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Should You Retake the MCAT? A Decision Framework from 20 Years of Tutoring

Dr. Stuart Donnelly May 24, 2026 12 min read

About 30% of my students are retakers. Some improve by 15+ points. Others gain 2 points and wish they hadn't bothered. The difference is never how hard they study — it's whether they change their approach.

Here's the decision framework I use with every retake student.

When You Should Retake

Retake if any of these are true:

  • Your score is more than 3 points below the median for your target schools
  • One section is disproportionately low (e.g., 125 CARS with 129s everywhere else)
  • You can identify a specific, fixable reason for underperformance (ran out of time, didn't finish content review, test anxiety)
  • You have 8+ weeks to prepare with a concrete, different study plan

Do NOT retake if:

  • You just want to "try again" without changing anything about how you study
  • You scored within 2 points of your target and your application is otherwise strong
  • Your test date is less than 6 weeks away
  • You're planning to use the same prep company that didn't work the first time
The Kaplan Trap: I've lost count of how many students have told me they used Kaplan (or Princeton Review, or Blueprint) for their first attempt, scored below expectations, and then signed up for the same company again. If a method didn't work the first time, doing more of it won't produce a different result. My student Jenil used Kaplan twice before finding my tutoring — she jumped from the 66th to the 92nd percentile in 10 weeks with a completely different approach.

The Retake Improvement Formula

Based on my experience with hundreds of retakers, here's what drives score improvement:

1. Diagnose Before You Prescribe

Before studying a single chapter, analyze your first exam in detail. For every wrong answer, classify it:

  • Content gap: You didn't know the material
  • Reasoning error: You knew the content but misread the passage, fell for a distractor, or made a logical error
  • Timing error: You knew the answer but ran out of time

Most students scoring 500+ will find that 60-70% of their errors are reasoning and timing — not content. If you spend all your retake prep re-reading textbooks, you're treating the wrong disease.

2. Focus on Your Weakest Section First

Improving a 124 to a 128 is much easier than improving a 129 to a 130. Your lowest section has the most room for growth. My student Michael went from 504 to 519 in 8 weeks — most of the improvement came from his weakest section.

3. Do 3x More Practice Questions

The number one predictor of retake improvement is question volume. If you did 1,000 practice questions the first time, do 3,000 the second time. Use DoctorMCAT's Q-Bank (10,000+ questions) to ensure you never run out of fresh material.

4. Take Your Practice Tests Seriously

Many retakers take practice tests casually because they've "already been through this." That's exactly backwards. Your practice tests should be harder and more realistic than the first time. Take at least 6 full-length tests under strict exam conditions.

How Medical Schools View Retakes

Most schools see all your MCAT scores. A significant improvement (5+ points) is viewed positively — it shows persistence and growth. A marginal improvement (1-2 points) or a score decrease raises concerns.

The worst outcome is retaking and scoring the same or lower. This is why preparation must be fundamentally different the second time — not just "more of the same."

Real Results: Samuel went from 500 to 511 (+11 points) and got into the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. Donna improved from 506 to 510 and got multiple medical school offers including UC Riverside. These aren't outliers — they're what happens when you change the method, not just the effort.

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