📌 Quick Answer: How Long to Prepare for the TAGE MAGE?
Most candidates targeting a competitive score (420–480+) spend 8–12 weeks preparing, with 8–12 hours per week. If you’re starting from scratch, plan for at least 80–100 hours of preparation. Strong maths backgrounds can reduce prep time for Calcul; non-native French speakers may need extra time on Compréhension and Expression.
Start Here: Take a Diagnostic Test
Before opening any study material, take a full diagnostic exam under real test conditions — timer running, no phone, no breaks between subtests. This is the single most important first step in your TAGE MAGE preparation. Without a baseline score, you cannot build an effective study plan or know where to focus your energy.
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What to Measure in Your Diagnostic
- Score per subtest (where are you weakest?)
- Did you finish each subtest, or run out of time?
- Which question types caused the most errors?
- How far are you from your target score?
The 6 Subtests: Preparation Strategy for Each
Each subtest has its own logic and requires a different preparation approach. Here’s what works — and what to avoid — for each section.
1
Calcul — Numerical Reasoning (15 q, 20 min)
What’s tested:
Arithmetic, percentages, ratios, proportions, basic algebra. Questions are applied (word problems), not abstract. Mental arithmetic speed is critical — calculators are prohibited.
How to prepare:
- Master shortcuts for %, fractions, ratios
- Practice mental arithmetic daily (15 min)
- Learn to estimate rather than calculate exactly
- Time per question target: 60–80 seconds
2
Logique — Abstract Reasoning (15 q, 25 min)
What’s tested:
Pattern recognition in sequences, matrices and diagrams. No language required — this is pure abstract reasoning. Often the highest-scoring subtest for strong STEM candidates.
How to prepare:
- Practice IQ-style matrix puzzles daily
- Learn common pattern types: rotation, reflection, alternation
- Use elimination strategy — remove obviously wrong answers first
- Time per question target: 90–100 seconds
3
Compréhension — Reading (15 q, 20 min)
What’s tested:
Short French texts (200–400 words) followed by inference and comprehension questions. The texts are literary or academic — formal French register. Non-native French speakers find this the hardest section.
How to prepare:
- Read Le Monde, Le Figaro, or Le Point daily
- Practice skim-reading and main-idea identification
- Focus on inference — answers are implied, not stated
- Time per question target: 70–80 seconds
4
Conditions Suffisantes — Data Sufficiency (15 q, 20 min)
What’s tested:
Given a question and two conditions, decide if Condition A alone, Condition B alone, both together, or neither is sufficient to answer. Unique question format — unfamiliar to most candidates before prep. Similar to GMAT Data Sufficiency.
How to prepare:
- Learn the 4-answer-choice framework first
- Never solve the full problem — just check sufficiency
- Master number property shortcuts (even/odd, positive/negative)
- Time per question target: 75–90 seconds
5
Expression — French Grammar (15 q, 15 min)
What’s tested:
French vocabulary, grammar, sentence correction and syntax. Native French speakers have a significant advantage here. However, the questions test formal/literary French — even natives lose points on archaic vocabulary.
How to prepare:
- Study common grammar traps (accord du participe passé, subjonctif)
- Build vocabulary with formal French word lists
- Read literary texts, not just journalistic French
- Time per question target: 60 seconds — fastest subtest
6
Raisonnement — Critical Reasoning (15 q, 15 min)
What’s tested:
Short arguments (4–6 sentences) followed by questions asking you to identify the conclusion, find the flaw, strengthen/weaken the argument, or identify an underlying assumption. Similar to LSAT and GMAT Critical Reasoning.
How to prepare:
- Learn argument structure: premise → conclusion
- Master the 5 question types (assumption, weaken, strengthen, evaluate, flaw)
- Practice on GMAT Critical Reasoning for additional material
- Time per question target: 60 seconds
The Best TAGE MAGE Preparation Resources
Resources fall into three tiers. Official materials from the CGE are the most realistic but limited in quantity. Third-party prep books add volume and explanation depth. Online communities and coaching add accountability and personalised feedback.
| Resource |
Type |
Cost |
Best For |
Rating |
| Official CGE Past Papers |
Practice Tests |
Free–€15 |
Authenticity |
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Annales TAGE MAGE (Studyrama) |
Book |
€20–25 |
Volume + Explanations |
⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Concours Direct Online Platform |
Online Drills |
€30–60/month |
Timed practice |
⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| GMAT Official Guide (Critical Reasoning) |
Book |
€30 |
Raisonnement extra practice |
⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| YDS TAGE MAGE Coaching |
1:1 Tutoring |
Custom |
Fast score gains |
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
Your 10-Week TAGE MAGE Study Schedule
Week-by-Week Study Plan (8–10 hrs/week)
| Week |
Primary Focus |
Key Milestone |
| Week 1 |
Diagnostic + Test Structure |
Baseline score established; weaknesses ranked |
| Week 2 |
Calcul foundations |
Mental maths shortcuts mastered; 2 timed sets done |
| Week 3 |
Logique |
All major pattern types recognised; 2 timed sets done |
| Week 4 |
Compréhension |
Reading speed improved; inference strategy drilled |
| Week 5 |
Mid-prep mock exam |
Score vs. week 1 diagnostic compared; plan adjusted |
| Week 6 |
Conditions Suffisantes |
CS method fully understood; 3 timed sets done |
| Week 7 |
Expression + Raisonnement |
Grammar rules reviewed; argument structure mastered |
| Week 8 |
Mixed practice all 6 subtests |
Consistent timing across all subtests |
| Week 9 |
3 full mock exams |
Exam routine locked in; score plateau broken |
| Week 10 |
Light review + rest |
No new material; sleep + nutrition prioritised |
Top 7 TAGE MAGE Preparation Mistakes to Avoid
❌ Skipping the diagnostic test
Without a baseline, you’re guessing about where to spend prep time.
❌ Practising without timing
The TAGE MAGE is extremely time-pressured. Untimed practice creates false confidence.
❌ Ignoring Conditions Suffisantes
This section is unfamiliar to most — it requires learning a new question format. Don’t save it for last.
❌ Cramming the day before
Cognitive aptitude tests do not reward last-minute cramming. Rest is more valuable in the final 48h.
❌ Only using one prep book
Volume of practice matters. Supplement official materials with third-party books and online drills.
❌ Not reviewing wrong answers
Reviewing errors teaches you more than doing new questions. Spend 30% of your time on error analysis.
❌ Preparing for the TAGE MAGE in English
All six subtests are in French. Your reading speed in French must be fast enough to handle 15 questions in 15–25 minutes. Practice in French from day one.
Want a Personalised TAGE MAGE Prep Plan?
Your Dream School coaches have helped students reach 450+ at HEC Paris, ESSEC and ESCP. We build your plan around your diagnostic results, schedule and target schools.
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