1. Exam Overview

  • Official exam name: Medical College Admission Test
  • Short name / abbreviation: MCAT
  • Country / region: Canada (also used in the United States and accepted by many medical schools in North America and some other countries)
  • Exam type: Professional school admission test / medical school admission test
  • Conducting body / authority: Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC)
  • Status: Active

The Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) is a standardized computer-based admissions exam used by most medical schools in Canada and the United States as part of their admissions process. It does not by itself guarantee admission; instead, it is one component considered alongside GPA, prerequisites, personal statements, CASPer or other situational tests at some schools, references, extracurricular activities, and interviews. For students in Canada, the MCAT matters because many Canadian medical schools require it, but requirements vary by university, and some schools use only certain sections or may not require it at all.

Medical College Admission Test and MCAT

In this guide, Medical College Admission Test and MCAT refer to the same exam: the AAMC-administered medical school admissions test used by many Canadian faculties of medicine.

2. Quick Facts Snapshot

Item Details
Who should take this exam Students planning to apply to medical school where the MCAT is required or strongly recommended
Main purpose Medical school admissions screening and comparison across applicants
Level Professional / graduate-entry admissions
Frequency Multiple test dates each year
Mode Computer-based at test centers
Languages offered English only
Duration About 7 hours 30 minutes total test appointment time; approximately 6 hours 15 minutes scored testing time, plus breaks and check-in/out
Number of sections / papers 4 sections
Negative marking No negative marking
Score validity period Varies by medical school; many schools accept scores from a limited number of past years only
Typical application window Registration opens in phases by testing year; exact dates vary annually
Typical exam window Multiple dates across the year, typically January and March through September, but confirm each cycle officially
Official website(s) AAMC MCAT official site: https://students-residents.aamc.org/mcat-exam
Official information bulletin / brochure availability Yes, through the official AAMC MCAT Essentials / registration and testing information pages

Warning: For Canadian applicants, the exam is common but admissions rules are school-specific. Always check each target medical school’s admissions page in addition to AAMC rules.

3. Who Should Take This Exam

The MCAT is suitable for students who:

  • Intend to apply to Canadian medical schools that require the MCAT
  • Intend to apply to U.S. MD or DO programs
  • Are completing or have completed undergraduate study and are preparing for medicine
  • Have completed or are close to completing foundational science coursework
  • Need a competitive standardized test score to strengthen a medical school application

Ideal candidate profiles

  • Canadian undergraduate students targeting medicine
  • Graduates doing a second application cycle to med school
  • International students applying to North American medical programs
  • Career changers who have completed prerequisite science learning

Academic background suitability

Most successful MCAT candidates have some grounding in:

  • Biology
  • General chemistry
  • Organic chemistry
  • Biochemistry
  • Physics
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Critical reading and reasoning

This does not mean all of these are always formal MCAT eligibility requirements, but they strongly support performance.

Career goals supported by the exam

  • Entry into MD programs
  • Entry into some osteopathic medical programs in the U.S.
  • In some cases, consideration by related health-profession pathways that accept MCAT scores

Who should avoid it

You may want to delay or avoid the MCAT if:

  • None of your target schools require it
  • You have not yet built the required science foundation
  • You are applying this cycle but cannot prepare adequately
  • Your preferred pathway is another profession with a different admissions test

Best alternative exams if this exam is not suitable

Depending on your goals, alternatives may include:

  • CASPer for schools that require situational judgment testing
  • UCAT or GAMSAT for certain non-Canadian international pathways
  • No admission test at all, where schools rely on GPA, interviews, and other components

4. What This Exam Leads To

The MCAT can lead to:

  • Consideration for admission to medical schools
  • Eligibility to apply to many Canadian MD programs
  • Eligibility to apply to most U.S. MD programs
  • Eligibility for some international programs that recognize the MCAT

Is the MCAT mandatory?

  • Not universally mandatory across all Canadian medical schools
  • Mandatory for many Canadian schools
  • Optional or not required at some schools
  • Some schools may evaluate:
  • Total score
  • Specific section scores
  • Threshold scores only
  • Scores differently for in-province vs out-of-province applicants

Recognition inside Canada

The MCAT is widely recognized in Canadian medical admissions, but recognition and usage vary by school. Some universities place strong weight on it; others use it as a cutoff or only evaluate specific sections such as CARS.

International recognition

The MCAT is best recognized in:

  • Canada
  • United States

It may also be accepted by some medical schools in other countries, but this is institution-specific.

5. Conducting Body and Official Authority

  • Full name of organization: Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC)
  • Role and authority: AAMC develops, administers, scores, and manages the MCAT exam
  • Official website: https://students-residents.aamc.org/mcat-exam

The AAMC is the official authority for:

  • Registration
  • Scheduling
  • Test-day rules
  • Scoring
  • Score reporting
  • Official prep materials

Governing ministry / regulator / board / university

The MCAT is not a Canadian government exam. It is administered by the AAMC and then used by individual medical schools as part of their own admissions processes.

Source of rules

MCAT rules typically come from:

  • Official AAMC testing policies
  • Annual or cycle-specific registration and scheduling information
  • Official medical school admissions policies at each university

6. Eligibility Criteria

Unlike many entrance exams, the MCAT is relatively open for registration, but using the score for admission depends on university-specific rules.

