Inside the dMAT: Structure & Syllabus
Exactly what you'll face on test day — the two modules, three Core subtests, the General Academic Module, and the rules that make it challenging.
A 3.5-hour computer-based test
The dMAT is proctored at licensed test centres. Here are the essentials before we break down each part.
Two modules, one break
For Indian APS applicants, the test is the Core Module followed by the General Academic Module.
Core Module
3 subtests · 60 single-choice questions · general aptitude
Break
Mandatory · stay in the building
General Academic Module
Single-choice · applied academic reasoning
The Core Module
Language-independent and mandatory for everyone. It measures general cognitive ability through 60 single-choice questions across three 25-minute subtests — about 75 seconds per question.
Figure Sequences
You see four matrices of shapes that transform by a hidden rule. Your job: work out the rule and pick the next two matrices (the 5th and 6th) in the series.
- Shapes move, rotate or change colour between matrices
- Advanced items use "bounce" and edge-travel logic
- Escalating steps: 1 move, then 2, then 3…
- Everything tracked mentally — no notes allowed
Mathematical Equations
You're given a system of equations with letter variables. The key that makes it solvable in your head: every variable is a unique whole number from 1 to 20.
- Find the "anchor" equation with the fewest unknowns
- Substitute rapidly and mentally
- No geometry or advanced formulas — pure deduction
- Difficulty scales by chaining more variables
Latin Squares
A 5×5 grid uses five letters (A–E). Each letter appears exactly once in every row and every column. From a partly-filled grid, deduce which letter belongs in the highlighted cell.
- No sub-grid rule like Sudoku — only rows & columns
- Scan the fullest rows/columns first
- Chain "forced" placements to the target cell
- Solve entirely by elimination, in your head
Row 3 already has C, E, A, B → the missing letter is D.
The General Academic Module
After the break, you get 90 minutes of applied reasoning. Instead of memorised subject facts, it tests whether you can absorb new academic material and draw correct conclusions — exactly what a German Master's demands.
This is your module. g.a.s.t. builds specialised subject modules (Data Science, Computer Science…) for specific university programmes, but Indian applicants routed through the standard APS process take the General Academic Module.
Reading comprehension
Extract the core argument from dense, tertiary-level academic passages — fast.
Data interpretation
Read tables, graphs and statistics, and make valid quantitative inferences.
Logical inference
Spot assumptions, contradictions and logical fallacies in the material provided.
You're given an "input" — a passage, a research scenario, a data table or a chart — and answer single-choice questions based strictly on it. Nothing to cram; everything to reason.
What makes the dMAT demanding
The difficulty isn't the syllabus — it's the constraints. This is why preparation focuses on speed and mental processing.
Every calculation is done mentally — one reason the equations are capped at integers 1–20.
You must hold and track patterns in working memory, with nothing to write on.
About 75 seconds per Core question. If you're stuck, guess and move on.
Never leave a blank — a guess has upside, a blank has none.
No pass, no fail — a standardised score
Your raw answers convert to standardised scales so results are comparable across dates and question sets.
(mean 100, SD 30)
all test-takers
separately
A low score does not fail you — universities weigh the dMAT alongside your GPA, SOP, recommendations and language scores. There is no fixed passing mark.
Know the test? Now prepare with a plan
We turn this structure into a personalised preparation roadmap — and handle your registration, centre booking and APS from start to finish.
IndoGerman Education · Igniting the Brightest Future · dmat.indogermaneducation.com
