Skip to main content

4th Grade i-Ready Math Scores 2025–2026

Score charts, percentile rankings, and placement levels for 4th grade students. Data updated for the 2025–2026 school year.

Quick Score Check

Check Your i-Ready Score

Subject

Test Season

4th Grade Math Score Chart

Test window: March 16 – End of school year

Percentile, scale score, and placement ranges for the selected grade and testing season.
PercentileScale ScorePlacement
99th662Well Above
95th637Well Above
90th623Above Grade
85th612Above Grade
80th604Above Grade
75th597On Grade
70th591On Grade
65th585On Grade
60th580On Grade
55th576On Grade
50th(average)571On Grade
45th566Below Grade
40th561Below Grade
35th556Below Grade
30th551Below Grade
25th546Below Grade
20th539Below Grade
15th532Well Below
10th524Well Below
5th513Well Below
1st491Well Below

Data based on Curriculum Associates national norms (2025–2026 school year).

Score Distribution — Spring

Scale score ranges by percentile band

This page covers everything you need to interpret a 4th grade student's i-Ready Math score for the 2025–2026 school year: national percentile benchmarks, placement level cutoffs for Fall, Winter, and Spring, grade-specific growth expectations, and targeted guidance for supporting 4th grade math learners. Use this 4th Grade i-Ready Math Scores guide and the Quick Score Check above to look up any specific score instantly.

What Is a Good i-Ready Math Score for 4th Grade?

A "good" score depends on when in the year the test was taken. In Fall, the national average (50th percentile) for 4th grade students is 526. By Spring, that same average rises to approximately 571 — reflecting a full year of expected math learning. A score that was above average in Fall may be exactly average by Spring if the student grew at a typical rate.

Here are four key benchmark scores for 4th Grade Math Fall:

  • 572+ — 90th percentile and above (Well Above Grade Level)
  • 550 — 75th percentile (top of Above Grade Level)
  • 526 — 50th percentile, national average (On Grade Level)
  • 502 — 25th percentile (approaching Below Grade Level)
  • 481 or below — 10th percentile and below (Well Below Grade Level)

For context: the Fall 50th percentile for 3rd Grade is 493, and for 5th Grade it is 548. The scale is continuous — a score of 526 means the same thing regardless of grade.

How 4th Grade Math Scores Change Across Fall, Winter, and Spring

The i-Ready national average (50th percentile) for 4th grade Math rises across the three testing windows:

  • Fall: 526 (start of year baseline)
  • Winter: 549 (mid-year checkpoint)
  • Spring: 571 (end of year)

That means a student at the national average is expected to gain approximately 45 scale-score points from Fall to Spring. This is the Typical Growth benchmark for 4th grade Math.

Critically, the placement level cutoffs also shift each season. The On Grade Level range in Fall is approximately 524–551. A student who scores at the low end of On Grade Level in Fall and doesn't grow will fall into the Below Grade Level range by Spring — because the bar rises with each window. This is why consistent progress matters more than any single score.

Placement Level Cutoffs for 4th Grade Math

i-Ready assigns one of five placement levels based on how a student's scale score compares to grade-level expectations. Here are the Fall cutoffs for 4th Grade Math:

  • Well Above Grade Level: 580–800
  • Above Grade Level: 552–579
  • On Grade Level: 524–551
  • Below Grade Level: 495–523
  • Well Below Grade Level: 100 and below

Winter and Spring cutoffs are shown in the full score table above. For complete cutoff tables across all grades and seasons, see our Placement Levels guide.

How to Support 4th Grade Math Growth

i-Ready Math covers five major domains, and most students have stronger performance in some areas than others. Review your child's diagnostic report to see which domains show the most opportunity for growth. Common focus areas for 4th grade students include:

  • Number and Operations: Place value, multi-digit computation, and number sense. For 4th grade: multi-digit multiplication, long division, factors and multiples.
  • Algebra and Algebraic Thinking: Patterns, equations, and relationships. In grades 3–4: properties of operations, input/output rules.
  • Measurement and Data: Units, graphs, and data interpretation. This domain is consistently valuable because it connects math to real-world contexts and science learning.
  • Geometry: Shapes, area, perimeter, volume, and spatial reasoning. Visual math practice — drawing figures, using graph paper, building with blocks — reinforces geometry concepts at home.
  • Number and Operations — Fractions: In grades 3–4: fraction concepts, comparing fractions, introducing fraction operations.

Consistent daily practice — even 15–20 minutes — on the specific skills flagged in the diagnostic report is more effective than general review. Free resources like Khan Academy align well with the i-Ready skill progression and complement the lessons assigned in the i-Ready program.

Common Questions Parents Ask About 4th Grade Math Scores

Many parents wonder whether their child's score is "good enough." The most helpful frame is: is this score showing that my child is on track to meet year-end expectations? A student who is On Grade Level in Fall and maintains Typical Growth through Spring is meeting the bar. A student who is Above Grade Level and still growing is doing exceptionally well.

Another common question: can a student move up a full placement level in one year? Yes — especially students who are one level below grade level and who receive targeted instruction in the specific skills flagged by the diagnostic. Moving from Below Grade Level to On Grade Level by Spring is achievable with consistent effort and good support.

If your child's score decreased from one testing window to the next: a drop of 5–10 points is within the measurement margin and isn't necessarily a concern. A consistent downward trend across two or more testing windows, or a large single-window drop, is worth discussing with their teacher to identify whether there is a specific domain where skills have stalled.

Related Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average i-Ready Math score for 4th Grade?

The national average (50th percentile) for 4th Grade Math in the Fall testing window is 526. This represents the median score nationwide for 4th grade students at the start of the school year. By Winter it rises to approximately 549, and by Spring to approximately 571 — reflecting expected learning across the year.

What i-Ready Math score is considered "on grade level" for 4th Grade?

For 4th Grade Math, the "On Grade Level" placement range in the Fall is approximately 524–551. Students scoring in this range are meeting grade-level math expectations. See the <a href="/placement-levels/">Placement Levels guide</a> for complete cutoff tables across all three seasons.

My 4th grader was On Grade Level in 3rd grade but is now Below — what happened?

Fourth grade Math introduces multi-digit multiplication, long division, and extends fractions to operations (adding and subtracting fractions with like denominators, multiplying fractions by whole numbers). These are genuinely harder than 3rd-grade content. Some students who mastered 3rd-grade skills hit a wall in 4th grade because the prerequisite skills from 3rd grade (especially fractions) weren't fully consolidated. Review the diagnostic sub-score report to find the specific gap.

What are the most important math skills for 4th graders to practice at home?

Multiplication fluency (knowing all facts up to 10×10) is the single most important skill for 4th grade. Without multiplication automaticity, students slow down on every other topic — fractions, division, area, and multi-step word problems. Practice multiplication facts for 10 minutes daily. Beyond that, working with fractions using visual models (fraction bars, pie diagrams) helps significantly.

How does 4th grade i-Ready Math connect to middle school readiness?

Fourth grade is an important foundation year. Students who are On Grade Level or above in 4th grade Math are building the skills (multi-digit operations, fractions, place value) that directly feed into 5th grade fractions and decimals, which in turn feed into 6th-grade ratios and proportional reasoning. A strong 4th-grade foundation prevents the accumulating skill gaps that make 6th-grade math significantly harder.