GRE Accommodations for Students with Psychological Disabilities

The GRE is shorter than it used to be, but it is still demanding: one Analytical Writing task, two Verbal Reasoning sections, and two Quantitative Reasoning sections in just under two hours. If ADHD, anxiety, dyslexia, autism, depression, or another condition makes it harder to focus, read efficiently, manage pacing, or sustain mental stamina, you may qualify for GRE accommodations. Get a psychological evaluation written to support your GRE accommodations request.

$1,200 total (60%+ below typical $3,000-$5,000 rates)

See why clients find our plans cost-effective.
Student preparing for the GRE with disability accommodations support

Why GRE Accommodations Matter

The current GRE General Test is about 1 hour and 58 minutes, but that shorter format does not remove the underlying barriers for students with psychological disabilities. A fast sequence of reading, math reasoning, and writing can still punish slower processing speed, distractibility, test anxiety, reading-based learning disabilities, or fatigue. Accommodations help create fairer conditions so your score reflects graduate-school readiness rather than disability-related timing barriers.

1:58

overall test time for the current GRE General Test format.

5 sections

including one Analytical Writing section plus two Verbal and two Quant sections.

54

multiple-choice Verbal and Quant questions, in addition to one timed writing task.

How Accommodations Can Help on the GRE

Accommodations do not make the GRE easier. They reduce the impact of disability-related barriers on a section-level adaptive exam where pacing problems, anxiety spikes, and cognitive fatigue can snowball across the test.

Verbal Reasoning

Extra time can help if dense passages, subtle answer choices, or dyslexia-related reading inefficiency slow you down even when you understand the content.

Quantitative Reasoning

Additional time and breaks can help when ADHD, anxiety, or slower processing speed make multistep problem solving and error checking harder under pressure.

Analytical Writing

A timed writing task can be especially difficult when executive functioning, organization, idea generation, or written-expression speed are affected by a disability.

Adaptive Section Flow

On the GRE, your performance on the first Verbal and Quant sections affects the difficulty of the second ones. Better regulation, pacing, and stamina early in the test can matter throughout the rest of the exam.

Common GRE Accommodations

Extended Time

Extended Time

ETS lists 25%, 50%, and 100% extended time options for approved test takers, depending on documentation and need.

Extra Breaks

Extra Breaks

ETS states that approved extra breaks are not included in testing time and can be used for medication, snacks, or regulation needs.

Accessible Computer-Delivered Supports

Accessible Computer-Delivered Supports

Depending on your documentation, ETS may approve items such as screen magnification, selectable colors, trackball use, or other technology-based supports.

Alternative Formats or Assistance

Alternative Formats or Assistance

For some disabilities, ETS also offers alternate formats, human reader or scribe support, and other testing modifications tied to documented functional limitations.

Conditions That May Qualify

ADHD

Difficulty sustaining attention, managing time, and maintaining consistent effort across reading, math, and writing tasks.

Learning Disabilities

Dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyscalculia, and related disorders that affect reading rate, written output, or quantitative processing.

Anxiety Disorders

Test anxiety, panic symptoms, or generalized anxiety that interfere with concentration, pacing, and cognitive efficiency.

Depression

Mental fatigue, slowed processing, and concentration problems that become more pronounced during high-stakes testing.

Autism Spectrum Disorder

Sensory sensitivities, processing differences, and executive-functioning challenges that can affect standardized testing performance.

Traumatic Brain Injury

Changes in stamina, memory, processing speed, attention, or regulation after concussion or other brain injury.

How It Works

1

Schedule Your Evaluation

Meet with a licensed psychologist who understands accommodation documentation. We review your history, symptoms, and how they affect your GRE performance under standard conditions.

2

Complete the Assessment from Home

You complete evidence-based testing remotely via telehealth. The evaluation can address attention, executive functioning, processing speed, learning, and psychological symptoms tied to GRE performance.

3

Get Your ETS-Ready Report

Receive a comprehensive report that explains your diagnosis, functional limitations, and why specific GRE accommodations are appropriate. You can then submit it through your ETS accommodations request.

$1,200 total (60%+ below typical $3,000-$5,000 rates)

Typical comprehensive psychological evaluations cost $3,000-$5,000. Our $1,200 total is 60%+ below those rates, and the same report can often support both a GRE accommodations request and later graduate-school disability services documentation.

See why clients find our plans cost-effective.

Payment plans available - Telehealth in 42 states

GRE Accommodations FAQ

Still have questions?

Let us know!

Do Not Let a Disability Suppress Your GRE Performance

You deserve testing conditions that show schools your actual reasoning and writing ability. Get the documentation you need to request GRE accommodations with clarity and confidence.