Saville AssessmentReal-format simulator 70s/question Calculator allowed

Saville Numerical Analysis practice

Saville's Numerical Analysis Aptitude test is used for graduate and managerial hiring. It looks similar to SHL on paper — multiple choice over tables and charts, calculator allowed — but the exhibits are denser and the timing is tighter, so the challenge is fast, accurate read-off rather than the arithmetic itself.

This simulator runs 16 questions at the real ~70-second budget. If you find yourself finishing the maths but losing time locating the right cells, that's the exact skill Saville is testing.

The format at a glance

Response formatMultiple choice, 5 options (A–E)
Time per question~70 seconds (data-dense, tight)
CalculatorAllowed
Used bygraduate/managerial schemes

How this simulator compares to the real test

We’d rather tell you exactly what matches than claim a perfect clone. 373 bank questions feed this simulator; the full version draws a fresh form every attempt.

What matches the real test
5-option multiple choice over tables and charts
~70 seconds per question — tighter than SHL
Calculator allowed
End-of-run scoring with worked solutions
What’s different
Real Saville papers often show two exhibits side by side for one question; our questions use a single exhibit each

Common questions

How long is the Saville numerical test?

Roughly 70 seconds per question on the full Numerical Analysis test; the shorter Swift versions compress several aptitudes into one sitting. Exact lengths vary by version and employer.

Can you use a calculator on Saville tests?

Yes, a calculator is allowed. Saville's difficulty is dense, multi-part exhibits under tight timing rather than the calculation itself.

How is Saville different from SHL?

Similar multiple-choice data interpretation, but Saville's exhibits are denser and the per-question timing slightly tighter, so fast accurate read-off matters even more.

Saville Assessment and Saville are trademarks of their respective owners. We are not affiliated with, or endorsed by, any test publisher. Our questions are original practice content; “simulator” means we match the published format, timing and calculator policy.