Medical College Admission Test and MCAT

For the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT), there is a difference between:

  • Eligibility to register for the exam, and
  • Eligibility to use the score for admission to a particular medical school

Nationality / domicile / residency

  • There is no general MCAT rule limiting test-taking only to Canadians.
  • Canadian, U.S., and international students may register.
  • However, medical school admission policies may differ based on:
  • Citizenship
  • Permanent residency
  • Provincial residency
  • International applicant category

Age limit and relaxations

  • AAMC does not generally publish a standard age cutoff like many public exams.
  • Candidates should review the current registration rules.
  • If under 18, additional consent or policy conditions may apply if stated by AAMC for the current cycle.

Educational qualification

According to AAMC, the MCAT is intended for examinees who plan to apply to health professions schools. In practice, typical candidates are:

  • Current undergraduate students
  • Graduates
  • Post-baccalaureate students

For official registration intent categories, AAMC policies should be checked for the current cycle.

Minimum marks / GPA / class / degree requirement

  • No universal MCAT GPA requirement to sit the exam
  • But medical schools have their own GPA rules for admission

Subject prerequisites

  • The AAMC does not frame the MCAT as requiring a formal prerequisite certificate to register.
  • But the exam assumes knowledge in:
  • Biology
  • Biochemistry
  • Chemistry
  • Physics
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Critical analysis and reasoning

Final-year eligibility rules

  • Students in undergraduate study commonly take the MCAT before applying to medical school.
  • Exact timing should match school application deadlines and score validity rules.

Work experience requirement

  • No MCAT work experience requirement

Internship / practical training requirement

  • Not required for the exam itself

Reservation / category rules

  • The MCAT itself does not operate like an Indian-style reservation exam.
  • Canada-specific admissions equity pathways may exist at the medical school level, not the exam level.

Medical / physical standards

  • No general physical fitness standard to take the exam
  • Candidates with disabilities may request testing accommodations through AAMC’s official accommodations process

Language requirements

  • Exam language: English only
  • Strong academic English reading ability is essential

Number of attempts

AAMC has official lifetime and yearly attempt limits. These limits can change only if AAMC changes policy, so always verify on the official site. Historically, AAMC has used limits on:

  • Number of attempts in a single testing year
  • Number of attempts across two consecutive years
  • Lifetime attempts

Do not rely on memory or old forum posts; verify before booking.

Gap year rules

  • Taking a gap year does not by itself affect MCAT eligibility
  • But target schools may view application timing, score age, and academic history differently

Special eligibility for foreign candidates / international students / disabled candidates

  • International candidates can register where seats and test-center availability allow
  • Candidates needing accommodations must follow AAMC’s official approval process in advance
  • Identification and name-matching rules are strict

Important exclusions or disqualifications

You may face issues if:

  • Your ID does not exactly match your registration details
  • You violate test-day security rules
  • You miss deadlines for scheduling or rescheduling
  • You do not comply with AAMC conduct policies

7. Important Dates and Timeline

Current cycle dates

Exact MCAT dates, registration opening dates, and deadlines change every year and are officially published by AAMC. Because these dates are cycle-specific, students should confirm them directly on the official MCAT registration page.

Typical / historical annual timeline

This is a typical pattern, not a guaranteed current-year schedule:

Period Typical Activity
October to November (prior year) AAMC may release next year’s testing calendar and registration information
January to September Multiple MCAT test dates
Several months before each test date Registration windows open
Before each exam date Deadlines for scheduling, rescheduling, and cancellation
About 1 month after test date Score release for that test date

Registration start and end

  • Varies by test date
  • AAMC uses date-specific registration deadlines
  • Seats may fill early at preferred locations

Correction window

  • MCAT registration changes are handled through scheduling/rescheduling rules rather than a broad public “correction window” model common in some exams
  • Name and ID issues may require direct action under AAMC policy

Admit card release

  • The MCAT typically does not use a traditional downloadable “admit card” in the same way many public exams do
  • Candidates access appointment details through their AAMC account and must follow official check-in instructions

Exam date(s)

  • Multiple dates annually
  • Available dates and centers vary by location

Answer key date

  • No public answer key release model like many government exams

Result date

  • MCAT scores are usually released about 30 to 35 days after the exam date
  • Exact score release dates are published by AAMC for each test date

Counselling / interview / document verification timeline

The MCAT itself has no central counselling process. After the exam:

  • Scores are transmitted or reported for applications
  • Medical schools run their own admissions process
  • Schools may require:
  • GPA review
  • Casper/Altus assessments
  • Essays
  • References
  • Interviews
  • Transcript checks
  • Provincial residency proof

Month-by-month student planning timeline

Timeline What to do
12 months before application Research Canadian medical schools and whether they require MCAT
9 to 12 months before intended test Build content base and decide test date
6 to 8 months before test Begin serious prep and book exam early if ready
4 to 6 months before test Start full-length practice schedule
2 to 3 months before test Intensive revision and stamina building
1 month before test Focus on weak areas, timing, and official practice
Test month Final review, logistics, sleep, ID check
1 month after test Receive score and evaluate retake decision if needed
Application season Submit school applications according to each university timeline

8. Application Process

Where to apply

Apply through the official AAMC MCAT registration system on the AAMC website: https://students-residents.aamc.org/mcat-exam

Step-by-step application process

  1. Create an AAMC account – Use your legal name exactly as it appears on your accepted ID

  2. Review official registration rules – Check ID policy – Scheduling deadlines – Rescheduling and cancellation terms – Accommodation rules if needed

