UCAT Study Plan 2026: 4, 6 and 8 Week Revision Timetables
- Akash Gandhi
- May 19, 2023
- 15 min read
Updated: 6 days ago
Updated March 2026 | By Dr Akash Gandhi, TheUKCATPeople
At TheUKCATPeople, we have helped thousands of students prepare for the UCAT over 14 years. The single most common mistake we see in the first consultation is students who have done a lot of practice but have no structure behind it - they have ground through hundreds of questions without a plan, burned out by July, and made less progress than students who started later but prepared intelligently.
This guide gives you three complete, ready-to-use UCAT study plans - 4 weeks, 6 weeks, and 8 weeks - built around what we actually see working. Each plan is section-weighted based on average student difficulty, includes daily hour targets, and is calibrated to the 2026 UCAT format (4 sections, scored out of 2700, Abstract Reasoning removed).
Before you start: if you are not sure what the UCAT actually involves, read the Ultimate UCAT Guide 2026 first.
If you want to know where your practice scores sit against the national average, use the UCAT Score Calculator to benchmark yourself. And if you want to understand exactly what you are preparing for section by section, the guides below are your starting points:
👉 UCAT Verbal Reasoning: Complete 2026 Guide - the hardest section on average (602 mean score in 2025)
👉 UCAT Decision Making: Complete 2026 Guide - the most variable section; technique is everything
👉 UCAT Quantitative Reasoning: Complete 2026 Guide - GCSE maths under severe time pressure
👉 UCAT Situational Judgement: Complete 2026 Guide - the only banded section; Band 4 ends applications

When Should You Start Revising for the UCAT?
The UCAT testing window runs July to September each year. Whilst many people start in January, you can use the following plans to help plan your remaining weeks. Use this table to pick your plan:
Your exam month | Start revision | Use this plan |
Early - mid July | Late April / early May | 8-week plan |
Late July - August | Early–mid June | 6-week plan |
September | Late July | 4-week intensive |
The honest answer to "when should I start" is: as early as you can without burning out before your actual exam date. Starting in April and doing 30–45 minutes of technique reading per day is entirely fine - it builds a foundation that makes the intensive practice phase much more effective when you hit it in June or July.
What you should not do is leave it until three weeks before and attempt to compress 8 weeks of skill development into a panic sprint. The UCAT tests cognitive skills, not content knowledge. Skills take time to build and cannot be crammed.
If you are sitting in July and reading this in March, you are in a good position. Use the next 4 - 6 weeks to read the section guides and do small amounts of untimed practice to get comfortable with the formats. Then hit the 8-week plan properly from late April.
Key Takeaway: Pick your plan based on your exam date, not based on how much time you feel you have available. Most students need 6–8 weeks of structured preparation.
How Many Hours of UCAT Revision Should You Do Per Day?
This is one of the most searched questions about UCAT preparation, and most answers online are vague or unrealistic. Here is what we actually see across thousands of students:
Preparation phase | Daily hours | Weekly total |
Early phase - learning technique | 1–1.5 hours | 7–10 hours |
Mid phase - building practice | 2–3 hours | 14–20 hours |
Final phase - intensive practice | 3–5 hours | 21–35 hours |
Final week before exam | 2–3 hours | 14–20 hours |
Total across a full preparation period:
We would recommend at least 150-200 hours of structured practice over 6–8 weeks. Students who complete 200 hours of quality preparation consistently outperform students who do 300+ hours of unstructured question grinding.
The word quality is doing a lot of work in that sentence. One hour of deliberate practice - attempting questions, reviewing every wrong answer carefully, diagnosing your specific error pattern, and drilling that error type explicitly - is worth more than three hours of passive question completion where you check the answer and move on without understanding why you were wrong.
How many UCAT questions should I do per day?
Early phase: 30–50 questions per session, untimed, technique-focused
Mid phase: 50–80 questions per session, starting to time yourself
Final phase: complete timed section sittings followed by a thorough review
Key Takeaway: 150-200 hours of structured practice over 6–8 weeks is the realistic target. Reduce hours slightly in the final week - pushing to exhaustion before your exam actively damages your performance on the day.
The 8-Week UCAT Study Plan
For students sitting in July or early August. Start: late April or early May.
This plan is front-loaded with technique and back-loaded with timed practice. The most common reason students plateau in the final weeks is that they skipped the technique phase and went straight to doing questions - they have practised being slow and inaccurate repeatedly rather than building the right habits first.
VR receives proportionally more time throughout because it has the lowest average score of any section and requires the most fundamental adjustment to how most students read and reason.
WEEKS 1-2: TECHNIQUE FOUNDATION
Daily time: 1–1.5 hours. Goal: understand every question type before attempting timed practice.
