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IQ Test Ages 2½–7

Free WPPSI-IV Practice Test

The Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI-IV) is the leading IQ test for children ages 2½–7. It identifies gifted children for early entry programs, evaluates developmental delays, and guides educational planning for the youngest learners.

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Ages 2½–7
Age Range
5 Indexes
Composite Scores
30–60 min
Test Duration
IQ / FSIQ
Score Format

All Resources

Everything You Need to Prepare

Practice Questions
8 free questions
Flashcards
5 key terms
Study Guide
On this page
Books
2 study guides
Articles
2 guides

Test Structure

What the WPPSI-IV Covers

Each index measures a distinct cognitive ability in young children. Picture-based tasks make this test accessible even for children who cannot yet read.

Verbal Comprehension

Tests receptive vocabulary (pointing to pictures matching words) and information recall. Designed for young children using picture-based questions — no reading required.

Visual Spatial

Uses block design and object assembly tasks to measure how young children analyze and reconstruct visual patterns. Key predictor of later math and science ability.

Fluid Reasoning

Picture concepts and matrix reasoning assess how well young children identify categories and spot patterns. Available in the age 4–7 version of the WPPSI-IV.

Study Strategy

Prep Tips for Parents

1
Read together every day

The WPPSI Receptive Vocabulary subtest asks children to point to pictures matching a word. Daily reading builds the vocabulary bank that makes this subtest easy.

2
Build with blocks

LEGO, Duplo, and wooden blocks directly develop the Visual Spatial skills the WPPSI measures. Children who build regularly score higher on Block Design.

3
Name categories in daily life

Point to things and ask 'what type of thing is this?' and 'what else belongs in that group?' This builds the conceptual grouping skills tested in Picture Concepts.

4
Play memory card games

WPPSI Picture Memory requires children to recall images after briefly seeing them. Any card-matching memory game builds this skill.

5
Keep sessions very short

Young children ages 2–7 have limited attention spans. Maximum 10 minutes per session. Make it a game — positive associations matter enormously at this age.

Study Materials

Recommended Books

Handpicked study guides to complement your online practice. Affiliate links — we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

WPPSI-IV Test Prep Book

WPPSI-IV Test Prep for Gifted Preschool Programs

Age-appropriate practice for children ages 4–6. Covers vocabulary, visual puzzles, and reasoning concepts in a child-friendly format.

Gifted Test Prep Workbook

Getting Ready for the Gifted Test: Ages 4–6 Workbook

Picture-based activities designed for young gifted test-takers. Includes WPPSI-style visual and vocabulary tasks.

Try a Question

See How You Do

Sample Question Verbal

Point to the animal that lives in the water.

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Learn More

WPPSI-IV Articles

Parent Guide

What Is the WPPSI-IV? A Complete Guide for Parents of Young Children

What the WPPSI tests, how it's administered, what scores mean for preschoolers, and how to prepare a young child without stress.

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Score Guide

Is My 4-Year-Old Gifted? WPPSI Scores and What They Mean

Understand FSIQ ranges for young children, what gifted means at age 4–5, and how WPPSI scores predict future academic performance.

Read article →

View all articles →

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the WPPSI-IV?

The Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence, Fourth Edition (WPPSI-IV) is an IQ test for children ages 2 years 6 months through 7 years 7 months. It's the most widely used intelligence assessment for young children.

What is a good WPPSI score?

FSIQ scores above 130 (98th percentile) are Very Superior or gifted. Scores of 120–129 are Superior. Many early gifted programs use a cutoff between 125 and 130.

At what age can children take the WPPSI?

The WPPSI-IV has two age bands: ages 2:6–3:11 (younger) and 4:0–7:7 (older). Most gifted program screening uses the 4+ version.

How is the WPPSI different from the WISC-V?

The WPPSI is designed for younger children (up to 7½), uses picture-based tasks, and has no timed components for the youngest age band. The WISC-V covers ages 6–16 with more complex tasks.

Should I prepare my child for the WPPSI?

Light preparation is beneficial — mainly building vocabulary, doing puzzles, and practicing multi-step instructions. Intensive drilling at young ages can increase anxiety and is counterproductive.