Verbal reasoning is, for most EPSO competitions, the single most important reasoning test you will sit. In the latest generalist and specialist competitions it is not just a hurdle to clear but a test that feeds directly into your ranking. Understanding what it actually measures — and what it does not — is the first step to scoring well.
The test presents you with short passages of text, each followed by a statement or question. Your job is to judge, using only the information in the passage, whether a conclusion follows. It sounds simple. Under time pressure, with carefully written distractors, it is anything but.
What the test looks like
In the current EPSO format, the verbal reasoning test is a multiple-choice test taken in your first language. The structure is consistent across recent competitions:
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Questions | 20 |
| Duration | 35 minutes |
| Scoring | 0 to 20 |
| Pass mark | 10 out of 20 |
| Language | Language 1 (your main language) |
That works out to a little under two minutes per question. Crucially, in recent competitions verbal reasoning is one of the tests that contributes to your ranking, not merely a pass/fail gate. Every mark counts towards your position relative to other candidates.
What it actually measures
The test is not about general knowledge, vocabulary, or how much you know about a topic. It measures one narrow skill: can you work strictly within the four corners of a text and judge what does and does not follow from it. The most common mistake candidates make is bringing in outside knowledge or making reasonable-sounding inferences that the passage does not actually support.
The recurring traps
Verbal reasoning questions are built around a small set of predictable distractors. Learning to recognise them is most of the battle:
- The plausible outside fact. A statement that is true in reality but not supported by the passage. Tempting, and wrong.
- The overreach. The passage supports a modest claim; the statement stretches it into an absolute ("some" becomes "all", "may" becomes "will").
- The subtle swap. A statement that mirrors the passage almost word for word but changes one critical term, reversing or distorting the meaning.
- The unstated cause. The passage describes two things happening; the statement claims one caused the other, which the text never establishes.
Train your verbal reasoning
Realistic EPSO-style passages with instant feedback on every answer. See the traps before they catch you.
Start practising → First set free · no costHow to prepare
Verbal reasoning improves with deliberate, timed practice more than with reading theory. The most effective approach is to practise in timed sets, then review every wrong answer carefully — not to learn the fact, but to understand which trap you fell for. Over time you build an instinct for the gap between what a passage says and what it merely suggests. Practising in your strongest language matters too, since you will sit the real test in your language 1.
One practical tip: on the real test, read the statement first, then the passage with that specific claim in mind. It focuses your reading and saves precious seconds.
Worked examples
Three examples in the actual EPSO format — short passage, one question, four statements, only one fully supported. Read each passage, pick your answer, then reveal the explanation — paying close attention to which trap each distractor is built around.
Question: Which of the following statements is correct?
- Plants absorb mainly the green wavelengths of light.
- Photosynthesis contributed to the historical rise of atmospheric oxygen.
- Chlorophyll is found in the roots of plants.
- Only plants can perform photosynthesis.
Show answer
Why each distractor fails:
• A — direct inversion: the passage explicitly says plants do not use the green part of the spectrum efficiently.
• C — wrong location: chlorophyll sits in chloroplasts (cells, predominantly in leaves), not in roots.
• D — universal-quantifier overreach: the first sentence lists 'plants, algae and some bacteria'. The word only is one of the most reliable EPSO trap markers — always re-read the passage when it appears in an option.
Question: Which of the following statements is correct?
- The Antarctic Treaty resolved all territorial disputes on the continent.
- Antarctica holds the majority of the world's freshwater.
- The Madrid Protocol authorises mining in Antarctica.
- The Antarctic Treaty was signed in 1961.
Show answer
Why each distractor fails:
• A — direct contradiction of 'freezes — but does not resolve — territorial claims'.
• C — direction inversion: the Madrid Protocol bans mining.
• D — the archetypal EPSO date trap: the treaty was signed in 1959 and entered into force in 1961. Always note both dates separately. The same trap recurs in EU law passages (e.g. GDPR adopted 2016, applied 2018; AI Act adopted 2024, applies progressively 2025–2027).
Question: Which of the following statements is correct?
- Organic farming is the only form of sustainable agriculture.
- Sustainable agriculture seeks to meet present needs without compromising those of future generations.
- Precision agriculture relies on traditional methods and does not use technology.
- The EU's Farm to Fork strategy increases the use of chemical pesticides.
Show answer
Why each distractor fails:
• A — 'only' overreach: the passage explicitly says organic 'is not the only one' and gives precision agriculture as another example.
• C — direct contradiction: precision agriculture 'uses sensors, GPS and data analysis'.
• D — policy-direction inversion: the passage says 'a substantial reduction'. EPSO routinely tests whether you noticed the verb on quantitative policy goals — reduce, increase, cap, phase out. Always re-read the verb before answering.
These examples are written in the exact style of our Set 3 practice bank — same passage length, same four-option format, same trap classification used in the explanations. They are not official EPSO questions.
Frequently asked questions
How many questions are in the EPSO verbal reasoning test?
Twenty questions in 35 minutes, scored from 0 to 20, with a pass mark of 10 out of 20. It is taken in your first language.
Does verbal reasoning count towards my ranking?
Yes. In recent EPSO competitions verbal reasoning is one of the tests that feeds into your ranking, not just a pass/fail gate, so every mark matters.
What is the most common mistake?
Bringing in outside knowledge. The test asks only what follows from the passage itself; a statement can be true in reality but still wrong for the test if the passage does not support it.
The fastest way to improve is to practise under realistic, timed conditions. The first set is free.