11+ Letter Pair Series Practice
(GL Assessment)

Letter pair series turn your child into a pattern detective. A line of letter pairs is shown, such as AC, BD, CE, DF, and your child has to spot the hidden rule and supply the pair that comes next. The clever part is that each pair holds two patterns running side by side: the first letters follow one rule and the second letters follow another, and the two rules can be completely different. Cracking both at once is what the question rewards.

Letter pair series sit within the GL Assessment 11+ Verbal Reasoning paper, where this kind of sequence reasoning is a regular feature. Our research estimate, since GL does not publish exact weightings, is a small block of questions in papers that include the type. As everywhere in the VR paper, your child picks from five options (A to E) and marks the answer on a separate sheet. GL prints an alphabet line on the page, and counting the gap between letters on that line is exactly the skill being tested.

On this page your child works through these sequences one at a time, with the same alphabet line they will meet in the exam. Every question comes with a worked explanation that splits the pair into its two patterns, so your child learns to track each letter separately rather than guessing from the look of the sequence.

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What the GL 11+ Tests on Letter Pair Series

Letter pair series are built from a handful of pattern shapes. GL does not publish their frequency, so this order is our research estimate, roughly from most common to least:

  • Both letters following the same simple rule (each pair adds the same small step, such as +1 or +2 to both letters): the gentlest starting point
  • A different step for each letter (the first letter moves by one amount, the second by another): the heart of the type
  • Opposite directions (the first letter moves forward while the second moves backward, as in AZ, BY, CX): a favourite GL pattern
  • Repeated letters in a pair moving together (ZZ, YY, XX), where both letters share one rule
  • Asymmetric step sizes (one letter jumps by three, the other slips back by two): a harder mix
  • Wrap-around across the Z to A boundary (a sequence that runs off the end of the alphabet and loops round): a real test of care
  • Accelerating or converging gaps (the jump grows each step, or the two letters drift towards each other): the most demanding shapes

Difficulty climbs from both letters sharing one easy rule, through pairs where each letter follows its own rule or runs in the opposite direction, up to asymmetric steps, wrap-around and gaps that change size as the sequence goes on.

Sample Letter Pair Series Questions

Five questions drawn from PrepStep’s letter pair series bank, spanning Foundation to Challenging. Tap “Show worked explanation” to see the full method after you’ve had a go. The correct answer is highlighted on each question so you can check immediately.

Question 1 Foundation

What comes next in this letter series? A, C, E, G, ___

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
  1. H
  2. I
  3. J
  4. K
  5. L
Show worked explanation

The pattern skips one letter each time: A (skip B) C (skip D) E (skip F) G (skip H) I. These are the odd-positioned letters of the alphabet. Tip: Convert letters to numbers (A=1, B=2...) to spot the pattern more easily! ✓

Question 2 Intermediate

What comes next in this letter series? Z, W, T, Q, ___

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
  1. O
  2. N
  3. M
  4. P
  5. L
Show worked explanation

The pattern goes back 3 each time: Z(−3)→W(−3)→T(−3)→Q(−3)→N. The answer is N. Tip: In the exam, if you're stuck, try the most common pattern first: both letters +1 or +2. ✓

Question 3 Intermediate

What comes next in this letter series? V, S, P, M, ___

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
  1. L
  2. K
  3. H
  4. I
  5. J
Show worked explanation

The pattern goes back 3 each time: V(−3)→S(−3)→P(−3)→M(−3)→J. The answer is J. Tip: Convert letters to numbers (A=1, B=2...) to spot the pattern more easily! ✓

Question 4 Challenging

What comes next? A, B, D, G, ___

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
  1. K
  2. I
  3. J
  4. H
  5. L
Show worked explanation

The gaps increase by 1 each time: A(+1)B(+2)D(+3)G(+4)K. The differences are 1, 2, 3, 4. Tip: If both letters change by the same amount, it's a simple pattern. If different, track each separately. ✓

Question 5 Foundation

What comes next in this letter series? B, D, F, H, ___

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
  1. I
  2. L
  3. K
  4. J
  5. M
Show worked explanation

The pattern skips one letter each time: B (skip C) D (skip E) F (skip G) H (skip I) J. Tip: Use EJOTY (E=5, J=10, O=15, T=20, Y=25) as anchor points for counting. ✓

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Common mistake 1 of 4

Assuming both letters obey the same rule.

Tip: In many pairs the first and second letters move differently, and one of the wrong options is usually built on the false idea that they match. Teach your child to read the first letters as one sequence and the second letters as a separate sequence, then solve each on its own.

Common mistake 2 of 4

Checking only the last two pairs.

Tip: A rule that fits the final two pairs might not fit the whole line. Encourage your child to confirm the pattern works for every pair from the start before choosing, which rules out the tempting near-miss answers.

Common mistake 3 of 4

Slipping by one place when counting.

Tip: Off-by-one errors are the most common mistake here, and GL builds options that are exactly one letter away from correct. Counting each gap on the alphabet line, rather than from memory, keeps your child on the right letter.

Common mistake 4 of 4

Getting the direction wrong near Z and A.

Tip: When a sequence runs backward, or wraps past the ends of the alphabet, it is easy to reverse the move by mistake. Remind your child that after Z comes A again, before A comes Z, and to write the direction of each pattern down before extending it.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a letter pair series in the 11+?

It is a Verbal Reasoning question that shows a line of letter pairs, such as AC, BD, CE, DF, and asks for the pair that comes next. Each pair contains two patterns at once: the first letters follow one rule and the second letters follow another. Your child works out both rules and chooses the correct next pair from five options (A to E).

How do you solve letter pair series questions?

The reliable method is to split the pair in two. Read all the first letters as one sequence and work out their rule, then read all the second letters as a separate sequence and work out theirs. Converting letters to their alphabet positions (A is 1, B is 2, and so on) makes the gaps easy to see. Finally, check the rule fits every pair before answering.

Why do the two letters follow different rules?

That is exactly what the question type is designed to test. GL wants to see whether your child can hold two patterns in mind at the same time, so the first and second letters often move by different amounts or even in opposite directions. Treating them as one combined rule is the most common reason children pick a wrong answer.

What makes a letter pair series hard?

The hardest versions use asymmetric steps (each letter jumping by a different amount), wrap-around past Z or A, or gaps that grow or shrink as the sequence continues. Sequences where the two letters converge towards each other, or where two patterns are interleaved, are also demanding and reward careful, step-by-step checking.

How can my child improve at letter pair series?

Practice that trains the split-the-pair habit is the key, along with comfort converting letters to numbers and counting on the alphabet line. Free PrepStep practice gives your child these sequences one at a time with the alphabet line on screen, and each worked explanation separates the pair into its two patterns, so the method sticks.

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PrepStep has 128 letter pair series questions in GL Assessment format: five options, instant feedback, and step-by-step explanations. Free to start.

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