  3. Choose test date and location – Search available centers – Pick a date that fits both your preparation and medical school deadlines

  4. Complete registration details – Personal information – Demographic information if requested – Intent or academic status fields, if applicable

  5. Request accommodations if needed – This is a separate process and often requires documentation – Start early

  6. Pay the exam fee – Fees vary by registration timing and region; official fee tables are published by AAMC

  7. Confirm appointment details – Check your account and email confirmations – Review test center instructions

  8. Prepare ID and test-day documents – Follow only the current official ID list and matching rules

Document upload requirements

For standard MCAT registration, document uploading is usually limited unless needed for:

  • Accommodations
  • Special approval
  • Fee assistance-related process where applicable
  • Identity-related issues

Photograph / signature / ID rules

  • ID rules are strict
  • Name must match registration exactly
  • Expired or unacceptable ID can lead to denial of entry

Warning: A small mismatch in name format can cause major problems on test day.

Category / quota / reservation declaration

  • Not generally relevant to MCAT registration in the same way as national quota-based exams
  • Equity-related or fee-assistance programs, where available, follow separate processes

Payment steps

  • Pay online through official AAMC payment methods listed during registration
  • Keep confirmation records

Correction process

  • There is no broad “edit form anytime” system
  • Some changes may require:
  • account updates
  • rescheduling
  • cancellation and rebooking
  • contacting support

Common application mistakes

  • Registering with a nickname instead of legal name
  • Booking too late and losing preferred city/date
  • Ignoring score release timing relative to applications
  • Underestimating accommodation approval timelines
  • Not checking medical school-specific MCAT deadlines

Final submission checklist

  • AAMC account created
  • Legal name verified
  • Test date selected
  • Test center confirmed
  • Fee paid
  • ID checked
  • Score release timing checked
  • School list reviewed
  • Accommodation request submitted early if needed

9. Application Fee and Other Costs

Official application fee

AAMC publishes official MCAT fees by testing year and timing category. These can include:

  • Standard registration fee
  • Reschedule fee
  • Cancellation/refund policy differences by deadline stage
  • International testing surcharge for certain locations, if applicable

Because these numbers can change by cycle and region, check the current official fee table on AAMC before budgeting.

Category-wise fee differences

The main relevant difference is usually not by social category, but by:

  • Registration timing
  • Geographic location
  • Fee assistance eligibility where applicable

Late fee / correction fee

MCAT uses scheduling deadlines and fee policies rather than a classic “late fee” model used in many public exams. Rescheduling and cancellation costs depend on timing.

Counselling fee / registration fee / interview fee

  • No central MCAT counselling fee
  • Medical schools may have their own application fees through:
  • OMSAS in Ontario
  • University-specific application systems
  • Separate interview-related travel costs

Retest / revaluation / objection fee

  • There is no standard public answer-key objection system
  • Rechecking/re-scoring options are limited and policy-based under AAMC rules

Hidden practical costs students should budget for

  • Travel to test center
  • Accommodation if center is far away
  • Meals on test day
  • Prep books
  • AAMC official practice materials
  • Third-party mock tests
  • Coaching, if chosen
  • Stable laptop and internet for prep
  • Opportunity cost of study time
  • Medical school application fees later

Pro Tip: For many students, the real total MCAT cost is much higher than the registration fee once travel and prep resources are included.

10. Exam Pattern

The MCAT is a computer-based standardized test with four scored sections.

Medical College Admission Test and MCAT

The Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) tests science knowledge, reasoning, data interpretation, and reading analysis rather than simple memorization.

Number of sections

The MCAT has 4 sections:

  1. Chemical and Physical Foundations of Biological Systems
  2. Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills
  3. Biological and Biochemical Foundations of Living Systems
  4. Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior

Subject-wise structure

Section Questions Time
Chemical and Physical Foundations of Biological Systems 59 95 minutes
Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills 53 90 minutes
Biological and Biochemical Foundations of Living Systems 59 95 minutes
Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior 59 95 minutes

Mode

  • Computer-based at authorized test centers

Question types

  • Multiple-choice questions
  • Passage-based questions
  • Standalone discrete questions

Total marks

The MCAT reports:

  • Section scores: 118 to 132 each
  • Total score: 472 to 528

Sectional timing

  • Strictly timed by section
  • Candidates cannot freely redistribute time across sections

Overall duration

The full appointment is about 7 hours 30 minutes, including:

  • Check-in
  • Tutorial
  • Scheduled breaks
  • Testing time

Language options

  • English only

Marking scheme

  • No negative marking
  • Raw performance is converted into scaled section scores and total score

Negative marking

  • None

Partial marking

  • Not applicable for multiple-choice format

Descriptive / objective / interview / practical components

  • No essay section in the current MCAT
  • No interview as part of the MCAT itself
  • Interviews belong to the medical school admissions process, not the exam

Whether normalization or scaling is used

  • MCAT scores are scaled
  • AAMC uses a statistical conversion process to maintain comparability across different test forms

Pattern changes across streams / roles / levels

  • Same core exam pattern for standard candidates
  • Accommodations may alter timing or format where officially approved

11. Detailed Syllabus

The MCAT does not have a single short chapter list like many school exams. Instead, AAMC defines a competency-based content outline.

Section 1: Chemical and Physical Foundations of Biological Systems

Tests the physical sciences as they apply to living systems.

