Is There a Free Alternative to iReady You Can Use at Home?
The first time iReady showed up in our house, it was a number on a conference printout. My daughter's teacher slid it across the table, pointed at a scale score, and said she was "on grade level, trending up." Good news. But when I got home and wanted to see it for myself, to poke at which topics were strong and which were shaky, there was nowhere for me to log in. The test that produced that number lived entirely inside the school. I was a parent holding a score I could not actually check.
If you have gone looking for a way to run iReady at home and come up empty, that is not you missing something. It is by design. Here is what iReady actually is, why parents cannot just log in, and a free, honest way to check your child's math and reading level whenever you want to.
Is there a free alternative to iReady at home?
Short answer: yes. The at-home version of what iReady does, telling you whether your child is approaching, meeting, or exceeding grade level in math and reading, is available for free through Test My Kid. It is an eight-minute adaptive assessment for grades K through 8, calibrated to the same NWEA MAP and iReady benchmarks schools use, and it does not require a school account. What it will not do, and what you should distrust in anything that claims otherwise, is hand you the identical iReady scale score. That number belongs to iReady's own scale. The useful thing to take home is the decision it points to, on track or not, and what to work on next.
What iReady actually is, and why parents can't just log in
iReady (styled i-Ready) is an adaptive diagnostic made by Curriculum Associates and sold to schools and districts, not to families. Your child typically takes it two or three times a year, in fall, winter, and spring, on a school-issued login. The adaptive part means the questions get harder or easier based on how your child answers, which is how it lands on a scale score and a placement level for math and for reading.
The catch for parents is the same thing that makes it useful for schools: it is a school product. There is no consumer login where you can start a fresh diagnostic the week your child brings home a worrying score. Curriculum Associates does offer some at-home practice and learning games, but the diagnostic itself, the part that produces the number on the report, is administered by the school on the school's schedule. So between windows, which can be months apart, you are flying blind. That is the gap an at-home alternative is meant to fill.
What to look for in an iReady alternative
Not everything that shows up when you search "free iReady alternative" is worth your time. A lot of it is worksheet packs labeled as a "free iReady practice test." Practice has its place, but a stack of questions is not a diagnostic, and it will not tell you where your child actually stands. Here is what separates a real alternative from a worksheet:
- It is adaptive. The questions adjust to your child instead of giving every kid the same page. That is how you get an accurate read in a few minutes instead of an hour.
- It covers math and reading. iReady measures both, so an alternative that only does math leaves half the picture out.
- It is calibrated to real benchmarks. A grade-level read only means something if it is anchored to the same yardsticks schools use, like NWEA MAP and iReady. Otherwise the result is just a score from nowhere.
- It tells you what to do next. A number alone is a dead end. You want to know which topics are solid, which are shaky, and what to practice.
How Test My Kid compares
I will be straight about where it matches iReady and where it does not, because that honesty is the whole point. Test My Kid's assessment is adaptive, covers math and reading for grades K through 8, and is calibrated to the same NWEA MAP and iReady benchmarks, so the grade-level read lines up with how the school thinks about your child. It reports which topics your child has down and which need work, and it takes about eight minutes. The first assessment is free; ongoing monthly assessments are ninety-nine dollars a year per family.
What it does not do is reproduce the exact iReady scale score, and no at-home tool honestly can, because that scale is iReady's own. If you want to understand how these benchmarks relate to each other, iReady versus NWEA MAP explained for parents walks through it. The practical difference at home is control: you decide when to check, instead of waiting months for the next school window.
Use it between the school's testing windows
The best way to use a free alternative is not to replace iReady but to cover the long stretches when the school is not testing. A quick monthly check tells you whether your child is holding steady, climbing, or slipping, and whether the practice you have been doing is working. That turns a single fall or winter score from a verdict into one data point on a line you can actually watch.
And it changes what a low score means. When iReady comes back below grade level, it is easy to read it as a judgment on your child. It is not. It is information about what to practice next, and the fastest way to act on it is to get your own read, see which topics are shaky, and start there. A wrong answer, at school or at home, is a map, not a label. Praise the work your child puts into the next thing, not how "smart" a number says they are.
My daughter's iReady score is still a printout from a conference. But now, in the months between, I can sit down with her for eight minutes and see for myself where she is, in her math and her reading both. The school has its windows. We have ours. That is all a good alternative needs to do: give you a clear, honest look on your own schedule, for free.
Frequently asked questions
Can parents buy or log in to iReady at home?
Is there a genuinely free alternative to iReady?
Will an alternative give me the same iReady score?
What should I look for in an iReady alternative for home?
How often should I check my child's level at home?
Keep reading
iReady vs NWEA MAP, Explained for Parents
Both are adaptive tests schools use to measure reading and math. Here is the plain-English difference between iReady and NWEA MAP, and how to read each score.
iReady Diagnostic Scores by Grade Level, Explained for Parents
An iReady scale score is one number on a K-12 ruler, not a percentage or a grade. Here is what a good score looks like by grade, what the placement levels mean, and why the label matters more than the number.
Lexile Score, Explained for Parents
A Lexile score is not a grade and not a verdict on a book. Here is what the number measures, what the letter codes in front of it mean, and the range to aim for when you pick a book.