Matrix reasoning practice: tests, questions, and guides

Free practice to prepare for job assessment tests and improve your matrix reasoning — the reasoning used in candidate assessments like Matrigma, SHL, and Korn Ferry.

Practice for:MatrigmaSHLKorn FerryAon
550+
practice questions
18
pattern guides
4
study guides
100%
original explanations

What matrix reasoning tests measure

A matrix reasoning test measures abstract reasoning — your ability to spot patterns in visual sequences without relying on language or prior knowledge. The most common format is a 3×3 grid with one cell missing, and you choose the piece that completes the pattern.

Employers use these tests to predict job performance. Matrigma, SHL, Korn Ferry, and Aon all include matrix or inductive reasoning in their assessments, so the same skill helps across many job tests.

Most aptitude assessments pair abstract reasoning with a numerical reasoning section — reading tables, charts, and percentages under time pressure. You can practise numerical reasoning free on our sister site, NumericalReasoningPractice.com.

3×3
Grid format
Free
No signup
Timed + untimed
Practice modes
Matrigma
Lead format

Learning portal

Learn the patterns that appear in real tests

Every question belongs to a reasoning family. Each pattern guide shows you the rule, the visual signal that gives it away, and a clear way to solve it — 18 families in all.

Common questions

Is matrix reasoning the same as Matrigma?
Not quite. Matrix reasoning is the skill. Matrigma is one test that measures it. Matrigma uses 3×3 grids, just like the questions here, so practising matrix reasoning is good preparation for Matrigma — and for similar tests from SHL, Korn Ferry, and Aon.
Is it free?
Yes. The practice tests and the question bank are free to use, and you do not need to sign up. Paid study guides will be added later, but the core practice stays free.
Timed or untimed?
Both. Start with an untimed test to learn at your own pace and find your weak spots. Then take a timed test to practise under real test pressure.
Which assessments does this help with?
Matrix reasoning appears in many job assessment tests. This practice helps most with Matrigma, and also with the inductive reasoning parts of SHL, Korn Ferry, and Aon tests.

Free test · 10 questions