Core subjects

  • General chemistry
  • Organic chemistry
  • Physics
  • Biochemistry
  • Introductory biology

Important topics

  • Atomic structure and bonding
  • Chemical reactions and stoichiometry
  • Acids, bases, buffers
  • Thermodynamics and kinetics
  • Electrochemistry
  • Fluids
  • Circuits
  • Light and optics
  • Mechanics
  • Energy and work
  • Biologically relevant molecules
  • Enzymes
  • Separations and laboratory methods

Skills being tested

  • Interpreting experiments
  • Applying formulas in context
  • Analyzing data tables and graphs
  • Connecting chemistry and physics to physiology

Section 2: Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills (CARS)

Tests reading comprehension and reasoning using humanities and social science passages.

Core areas

  • Passage comprehension
  • Argument analysis
  • Inference
  • Author tone and perspective
  • Evaluating claims

Important topics

There is no memorization syllabus in the traditional sense. Performance depends on: – Reading discipline – Logic – Passage mapping – Evidence-based answer selection

Commonly ignored but important points

  • Timing control
  • Avoiding outside knowledge
  • Understanding the author’s structure rather than just details

Section 3: Biological and Biochemical Foundations of Living Systems

Tests biology and biochemistry with some chemistry integration.

Core subjects

  • Biology
  • Biochemistry
  • Organic chemistry
  • General chemistry

Important topics

  • Cells and organelles
  • Membranes and transport
  • Genetics
  • DNA/RNA
  • Protein synthesis
  • Enzymes
  • Metabolism
  • Nervous system
  • Endocrine system
  • Cardiovascular system
  • Respiratory system
  • Immune system
  • Reproductive system
  • Homeostasis
  • Evolution

Skills being tested

  • Experimental interpretation
  • Mechanistic biological reasoning
  • Pathway integration
  • Molecular-to-system level understanding

Section 4: Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior

Tests psychology, sociology, and biological aspects of behavior.

Core subjects

  • Introductory psychology
  • Introductory sociology
  • Biology related to behavior

Important topics

  • Sensation and perception
  • Learning and memory
  • Cognition and consciousness
  • Motivation and emotion
  • Identity and personality
  • Psychological disorders
  • Social interaction
  • Culture
  • Demographics
  • Health disparities
  • Social institutions
  • Behavior change
  • Research methods and statistics basics

Skills being tested

  • Applying social science theories
  • Interpreting behavior in context
  • Understanding research design and evidence

High-weightage areas if known

AAMC publishes content categories and foundational concepts rather than “chapter weightage” in the coaching-center style. Weight can vary by form, so students should prioritize:

  • AAMC foundational concepts
  • Cross-disciplinary reasoning
  • Passage interpretation
  • Research and data analysis

Whether the syllabus is static or changes annually

  • The broad MCAT framework is relatively stable
  • Minor emphasis and question style can vary by test form
  • Always use the current official AAMC content outline

Link between syllabus and real exam difficulty

The MCAT is difficult because it tests:

  • Content recall
  • Application under time pressure
  • Multi-step reasoning
  • Dense passage reading
  • Scientific analysis

Commonly ignored but important topics

  • Research design
  • Graph interpretation
  • Statistics basics in social science context
  • Lab methods
  • Amino acids and biochemistry integration
  • CARS endurance

12. Difficulty Level and Competition Analysis

Relative difficulty

The MCAT is widely considered a high-difficulty exam.

Conceptual vs memory-based nature

It is more:

  • Conceptual
  • Application-based
  • Passage-driven

than purely memory-based.

Speed vs accuracy demands

The exam requires both:

  • Fast passage processing
  • Careful answer elimination
  • Strong stamina over a long testing day

Typical competition level

Competition is intense because the MCAT is used in admissions for highly selective medical programs. However:

  • The MCAT itself does not “select” candidates by rank alone
  • Medical school admission depends on the whole application
  • Canadian MD seats are limited relative to applicant demand

Number of test-takers / seats / selection ratio

  • AAMC publishes annual MCAT testing data for broad populations
  • Canadian school seat counts and acceptance rates vary by university and year
  • There is no single nationwide MCAT seat or cutoff system in Canada

What makes the exam difficult

  • Long duration
  • Dense scientific passages
  • Need for interdisciplinary thinking
  • Strict timing
  • High stakes
  • CARS difficulty for many science students
  • Canadian admissions competition at top schools

What kind of student usually performs well

Students who do well usually have:

  • Strong science fundamentals
  • Consistent reading habits
  • Good test endurance
  • Data interpretation skill
  • Calm timing discipline
  • Honest review of mistakes

13. Scoring, Ranking, and Results

Raw score calculation

The AAMC does not report a simple raw-score-to-scaled-score table in a fixed public way because conversion varies by form.

Scaled score system

  • Each section: 118 to 132
  • Total score: 472 to 528
  • Midpoint total: 500

Percentile / standard score / rank

AAMC also provides percentile ranks based on recent examinee performance distributions.

Passing marks / qualifying marks

  • There is no universal “pass” or “fail” MCAT score
  • There is no single national qualifying cutoff for Canada

Sectional cutoffs

  • Some medical schools set minimum section thresholds
  • Some specifically emphasize CARS
  • These thresholds vary by institution and applicant category

Overall cutoffs

  • Institution-specific
  • May vary by:
  • province
  • in-province/out-of-province status
  • applicant stream
  • admissions cycle

Merit list rules

The MCAT itself does not create a final admission merit list. Each medical school uses its own admissions process.