Week 1 - Verbal Reasoning
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | VR overview | Read the VR Complete Guide. Understand the two formats: TF/CT and multiple choice. Do not attempt timed questions yet. |
Tue | True, False, Can't Tell | 20 TF/CT questions untimed. Review every answer - right and wrong. |
Wed | Can't Tell specifically | 20 more TF/CT questions. Focus entirely on Can't Tell - the most common error source. Read the Can't Tell vs False guide. |
Thu | Multiple choice VR | 15 multiple-choice questions untimed. Learn and apply the UCAT elimination method. |
Fri | Negative questions | 15 questions targeting NOT/EXCEPT/LEAST formats. Read the Negative Questions guide. |
Sat | VR error review | Go through every wrong answer from the week. Write the error type next to each one: wrong inference, Can't Tell confusion, time trap, absolute language trap. |
Sun | Rest | No revision. |
Week 2 - Decision Making
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | DM overview | Read the UCAT DM Complete Guide. Understand all 6 question types. Do not attempt timed practice yet. |
Tue | Syllogisms | 15 syllogism questions untimed. Read the Syllogisms guide. These are the most counterintuitive DM questions and need the most explicit practice. |
Wed | Venn diagrams | 15 Venn diagram questions untimed. Read the Venn Diagrams guide. |
Thu | Logical puzzles + probabilistic | 20 questions across logical puzzles and probabilistic reasoning. |
Fri | Yes/No and strongest argument | 20 questions across Yes/No drag and drop and strongest argument formats. |
Sat | DM error review | Same process as VR error review. Identify which DM question type you are consistently getting wrong. |
Sun | Rest | No revision. |
WEEKS 3-4: BUILDING PRACTICE
Daily time: 2–3 hours. Goal: add QR and SJT technique, begin light timing across all sections.
Week 3 - Quantitative Reasoning + SJT
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | QR overview | Read the QR Complete Guide. Learn the on-screen calculator keyboard shortcuts. Read the Mental Maths Guide. |
Tue | QR data interpretation | 20 data interpretation questions untimed. Focus on reading charts and tables accurately before calculating. |
Wed | QR percentages, ratios, speed | 25 questions across percentage, ratio, and speed/distance/time types. |
Thu | SJT overview | Read the SJT Complete Guide and the SJT Band guide. Spend 30 minutes reading GMC Good Medical Practice principles. |
Fri | SJT appropriateness questions | 20 SJT appropriateness questions. Read the Appropriateness Questions guide. |
Sat | SJT ranking questions | 20 SJT most/least appropriate ranking questions. |
Sun | Rest | No revision. |
Week 4 - Mixed timed practice begins
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | Timed VR | Complete one full VR section (44 questions, 22 minutes). Review all wrong answers. |
Tue | Timed DM | Complete one full DM section (35 questions, 37 minutes). Review all wrong answers. |
Wed | Timed QR | Complete one full QR section (36 questions, 26 minutes). Review all wrong answers. |
Thu | Timed SJT | Complete one full SJT section (69 questions, 26 minutes). Review. |
Fri | Weak section focus | Identify your weakest section from the week. Do 30 focused questions on your specific error pattern from that section. |
Sat | First full mock | Complete your first full UCAT mock under timed conditions. Record your score. |
Sun | Mock review | Spend 90 minutes reviewing every wrong answer from the mock. Do not skip this. |
WEEKS 5–6: TARGETED IMPROVEMENT
Daily time: 3–4 hours. Goal: diagnose your specific error patterns and fix them explicitly.
By week 5 you should have mock score data and a clear picture of which section is holding your total down. The key shift here is moving from general practice to targeted error correction.
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | Weakest section deep dive | 45 focused questions on your weakest section. Untimed if needed - accuracy before speed. |
Tue | Second weakest section | 45 focused questions. |
Wed | Full timed section | Pick the section where your improvement has stalled. Complete a full timed sitting. |
Thu | Error pattern drilling | Take your error log from the week. Do 30 questions specifically targeting your most common mistake type. |
Fri | Mixed timed practice | 25 questions per section under timing. Track your score. |
Sat | Full mock | Second full mock under exam conditions. Note score improvement vs week 4 mock. |
Sun | Mock review | 90-minute review session. |
The students who make the biggest gains in weeks 5 and 6 are not the ones who do the most questions. They are the ones who review the most carefully. If your mock score has not moved between week 4 and week 6, the problem is almost always in your review process, not your question volume.
WEEKS 7–8: EXAM PREPARATION
Daily time: 3–5 hours. Goal: peak performance and exam-day readiness.
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | Full mock | Third full mock. You should be seeing a meaningful improvement on your week 4 baseline. |
Tue | Mock review + weak section | 90-minute review, then 45 focused questions on your remaining weak area. |
Wed | Timed section sittings | Two timed section sittings (your two weakest sections). |
Thu | Mixed practice | 80 questions across all sections under timing. |
Fri | Full mock | Fourth mock. |
Sat | Review and consolidate | Review only. No new questions. Read your error log from the full preparation period. |
Sun | Rest | No revision. |
Final week (week 8): Reduce volume. Do not attempt a new full mock in the 48 hours before your exam. Your score will not improve in the last 48 hours - it can only be damaged by exhaustion. On the night before, read through your section guides briefly, prepare your ID and test centre logistics, and stop revising by early evening.
The 6-Week UCAT Study Plan In 2026
For students sitting in August. Start: early to mid June.
