Math IQ
Test
Measure your mathematical reasoning, numerical problem-solving and quantitative fluency. 30 questions across arithmetic, algebra, geometry and logic. Instant results. No account needed.
The core definition
Mathematical intelligence is the ability to think in numbers, recognize patterns, reason logically and solve problems using mathematical concepts. It encompasses numeracy, quantitative reasoning, logical analysis and the capacity to recognize abstract relationships and structures. People with strong mathematical intelligence naturally gravitate toward finding order, testing hypotheses and discovering underlying rules in complex systems. They think in equations and relationships rather than isolated facts.
Howard Gardner identified logical-mathematical intelligence as one of the primary intelligences in his framework. It is not merely the ability to calculate — that is a learned skill — but the deeper capacity to recognize patterns, construct logical arguments and manipulate abstract symbols to solve novel problems. Mathematical thinking is essential not only in STEM fields but in finance, law, medicine, programming, engineering and any domain where precision, logic and quantitative reasoning matter.
Arithmetic & calculation
Number operations, mental mathematics and basic computational fluency with whole numbers, fractions and decimals.
Algebra & equations
Solving for unknowns, manipulating variables and understanding relationships expressed through algebraic notation.
Geometry & spatial reasoning
Understanding shapes, angles, areas, volumes and spatial relationships in two and three dimensions.
Logic & reasoning
Deductive and inductive reasoning, recognizing patterns in sequences and solving multi-step logical problems.
You naturally organize information into categories, sequences and relationships
You notice patterns and rules in data, games and systems others overlook
You enjoy solving puzzles, riddles and problems with objective solutions
You reason through complex problems step by step, testing hypotheses systematically
You think in terms of cause-and-effect, probabilities and quantitative relationships
You prefer abstract thinking over memorization and rote learning
Marie Curie
Her groundbreaking research in radioactivity required extraordinary capacity to design mathematical experiments, recognize patterns in data and translate observations into numerical relationships that unlocked atomic physics.
Alan Turing
Turing's entire intellectual contribution — from the Turing machine to artificial intelligence theory — was built on mathematical abstraction and the capacity to reason about systems and logic independent of any physical implementation.
Carl Sagan
Beyond his genius for explanation, Sagan had an extraordinary capacity to translate cosmic scale, probability and statistical patterns into compelling narratives — mathematical thinking applied to the deepest questions.
Each question tests your mathematical reasoning and quantitative ability. Choose the best answer. Calculator not permitted.
Free cognitive and intelligence assessments grounded in academic research. Built for the curious. Designed around your privacy.
© 2025 IntelligencesTest.com · All rights reserved
This test provides a mathematical reasoning assessment for educational purposes only.