Tie-breaking rules

  • Not generally relevant at the centralized exam level
  • School-level admissions rules apply separately

Result validity

  • MCAT score validity depends on each medical school’s policy
  • Many schools accept scores only from a certain recent time window

Warning: Never assume your old MCAT score is valid for all schools in a new cycle.

Rechecking / revaluation / objections

AAMC has limited post-score review mechanisms under official policy, but not a broad answer-key objection system.

Scorecard interpretation

A score report typically includes:

  • Section scores
  • Total score
  • Percentile rank

How to read it:

  • Balanced section scores can matter
  • A strong total score may still be less useful if a target school requires a minimum in one section
  • Compare your score against the specific schools you plan to apply to, not against online myths

14. Selection Process After the Exam

The MCAT is only one stage in the medical school admissions journey.

Typical post-exam process

  1. Take the MCAT
  2. Receive official score
  3. Apply to medical schools through: – centralized systems where applicable – direct university applications where applicable
  4. Submit supporting materials
  5. Schools review academics and non-academic components
  6. Interview invitations may be issued
  7. Interview stage
  8. Final offers / waitlist / rejection

Possible next stages by school

  • Academic screening
  • GPA review
  • CASPer or similar assessment
  • Supplemental application essays
  • Autobiographical sketch or activities list
  • Reference letters
  • Interview
  • Document verification
  • Residency documentation
  • Final offer and seat acceptance

Counselling / choice filling / seat allotment

There is no single Canada-wide MCAT counselling system. Admissions are school-specific.

15. Seats, Vacancies, Intake, or Opportunity Size

There is no single MCAT seat pool because the MCAT is used across many institutions.

What is available

  • Each Canadian medical school has its own intake
  • Seat counts vary by year and school
  • Some schools reserve most seats for in-province applicants
  • Publicly available intake data should be checked on each school’s admissions page

What is not appropriate to generalize

  • A national MCAT seat number for Canada
  • A single selection ratio tied only to MCAT

16. Colleges, Universities, Employers, or Pathways That Accept This Exam

Acceptance type

  • The MCAT is accepted by many Canadian medical schools
  • It is also accepted by most U.S. MD programs and many U.S. DO programs

In Canada: key institutions to verify individually

Many Canadian faculties of medicine either require or consider the MCAT, but policies vary. Students should verify directly with each school. Examples of Canadian medical schools include:

  • University of Toronto Temerty Faculty of Medicine
  • McMaster University Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine
  • Queen’s University Faculty of Health Sciences / School of Medicine
  • University of Ottawa Faculty of Medicine
  • Western University Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry
  • University of British Columbia Faculty of Medicine
  • University of Alberta Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry
  • University of Calgary Cumming School of Medicine
  • Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine
  • Memorial University Faculty of Medicine

Notable exceptions

Some schools may:

  • Not require the MCAT
  • Use only selected sections
  • Have different policies for different applicant streams

Alternative pathways if a candidate does not qualify

  • Apply to schools not requiring the MCAT, if eligible
  • Improve GPA and reapply
  • Pursue a graduate degree to strengthen the application
  • Consider other health professions

17. Eligibility-to-Outcome Map

If you are X, this exam can lead to Y

  • If you are a Canadian undergraduate student
    MCAT can help you apply to many Canadian medical schools, depending on each school’s requirements.

  • If you are a science graduate
    MCAT can support a first-time or repeat application to medicine in Canada or the U.S.

  • If you are a non-traditional / career-change applicant
    MCAT can help demonstrate academic readiness for medicine if your science foundation is solid.

  • If you are an international student
    MCAT may support applications to North American medical schools, but admission opportunities for international applicants are much more limited at many schools.

  • If you are targeting schools like McMaster or other CARS-sensitive programs
    MCAT, especially CARS performance, can be especially important.

  • If you are applying only to schools that do not require MCAT
    This exam may not be necessary.

18. Preparation Strategy

Medical College Admission Test and MCAT

A good Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) plan should be based on your target score, current level, available months, and school deadlines.

12-month plan

Best for:

  • Students with weak basics
  • Busy students
  • Non-science backgrounds
  • Repeaters rebuilding fundamentals

Phase 1: Foundation building (4 to 5 months)

  • Study core sciences slowly and properly
  • Build formula sheet and concept notebook
  • Start daily reading for CARS
  • Learn psychology/sociology systematically

Phase 2: Application practice (3 months)

  • Passage-based practice by topic
  • Begin timed section drills
  • Start error log
  • Weekly revision cycles

Phase 3: Full integration (2 to 3 months)

  • Full-length tests every 1 to 2 weeks
  • Review every test deeply
  • Focus on patterns of mistakes

Phase 4: Final push (1 to 2 months)

  • More official AAMC material
  • Timing strategy
  • Endurance training
  • Final content repair only for recurring weak zones

6-month plan

Best for students with average science background.

  • Months 1 to 2: Content review + CARS daily
  • Months 3 to 4: Topic-wise passages + section tests
  • Month 5: Full-length tests + targeted repair
  • Month 6: Official material, revision, timing, and stamina

3-month plan

Only suitable if your basics are already decent.

  • Month 1: Fast but disciplined review of all subjects
  • Month 2: Heavy passage practice and regular timed sets
  • Month 3: Full-length exams, official materials, and weakness correction

Warning: A 3-month plan is risky if your fundamentals are weak.

