Wonderlic for Police Officers: Score Targets & Practice Strategy
The Wonderlic is one of the most widely used cognitive screens in U.S. law-enforcement hiring. Wonderlic itself publishes a recommended target band of 20-27 for police work, and the national median for officer candidates is 21.
Why employers in this category use the Wonderlic
Departments use the Wonderlic as a fast, validated proxy for the reasoning ability that affects on-the-job decision making — interpreting statutes and reports, weighing evidence, and processing situations quickly. It's typically one component alongside fitness, background, and oral-board screening.
Where the test typically appears
- Municipal and state police
- Sheriff's offices
- Federal law enforcement
What your score means in this context
Aim for the upper end of the 20-27 band. Many departments set their pass score in the low 20s but use higher scores as a positive differentiator in competitive hiring rounds. A score above 25 puts you above the national median for the role and clears most published thresholds.
What to focus on in practice
Verbal reasoning (analogies, sentence-rearrangement, vocabulary) and logic items (syllogisms, ordering) are heavily represented and map directly to report-writing and report-interpretation. Don't neglect numerical items: they're the easiest domain to gain quick points in.
The domains that matter most for police officers, in priority order:
- Verbal reasoning
- Logic and spatial reasoning
- Numerical reasoning
Score quick-reference
If you finish a practice test, here's where common raw scores land in this role's context:
- 17 or lower: below the typical cut-score band — focus on timed practice before retest.
- 20–27: within the typical employer cut-score band for police officers. Most published thresholds sit in this range.
- 22 (occupational median): sits at the 58th percentile of all Wonderlic test-takers — the typical police officer score per Wonderlic's published occupational data.
- 28+: above the band — strong differentiator in competitive hiring rounds.
Source: occupational-average data is from Wonderlic Inc.'s published occupational summary. Percentile values are anchored to the official Wonderlic Personnel Test sample report (©Wonderlic Inc. 2018). Cut-score bands reflect commonly published employer thresholds and may vary by specific employer or program.
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