Welcome – Contact Us
Local Numbers
| Call from outside UK: |
+44 870 067 0644 |
| Toll-free in UK: |
0800 458 3268 |
Emergency Contacts
All of our classes are held at a well-equipped facility such as a local institution, hotel, conference/business center,
or our own offices/classrooms. All of our course facilities are conveniently located and easy to reach by public transportation.
Headquarters
Manhattan Review
The Graybar Building
420 Lexington Ave. Suite#2310
New York, NY 10170
USA
| Telephone in US: |
001 (212) 997 1660 |
| Fax in US: |
001 (212) 997 1669 |
Our headquarters is located in the Graybar Building at Grand Central, in the center of Manhattan.

The Graybar Building was the largest (though not tallest) in the world when it was completed in 1927.
Towering magnificently above Grand Central Terminal with 31 stories and uniquely decorated with animal figures on its canopy
entrance, the building symbolized New York's great maritime history and was featured in a number of well-known movies.
Manhattan Review is proud to offer all our local students and visitors unsurpassed convenience of accessing a wide
variety of transportation options through a direct passageway to Grand Central Station, a major New York transportation
& retail hub including trains, subways, buses, taxi stops, fashion shops, and restaurants.
Please visit our Info Request page to sign up so that we can start
to share with you our own GMAT, MBA and career success experience and advice!
If you have any questions, please email us at
info@review.com.tr or call us at +44 870 067 0644!
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| Testimonial |
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Now I am preparing for my GMAT tests. The course books Turbocharge Your GMAT and Official Guide For GMAT are very helpful. I think the combination of these two books is very good. What I like the most about Turbocharge Your GMAT course is Vocabulary lists. The other books don't provide such lists, but for me as a foreigner it is very important to learn the words that may appear in GMAT. For example, I was afraid not to understand a task in math section or to misunderstand it, and not to give correct answer to relatively easy question just because I didn't understand the data or the question. But after I learned Math Vocabulary list I very seldom misunderstand a task. Now the hardest GMAT task for me is Reading comprehension, because my vocabulary sometimes is not enough to understand a text, especially if it is historic matter. So now I am learning words from Vocabulary lists. Now I study hard every day, because I realize I am at a disadvantage in comparison to test takers, whose native language is English. -Natalia (This student is based in Russia.) Read More... |
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