Last 30-day strategy

  • Prioritize official AAMC materials
  • Take full-length exams under real conditions
  • Reduce passive reading; increase review quality
  • Memorize high-yield equations, pathways, and definitions
  • Tighten sleep and nutrition routine

Last 7-day strategy

  • No major new resources
  • Light revision notes only
  • One final full-length or section review early in the week, not the day before
  • Check route, ID, food, and timing
  • Sleep discipline matters more than panic studying

Exam-day strategy

  • Reach early
  • Carry required ID only as per official rules
  • Use breaks well
  • Do not obsess over one bad passage
  • Reset mentally section by section
  • Guess strategically if time is ending; never leave easy points to panic

Beginner strategy

  • Start with content, not mocks
  • Build reading stamina from day 1
  • Do short timed practice early
  • Learn why answers are wrong, not only why one is right

Repeater strategy

  • Diagnose the last attempt honestly:
  • Content gap?
  • Timing?
  • CARS?
  • Anxiety?
  • Poor review quality?
  • Retake only after fixing root causes
  • Do not just repeat the same study plan with more hours

Working-professional strategy

  • Use a longer timeline if possible
  • Study before work for hard subjects
  • Use evenings for review and flashcards
  • Reserve weekends for long practice sets
  • Take full-lengths on realistic days, not random holidays only

Weak-student recovery strategy

If your baseline is low:

  • Reduce resources
  • Master essentials first
  • Build one-page summaries
  • Focus on repeated high-yield concepts
  • Use untimed practice before timed sets
  • Improve accuracy before speed

Time management

  • Study in blocks of 60 to 90 minutes
  • Mix content + questions
  • Reserve one day each week for review
  • Do CARS almost daily

Note-making

Good notes should be:

  • Short
  • Revisable
  • Error-focused
  • Formula- and concept-driven

Avoid rewriting textbooks.

Revision cycles

Use 3 revision layers:

  1. Same-day quick review
  2. Weekly revision
  3. Monthly cumulative revision

Mock test strategy

  • Do not take full-lengths too early without review discipline
  • Every mock should produce:
  • error list
  • weak topics list
  • timing notes
  • guessing analysis
  • stamina notes

Error log method

Track:

  • Topic
  • Question source
  • Why wrong
  • Correct concept
  • Trap pattern
  • Fix action

This is one of the highest-value tools for MCAT prep.

Subject prioritization

For most students:

  1. Weakest high-impact section
  2. Core science fundamentals
  3. CARS consistency
  4. Psych/soc memorization plus application

Accuracy improvement

  • Read the whole question stem carefully
  • Identify what is actually being asked
  • Stop changing correct answers without evidence
  • Eliminate choices actively

Stress management

  • Simulate test conditions
  • Keep one rest block each week
  • Avoid score panic from one mock
  • Compare yourself to your trend, not others

Burnout prevention

  • Use planned breaks
  • Rotate subjects
  • Sleep enough
  • Keep one low-intensity session after every full-length review day

19. Best Study Materials

Official syllabus and official sample materials

AAMC official MCAT resources

  • Best source because they reflect actual exam style
  • Includes official prep products, section banks, question packs, and full-length practice exams
  • Most important resource in the final phase

Official page: https://students-residents.aamc.org/mcat-exam

Best books and standard references

Kaplan MCAT Complete Set

  • Widely used for structured content review
  • Good for students who want organized summaries
  • Can feel dense if used passively

Princeton Review MCAT books

  • Useful for concept review and strategy
  • Often preferred by students who like slightly more explanatory teaching style

Examkrackers MCAT materials

  • Useful for concise review and strategy-oriented preparation
  • Good for students who already have decent basics

Khan Academy MCAT-related legacy learning support

  • Historically valuable for concept explanation
  • Check current availability and AAMC-linked recommendations, since online resource ecosystems change

Practice sources

AAMC Section Bank and Question Packs

  • Best for realistic official practice
  • Essential for final-stage preparation

AAMC Full-Length Practice Exams

  • Most predictive among available resources
  • Use under timed conditions

UWorld MCAT question bank

  • Widely chosen by students for high-quality explanations
  • Strong for learning through mistakes
  • Not official, so use as a supplement

Previous-year papers

The MCAT does not function like many public exams where complete previous-year question papers are officially released in the same form. Use official AAMC practice tests instead.

Mock test sources

  • AAMC official full-lengths
  • Reputed commercial providers such as Kaplan, Princeton Review, Blueprint, depending on suitability

Video / online resources if credible

  • AAMC official resources
  • Reputed MCAT platforms with transparent materials
  • University learning supports for psychology, biology, and chemistry basics

Pro Tip: For MCAT, official AAMC materials matter more than collecting too many third-party books.

20. Top 5 Institutes for Preparation

This is a factual, cautious list of widely known or commonly chosen MCAT preparation providers relevant to Canadian students. This is not a ranking.

