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ATI TEAS Math Practice Questions: A Complete Guide to Success

By Marcus · May 27, 2026

The ATI TEAS 7 Math section rewards conceptual understanding, not memorization. Here's how to build the skills, pacing, and strategy you need to score high on test day.

The ATI TEAS 7 Math section is one of the strongest early predictors of how a future nursing student will handle the quantitative reasoning demands of a nursing program. With 38 questions to answer in 57 minutes, the section moves quickly — and the students who succeed aren't the ones who memorize the most formulas, but the ones who truly understand how numbers behave. This guide walks you through what's tested, the concepts that matter most, and the study habits that turn the Math section from a stumbling block into a strength.

What the TEAS Math Section Actually Tests

The Math section is divided into two reporting areas:

  • Numbers and Algebra — arithmetic, fractions, decimals, percentages, ratios, proportions, and linear equations.
  • Measurement and Data — unit conversions (including metric and household units), interpreting graphs, and basic statistics.

Because nursing relies on accurate dosing, careful interpretation of lab values, and clear clinical reasoning, the test is built around the math you'll actually use at the bedside. A structured ATI TEAS preparation plan helps you build that fluency without wasting time on topics the exam doesn't emphasize.

Key Concepts You Need to Master

Moving Fluently Between Fractions, Decimals, and Percentages

Many TEAS questions present a value in one form and expect an answer in another. You should be able to see, almost instantly, that 3/4 = 0.75 = 75%. Strong number-sense here helps you:

  • Compare values quickly in word problems.
  • Choose the easiest form to calculate with.
  • Avoid careless conversion errors under time pressure.

Practice switching forms until it feels automatic. The seconds you save add up across 38 questions.

Translating Word Problems into Equations

Algebra on the TEAS is rarely abstract — it almost always shows up as a word problem. The real skill is turning English into math. Watch for signal words:

  • More than, increased by, sum → addition
  • Less than, decreased by, difference → subtraction
  • Product, times, of → multiplication
  • Quotient, per, divided by → division
  • Is, equals, results in → the equals sign

This same translation skill is what nurses use every shift when turning a physician's order or a patient's report into a clear plan of care.

Unit Conversions and Data Interpretation

Expect to convert between milligrams, grams, and kilograms, between milliliters and liters, and between common household units like teaspoons, tablespoons, and ounces. Build a short, reliable list of the conversions you reach for most often and drill them until they're second nature.

For data questions, you'll see bar graphs, line graphs, scatter plots, and pie charts. Practice:

  • Reading scales carefully (note the increments).
  • Identifying independent vs. dependent variables.
  • Spotting trends rather than memorizing single points.

These are the same habits you'll use when scanning a patient's chart or a trend in vital signs.

Sample Practice Questions

1. Conversion. A patient is prescribed 0.5 g of a medication. How many milligrams is that?

  • Answer: 500 mg, because 1 g = 1,000 mg, so 0.5 × 1,000 = 500.

2. Algebra word problem. Three more than twice a number is 17. What is the number?

  • Translate: 2x + 3 = 17. Subtract 3: 2x = 14. Divide: x = 7.

3. Percentages. A nurse manager reports that 24 of 80 patients on a unit were discharged within 48 hours. What percentage is that?

  • 24 ÷ 80 = 0.30 = 30%.

4. Data interpretation. A line graph shows a patient's temperature rising from 98.6°F at 8 a.m. to 101.2°F at noon. What is the change?

  • 101.2 − 98.6 = 2.6°F increase.

Work through problems like these out loud — explaining your reasoning is one of the fastest ways to find the gaps in your understanding.

Study Tips and Exam-Day Strategy

Build a Consistent Study Routine

Consistency beats cramming every time. Start with a diagnostic test so you know exactly where you stand, then build a plan around your weakest topics — whether that's geometry, percent change, or proportions.

  • Aim for at least 30 focused minutes a day, not three-hour weekend marathons.
  • Keep a running list of formulas and conversions you miss.
  • Review missed questions the next day, not just at the end of the week.

Manage the Clock

You have roughly 90 seconds per question. If a problem is taking too long:

  • Make your best reasoned guess.
  • Flag it and move on.
  • Come back with whatever time remains.

Protect the questions you can answer easily — never let one hard problem cost you five easy ones.

Get Comfortable With the Question Formats

TEAS 7 includes more than standard multiple choice. You may see:

  • Select all that apply items.
  • Fill-in-the-blank numeric responses (no answer choices to guess from).
  • Hot-spot questions where you click directly on a graph or image.
  • Ordered response or drag-and-drop items.

Practice in a platform that mirrors these formats so the interface never becomes a distraction.

Final Thoughts

A strong TEAS Math score is more than a number — it's evidence that you can think clearly with data, which is exactly what nursing school and patient care demand. Build your foundation in arithmetic, algebra, conversions, and data interpretation, and the rest will follow.

Your next step is simple: take a timed practice set this week, identify the two topics that gave you the most trouble, and spend tomorrow's study session on just those. Targeted, consistent practice is what turns the Math section into your strongest score.

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