Started an aviation-manufacturing program at WSU Tech.
“I studied about forty-five minutes a night after my shift. Eleven weeks later I passed all four. The retake on math was only thirteen dollars at the center.”
Pass the Kansas GED on your schedule, from Wichita to Garden City.
Twigera is built for Kansas learners who need a high-school equivalency credential without rearranging their lives. There is no residency requirement to test here, you can sit the GED in person or online from home, and the full battery is $156. Our prep is one-time pay, never a subscription.
Free diagnostic · one-time payment, never a subscription

The fast facts for taking the GED in Kansas — verify on official sources before your test date.
Kansas State High School Diploma
Available in Spanish
Facts verified June 6, 2026
The four numbers that matter most for Kansas test takers — fee, age, locations, and the workforce gap a diploma closes.
Total cost of all four official subject tests in Kansas — $39 per subject, the same price in person or online.
Kansas requires GED test takers to be 18; 16- and 17-year-olds can test by presenting a Compulsory School Attendance Disclaimer signed by a parent or guardian and their school district.
Kansas community colleges, Washburn University Institute of Technology, and Pearson VUE sites in Wichita, Topeka and Lenexa host official testing, plus online proctored testing from home.
Total Kansas nonfarm employment (about 1,477,300, November 2025). The majority of these roles list a high-school diploma or GED as the minimum credential — aviation manufacturing, agriculture, healthcare, and the trades.
Source: GED Testing Service · Kansas Board of Regents — Adult Education · Q1 2026
Set by GED Testing Service and the KansasDepartment of Education. Verify on official sources before your test date — rules change.
Kansas requires GED test takers to be at least 18. A 16- or 17-year-old may test by presenting a Compulsory School Attendance Disclaimer signed by a parent or guardian and their school district, confirming they are no longer required to attend school.
Applicants cannot already hold a U.S. high school diploma and cannot be currently enrolled in a Kansas high school at the time of testing.
Kansas has no residency requirement — you can take the GED here regardless of which state you live in. The Kansas State High School Diploma is awarded once you pass all four subjects.
A current driver's license, state ID, U.S. military ID, or passport is accepted at every testing center. Expired IDs and school IDs are not accepted.
Both options are available at $39 per subject. Online proctored testing in Kansas requires enrollment in a WIOA Title II adult education program for approval to test at home, plus a recent 'green' score on a GED Ready practice test, a webcam and a private quiet room.
You must score at least 145 on each of the four subject tests independently. Subjects can be retaken one at a time without re-doing the others.
A 16- or 17-year-old can test by presenting a Compulsory School Attendance Disclaimer signed by a parent or guardian and their school district.
These are the official fees from GED Testing Service for Kansas test takers — what the test itself costs. Our prep is a separate one-time payment, with a Pass Guarantee on the Pro plan.
Charged at the testing center or online checkout.
All four subjects taken in any order, on your schedule.
Official practice test from GED Testing Service.
Per subject after the first two attempts.
In Kansas, free adult-education GED prep is state-funded, and for some learners that is a genuinely good fit. Here is an honest look at where it works — and where self-paced online prep works better.
Not sure which fits? The free diagnostic shows you exactly where you stand in Kansas, then you decide.
The official GED is administered at testing centers across Kansas, plus online from home through GED Testing Service. Pick a city for the local center directory.
Real Kansas students. Real diplomas. Real next chapters — nursing programs, college, the National Guard, the promotions they were capped on.
Started an aviation-manufacturing program at WSU Tech.
“I studied about forty-five minutes a night after my shift. Eleven weeks later I passed all four. The retake on math was only thirteen dollars at the center.”
Enrolled at Johnson County Community College for a nursing prerequisite track.
“No residency hoops, which mattered because I had just moved from Missouri. Two and a half months of lessons on lunch breaks and I started classes the next term.”
Earned a welding certificate at the Washburn Institute of Technology.
“I enrolled in the adult-ed program, which let me test from home. Ten weeks of studying after the baby went down. The certificate program took me the week scores posted.”
Moved into a line-lead role at a meatpacking plant.
“I tested in Spanish for math and science because that is how I learned them. Same diploma. Three months of evenings and my supervisor moved me up the month after.”
Same four steps for everyone. Most students reach the final step in eight to fourteen weeks.
A 45-minute baseline across all four subjects produces a personal heat-map of what to study first. The plan is built from your data, not a template.
Short video lessons, then practice on the same skill the same day. The platform reorders your queue around what you miss.
Full-length, timed simulations that look and feel exactly like the official test. Three clean passes and you are ready.
Schedule the official GED at a center or online from home. Pass in any order, on your timeline. Your state mails the diploma.
Specific to taking the GED in Kansas. For broader course questions, see the help center or email support@twigera.com.
Schedule the official GED through ged.com (run by GED Testing Service) at any of the 15+ testing sites across Kansas — community colleges, the Washburn Institute of Technology, and Pearson VUE in Wichita, Topeka and Lenexa — or take it online from home. The four subject tests can be taken in any order, on separate days, at $39 per subject either way.
Yes. The Kansas State High School Diploma is treated identically to a traditional Kansas high-school diploma by every accredited college, every employer, and every branch of the U.S. military. It is issued in partnership with the Kansas Board of Regents once you pass all four subject tests at 145 or higher.
The official test is $39 per subject, or $156 for the full four-subject battery — the same price in person and online. If you fail a subject, the discounted test-center retake is $13 ($10 test-center fee plus a $3 state fee); online retakes stay $39. The GED Ready practice test is a separate $7.99 per subject, and our prep is a one-time payment.
Yes, with a step. Kansas lets you test freely at 18, but 16- and 17-year-olds can test by presenting a Compulsory School Attendance Disclaimer signed by a parent or guardian and their school district. That form confirms you are no longer required to attend school. Once it clears, you register and test like anyone else.
Yes, with one condition specific to Kansas: testing from home requires enrollment in a WIOA Title II adult education program for approval. You also need a recent 'green' score on a GED Ready practice test, a webcam-equipped computer, and a private quiet room. If you would rather skip the enrollment step, you can test in person at any center for the same $39 per subject.
Most students who study consistently for 45 to 60 minutes a day are test-ready within 8 to 14 weeks. Your day-one diagnostic shows where you actually stand, and the plan adapts from there. Kansas does not require a minimum number of prep hours to sit the test.
No. Kansas has no residency requirement, so you can test here regardless of which state you live in, and you will be awarded the Kansas State High School Diploma. This makes Kansas a practical option if you live near the Missouri border or move frequently for work.
Yes. The GED test in Kansas is offered in English or Spanish, in person and online, and you can combine subjects taken in different languages to earn the credential. Twigera's prep is in English; we recommend testing in whichever language you read and think in most comfortably. The diploma issued is identical regardless of which language you test in.
From a quiet 45 minutes after the kids go down to your Kansas State High School Diploma in hand — no residency hoops, and most students get there in three months. Start with the free diagnostic and we'll show you the shortest path from where you are.