1. AAMC Official MCAT Prep

  • Country / city / online: Official provider, online
  • Mode: Online
  • Why students choose it: It is the exam maker’s own material
  • Strengths: Most authentic style, official scoring logic, best final-phase practice
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Not a full live-teaching institute by itself
  • Who it suits best: Every serious MCAT student
  • Official site: https://students-residents.aamc.org/mcat-exam
  • Exam-specific or general test-prep: Exam-specific

2. Kaplan Test Prep

  • Country / city / online: International / online
  • Mode: Online, sometimes live online and self-paced
  • Why students choose it: Well-known MCAT prep provider with structured courses and books
  • Strengths: Comprehensive content coverage, schedule support, many practice resources
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Can be expensive; not all students need a full course
  • Who it suits best: Students wanting a structured syllabus and guided plan
  • Official site: https://www.kaptest.com
  • Exam-specific or general test-prep: Exam-specific for MCAT, broader test-prep company overall

3. The Princeton Review

  • Country / city / online: International / online
  • Mode: Online; formats vary
  • Why students choose it: Long-standing MCAT prep brand
  • Strengths: Strong strategy teaching, books, practice tests
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Course cost can be high; quality depends on fit with your learning style
  • Who it suits best: Students who benefit from structured classes and strategy-heavy prep
  • Official site: https://www.princetonreview.com
  • Exam-specific or general test-prep: Exam-specific courses within a broader company

4. Blueprint MCAT

  • Country / city / online: Online
  • Mode: Online
  • Why students choose it: Known in MCAT prep for analytics and practice tools
  • Strengths: User-friendly interface, diagnostics, scheduling tools
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Third-party style may differ somewhat from AAMC
  • Who it suits best: Students who like dashboard-based prep and data tracking
  • Official site: https://blueprintprep.com/mcat
  • Exam-specific or general test-prep: Exam-specific

5. Jack Westin

  • Country / city / online: Online
  • Mode: Online
  • Why students choose it: Particularly known for CARS and daily practice
  • Strengths: Reading practice, CARS support, affordable/free resources in some areas
  • Weaknesses / caution points: Should not replace full official prep
  • Who it suits best: Students weak in CARS or daily discipline
  • Official site: https://jackwestin.com
  • Exam-specific or general test-prep: Strongly MCAT-focused

How to choose the right institute for this exam

Choose based on:

  • Your baseline score
  • Need for structure vs self-study
  • Budget
  • Whether you mainly need:
  • content teaching
  • CARS help
  • question practice
  • accountability
  • Time available before exam
  • Preference for online live, self-paced, or tutor-led learning

Common Mistake: Joining an expensive course without first checking whether you actually need teaching, or just need better practice discipline.

21. Common Mistakes Students Make

Application mistakes

  • Waiting too long to register
  • Name mismatch with ID
  • Ignoring score release dates
  • Not checking target-school deadlines

Eligibility misunderstandings

  • Assuming all Canadian schools require MCAT
  • Assuming one good total score works for every school
  • Ignoring school-specific section requirements

Weak preparation habits

  • Passive note-making
  • Too many resources
  • Delaying CARS practice
  • Memorizing without application

Poor mock strategy

  • Taking mocks without review
  • Chasing scores instead of fixing patterns
  • Using third-party scores as absolute predictors

Bad time allocation

  • Overstudying strengths
  • Neglecting weak sections
  • Spending too long on one passage

Overreliance on coaching

  • Expecting a course to replace self-study
  • Not using AAMC official materials enough

Ignoring official notices

  • Missing policy updates
  • Missing fee or schedule changes
  • Not reading accommodations instructions

Misunderstanding cutoffs or rank

  • Comparing with online rumors
  • Not checking school-level admissions policy

Last-minute errors

  • Poor sleep
  • Changing strategy on test week
  • Trying too many new resources

22. Success Factors and Winning Traits

Students who perform well usually show:

  • Conceptual clarity: especially in biochemistry and passage-based science
  • Consistency: daily or near-daily study beats occasional long sessions
  • Speed with control: fast enough, but not reckless
  • Reasoning skill: especially for CARS and research-based passages
  • Stamina: this is a long exam
  • Discipline: following a review system matters more than motivation
  • Pattern recognition: knowing your common traps
  • Calm under pressure: emotional control protects scores

23. Failure Recovery and Backup Options

If you miss the deadline

  • Check if a later MCAT date still fits your application cycle
  • If not, plan for the next cycle rather than forcing an unprepared attempt

If you are not eligible

  • The issue is more likely school admissions eligibility than MCAT registration itself
  • Fix prerequisites, GPA issues, residency documentation, or course requirements first

If you score low

  • Compare against your target schools
  • Decide whether:
  • to apply anyway to schools where the score is still usable
  • to retake after real diagnosis
  • to delay application by one cycle

Alternative exams

Depending on pathway: – CASPer – UCAT – GAMSAT – Program-specific non-MCAT admissions routes

Bridge options

  • Post-baccalaureate coursework
  • Master’s degree
  • GPA repair
  • More clinical/research/volunteering exposure

Lateral pathways

  • Dentistry
  • Pharmacy
  • Physician assistant where available
  • Nursing
  • Public health
  • Allied health professions

Retry strategy

Retake only if: – your practice scores now support meaningful improvement – your target schools will consider the new score appropriately – you have fixed core weaknesses

Whether a gap year makes sense

A gap year can make sense if it helps you: – improve MCAT substantially – strengthen GPA or academics – gain experience – apply more strategically

24. Career, Salary, and Long-Term Value

Immediate outcome

The MCAT does not directly create a job outcome. It supports admission to medical school.

