Recent work suggests that strategy differences may play an important role on gF tasks and are related to WMC. Thepresent study utilized eye tracking to assess the consistency of strategy use across tasks, focusing on constructive matching(CM) and response elimination (RE) strategies. Across two gF tasks (the Raven Matrices and a figural analogies task),participants were highly consistent in their strategy use, regardless of WMC. However, high-WMC individuals were morelikely to utilize the CM strategy, though this was influenced by task order. Those who utilized RE were more likelyto have their attention captured by salient, incorrect responses in the response bank and time on those responses wasnegatively related to accuracy. However, on select items where the response bank was necessary to make a response, theserelationships disappeared. Results are discussed in terms of the implications of strategy differences on our understandingof WMC and gF.