the items in this section have visual content - these are the spatial-reasoning items most candidates remember from the test.
Common formats:
- Syllogisms - given two or three premises, is a conclusion Yes, No, or Cannot be determined?
- Ordering and ranking - given relational premises, work out an extreme or position
- Cube and pyramid net folding - given a flat layout, which face ends up where after folding?
- Figure pattern - sequences of transforming shapes, or 3×3 matrices with one cell missing
Anna is taller than Bea. Bea is taller than Cara. Is Anna taller than Cara?
- A. Yes
- B. No
- C. Cannot be determined
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Spatial items in particular can eat 30–40 seconds if you over-think them. The right approach: solve the abstract structure (which face does X end up next to?) instead of trying to mentally rotate the whole figure. If you can't make progress in 20 seconds, guess and move on.
4. Attention to Detail (~4 of 50 items)
The smallest domain. These items don't test reasoning at all - they test focus and accuracy under time pressure. The two formats:
- Exact duplicate matching - given pairs of similar strings (names, addresses, account numbers), how many pairs are exactly identical? The catch is that some pairs differ by a single character.
- Character position - given a known sequence (months, days of the week), what is the Nth letter of the Mth element?
These are some of the most reliable points on the test if you've practiced. They are mechanical and don't depend on broad knowledge, so a few drills can move you from "occasional miss" to "automatic."
How the Domains Are Mixed
Items rotate between domains throughout the test. You might see a numerical question, then verbal, then logic, then numerical again. The mix is roughly the same on every WPT-R, but the order varies - there is no fixed pattern of "all numericals first."
Within each domain, items are roughly ordered by difficulty: the easy ones come early, the hard ones come late. This pattern is mirrored in this site's practice tests so your pacing instincts transfer directly.
Where to Focus If You're Short on Time
The 25 distinct question types are not equal in frequency. If you have limited prep time, prioritize:
- Numerical word problems - most common format, biggest payoff
- Number series - the same pattern-recognition skill transfers across many items
- Verbal analogies and word relationships - the verbal foundation
- Attention-to-detail drills - the easiest domain to improve through pure repetition
- Spatial reasoning - fewer items but high time-cost if you're not used to them
For example items in every category, see Free Wonderlic sample questions with explanations. For a structured 7-day study plan, see how to prepare for the Wonderlic in 7 days.
See every question type in a real test
This site's practice engine generates fresh 50-question, 12-minute Wonderlic-style sessions covering all four domains in the same proportions as the real test. Practice until each format feels familiar before test day.
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