Study or job options after qualifying

A strong MCAT score may help you enter: – MD programs – Some related professional programs where accepted

Career trajectory

Typical long-term path: 1. Undergraduate degree 2. MCAT 3. Medical school 4. Residency training 5. Licensure 6. Medical practice or specialization

Salary / stipend / earning potential

The MCAT itself has no salary value. Earnings depend on:

  • admission to medical school
  • residency completion
  • specialty choice
  • province and practice model

Long-term value

A strong MCAT score can be valuable because it:

  • strengthens medical school applications
  • can open pathways in Canada and the U.S.
  • provides evidence of academic readiness

Risks or limitations

  • A high score alone does not secure admission
  • Score validity can expire for some schools
  • Repeated low attempts may complicate strategy
  • Canadian medical admissions remain highly competitive even with a strong MCAT

25. Special Notes for This Country

Canada-specific realities

School-specific variation is huge

In Canada, MCAT policies differ significantly by medical school. Some key differences may include:

  • whether MCAT is required at all
  • whether only CARS matters
  • whether out-of-province applicants face different expectations
  • whether francophone or other pathways use different rules

Provincial residency matters

At many schools, residency status can significantly affect competitiveness and available seats.

Public vs private recognition

Canada’s MD system is largely university-based and publicly regulated through institutional and provincial frameworks, not through one MCAT central authority for admissions.

Regional access to test centers

Students in remote areas may need to travel for testing.

Digital divide

Even though the exam is test-center based, preparation often depends on online platforms and stable internet.

Documentation issues

Name consistency, government ID, and residency proof can all become important at different stages.

International students

Some Canadian medical schools accept very few international students, even if the MCAT itself is open to them.

26. FAQs

1. Is the MCAT mandatory for medical school in Canada?

No. Many Canadian medical schools require it, but some do not. Always check each school.

2. Is the MCAT a Canadian government exam?

No. It is conducted by the AAMC.

3. Can international students take the MCAT?

Yes, generally, if they can register at an available test center and meet AAMC requirements.

4. How many times can I take the MCAT?

AAMC has official attempt limits by year and lifetime. Verify the current policy on the official AAMC site.

5. Is there negative marking in the MCAT?

No.

6. What is a good MCAT score?

There is no single answer. A “good” score depends on the medical schools you are targeting and section-specific requirements.

7. Does every section matter equally?

Not always. Some schools emphasize certain sections, especially CARS.

8. How long is the MCAT score valid?

It depends on the medical school. Many schools accept scores only from recent years.

9. Can I prepare for the MCAT in 3 months?

Yes, but usually only if your fundamentals are already strong.

10. Is coaching necessary for the MCAT?

No. Many students self-study successfully. But structured courses can help if you need accountability or concept support.

11. Is the MCAT only for science students?

No, but non-science students need to build the required science foundation.

12. Does the MCAT include an interview?

No. Interviews are part of medical school admissions, not the exam itself.

13. Is there an official answer key after the exam?

No public answer-key model is typically used.

14. Can I retake the MCAT if I get a low score?

Yes, subject to AAMC attempt limits and your own admissions strategy.

15. Should I take the MCAT before my final year?

Many students do, but timing should depend on readiness and application deadlines.

16. What is the hardest section for most students?

It varies, but many students find CARS especially challenging.

17. Can I use an old MCAT score next year?

Maybe. It depends on the schools’ score validity policies.

18. What happens after I receive my MCAT score?

You use it as part of your medical school application process. Schools then decide on interviews and offers.

27. Final Student Action Plan

Use this checklist:

  • Confirm which Canadian medical schools you want to apply to
  • Check whether each school requires the MCAT
  • Check whether they require total score, section cutoffs, or only certain sections
  • Download and read the official AAMC MCAT information
  • Check current-year registration dates and fees
  • Verify score release timing against application deadlines
  • Ensure your legal name matches your ID exactly
  • Gather any documents needed for accommodations early
  • Choose a realistic test date
  • Build a 3-, 6-, or 12-month study plan
  • Collect limited, high-quality resources
  • Use official AAMC materials in the final phase
  • Start CARS practice early and consistently
  • Keep an error log
  • Take full-length tests under real conditions
  • Review every mock deeply
  • Plan travel and test-day logistics in advance
  • After score release, compare your score with each target school’s policy
  • Decide calmly whether to apply, retake, or broaden your school list

28. Source Transparency

Official sources used

  • AAMC MCAT official website: https://students-residents.aamc.org/mcat-exam
  • AAMC official MCAT exam structure, registration, scoring, and prep pages
  • Official Canadian medical school admissions pages should be checked individually for school-specific MCAT policies

Supplementary sources used

  • None relied upon for hard facts in this guide

Which facts are confirmed for the current cycle

Confirmed at the exam-framework level from official AAMC sources: – Exam name – Conducting body – Computer-based format – 4-section structure – Section names – Section timing framework – Score scale – English language – No negative marking – Use of official AAMC registration and policy system

Which facts are based on recent historical patterns

  • Typical annual testing window
  • Approximate score release timing after test date
  • General admissions usage patterns in Canada
  • Typical preparation timelines

Any unresolved ambiguity or missing public information

  • Exact current-cycle dates were not listed here because they are date-specific and should be confirmed directly from AAMC
  • Current exact fees were not listed here because they may vary by cycle and testing region
  • Canadian medical school MCAT requirements vary by institution and sometimes by applicant category, so students must verify each school individually
  • A single Canada-wide cutoff, seat count, or counselling process does not exist for the MCAT pathway

Last reviewed on: 2026-03-19

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