IQ Test vs Aptitude Test: What’s the Difference?
IQ tests and aptitude tests are often confused because they measure overlapping cognitive abilities. Understanding the distinction helps you choose the right assessment for hiring, education, or self-development.
Head-to-head comparison
| Dimension | IQ Test | Aptitude Test |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | General cognitive ability (g-factor) | Specific abilities relevant to a role or programme |
| Output | Single IQ score (normed to population mean 100) | Multiple domain scores (verbal, numerical, abstract, etc.) |
| Administration | Supervised clinical setting; 60-90 minutes | Online or supervised; 20-60 minutes per domain |
| Examples | WAIS-IV, Stanford-Binet, Raven’s | SHL Verify, CCAT, GRE, GMAT, Watson-Glaser |
| Used for | Clinical diagnosis, research, educational placement | Employment selection, graduate admissions, professional licensing |
| Hiring use | Rarely used directly in hiring (cost, clinical nature) | Widely used in hiring across industries and levels |
| Legal defensibility | Strong when properly validated, rarely used in selection | High when job-relevant abilities are demonstrated |
Frequently asked questions
Is an aptitude test the same as an IQ test?
No. An IQ test measures general cognitive ability (g-factor) across multiple domains and produces a single standardised score normed against the population. An aptitude test measures specific abilities relevant to a particular role and produces domain-specific scores. Aptitude tests are essentially domain-specific subsets of what a full IQ test measures, designed for practical selection rather than comprehensive cognitive profiling.
Which is better for employment selection: IQ or aptitude?
Aptitude tests are better suited for employment selection for several reasons: they are cheaper and faster to administer, they directly measure abilities relevant to the specific role, they are legally more defensible (job-relevance can be demonstrated), and they can be taken online without clinical supervision. IQ tests are used in research and clinical contexts but are rarely used directly in hiring due to cost, clinical requirements, and legal constraints in some jurisdictions.
What are the most common aptitude tests used by employers?
SHL Verify (numerical, verbal, inductive reasoning) is the most widely used in Europe. The CCAT (Criteria Cognitive Aptitude Test) is popular in North America. GMAT and GRE are used for graduate admissions. Watson-Glaser is used in law and consulting. The Wonderlic is used in American football (NFL Scouting Combine) and some employers. The McKinsey Problem Solving Test uses a case-based aptitude format.
Last updated: June 2026 · IntelligencesTest.com Comparison Guide
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