Retake Guide

Going from a 498 to a 503

What a 5-point MCAT jump actually involves, in honest percentile terms. No promises, no shame, just the shape of the project.

498
Starting score (42 percentile)
5 points
503
Target score (58 percentile)

Percentile ranks: AAMC, Summary of MCAT Total and Section Scores, in effect May 1, 2026 to April 30, 2027.

What this jump means in percentile terms

In percentile terms, this is a move from the 42nd percentile to the 58th percentile: 16 percentile points of the national distribution.

Percentiles are the honest way to size a retake goal, because points are not evenly spaced. The same number of points covers different amounts of the field depending on where you start, which is why a target that sounds modest can be substantial and vice versa.

What a 5-point move involves

A 5-point move is the most contained kind of retake project. It rarely requires becoming a different student. It usually requires finding where a handful of points leak on each section and sealing those specific leaks.

That is why the first step is forensic, not motivational: your score report, section by section, looking for the one or two sections carrying most of the shortfall and the recurring reasons behind your misses.

The Retaker's advantage

You are not starting from zero. You have seen the real exam, you know the room, and you have a score report full of information a first-timer would pay for. A retake built on that information, targeting your actual error patterns instead of generic weaknesses, is what we mean when we say a retake is a more informed first attempt.

Common questions

How hard is it to go from a 498 to a 503 on the MCAT?

In percentile terms, this is a move from the 42nd percentile to the 58th percentile: 16 percentile points of the national distribution. There is no way to promise any individual outcome, but jumps of this size are a known, structured project: they typically come from diagnosing the first attempt honestly, fixing recurring error patterns, and following a phased plan rather than repeating the first prep.

Can you improve 5 points on an MCAT retake?

Some Retakers do make moves of this size and larger, and some do not. Nobody can honestly guarantee a number. What is under your control is the approach: a structured plan, official AAMC material placed properly, and a review system that turns every miss into training. That is what shifts the odds.

Where should I start if I scored a 498?

Start with your score report rather than a study calendar. Which sections carried the shortfall, and do you know why? A 498 with one weak section is a different retake than a balanced 498. Once you can name the problem, the plan follows from it.

Dig into both scores, then make the plan

Understand where you are and where you are aiming: read the full breakdowns of a 498 and a 503. Related jumps: 498 to 506 · 498 to 508 · 498 to 510 · 491 to 503.

The free Retaker Calculator gives you a personalized read on your situation, and The Retaker Course turns it into a day-by-day plan. If you are mapping a timeline first, start with the 3-month retake schedule.

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