The 6-week plan compresses weeks 1–2 of the 8-week plan into a single week of accelerated technique reading. It is achievable but requires you to be disciplined about not skipping the technique phase. Students who jump straight to timed practice without learning the question type frameworks consistently plateau earlier.
WEEK 1: ACCELERATED TECHNIQUE
Daily time: 2 hours. Cover all four sections in a single week.
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | VR | Read VR complete guide. 30 untimed TF/CT questions. Focus on Can't Tell. |
Tue | VR | 30 untimed multiple choice questions. Read negative questions guide. |
Wed | DM | Read DM complete guide. 30 untimed syllogism + Venn questions. |
Thu | DM + QR | 20 DM mixed questions. Read QR guide. 15 QR data interpretation questions. |
Fri | QR + SJT | 20 QR mixed questions. Read SJT guide and GMC principles overview. 20 SJT questions. |
Sat | Error review | Review all wrong answers from the week across all sections. |
Sun | Rest | No revision. |
WEEKS 2–3: TIMED PRACTICE BEGINS
Daily time: 2.5–3 hours (if you can)
Day | Weekly structure | What to do |
Mon | Timed VR section | Full VR sitting + full review |
Tue | Timed DM section | Full DM sitting + full review |
Wed | Timed QR + SJT | Full QR sitting + full SJT sitting + review |
Thu | Weak section focus | 50 focused questions on your weakest section |
Fri | Mixed timed | 30 questions per section under timing |
Sat | Full mock | First full mock under exam conditions |
Sun | Mock review | Full 90-minute review of every wrong answer |
WEEKS 4–5: TARGETED IMPROVEMENT
Daily time: 3–4 hours. Same structure as weeks 5–6 of the 8-week plan.
Run the same targeted error correction process: identify your two weakest sections, drill your specific error patterns explicitly, complete full mocks every Saturday, and review every Sunday. Complete at least 3 full mocks across weeks 4 and 5.
WEEK 6: EXAM PREPARATION
Daily time: 3–4 hours, tapering to 2 hours in the final days.
Final mock on Monday or Tuesday. Review and consolidation on Wednesday and Thursday. No new full mocks from Thursday onwards. Reduce volume in the final 48 hours. Rest the night before.
The 4-Week UCAT Intensive Study Plan
For students sitting in September or those who have limited time. Start: late July.
This plan is intense. It assumes you can dedicate 4–5 hours per day and that you are starting from a point of zero UCAT experience. If you have already done some preparation and have a baseline score from a mock, you can adapt this plan to focus more time on your weak sections and less on the technique phase.
A realistic expectation: 4 weeks of intensive preparation can get most students to a competitive score, but you will likely be leaving improvement on the table compared to students who prepared for longer. If you have any flexibility on your exam date and can push it to September, even an extra 2 weeks makes a measurable difference.
WEEK 1: CRASH TECHNIQUE
Daily time: 4 hours.
Day | Focus | What to do |
Mon | VR all question types | Read VR guide. 60 untimed questions across all VR question types. Review all wrong answers. |
Tue | DM all question types | Read DM guide. 60 untimed questions across all DM question types. Review. |
Wed | QR all question types | Read QR guide. Learn calculator shortcuts. 50 QR questions. Review. |
Thu | SJT + GMC foundations | Read SJT guide. Read GMC Good Medical Practice. 50 SJT questions. Review. |
Fri | First full mock | Complete first full mock under exam conditions. Record your score per section. |
Sat | Mock review + weak section | 2-hour mock review. Then 60 focused questions on your weakest section. |
Sun | Rest | No revision. |
WEEKS 2–3: INTENSIVE TIMED PRACTICE
Daily time: 4–5 hours.
Day | Structure | What to do |
Mon | Full timed section × 2 | Your two weakest sections. Full review after each. |
Tue | Full timed section × 2 | Your other two sections. Full review. |
Wed | Weak section intensive | 80 focused questions on your lowest-scoring section. Untimed if accuracy is below 70%. |
Thu | Mixed timed practice | 40 questions per section under timing. Track score per section. |
Fri | Full mock | Full mock under exam conditions. |
Sat | Mock review + drilling | 2-hour review. Then 60 questions targeting your most common error pattern from the mock. |
Sun | Rest | No revision. |
Complete at least 4 full mocks across weeks 2 and 3.
WEEK 4: PEAK AND TAPER
Daily time: 3–4 hours, tapering to 2 in the final days.
Day | Focus |
Mon | Final full mock |
Tue | Full review + weak section drilling |
Wed | Timed section sittings (your two weakest sections) |
Thu | Light mixed practice. Review error log. No new question types. |
Fri | Light review only. No timed sittings. |
Sat | Rest or very light review (30 minutes maximum) |
Sun (exam day or day before) | Rest. Prepare logistics. Stop revising. |
Effective Break Strategies During UCAT Revision Sessions
Regular breaks during your UCAT revision sessions are essential to maintain focus and prevent burnout. Using your breaks effectively can help maximise your study time. Use your breaks to stretch, take a walk, or engage in some light exercise to get your blood flowing and improve your focus.
Avoid checking your phone or engaging in other distracting activities during your breaks.
In conclusion, creating and adhering to an effective UCAT revision timetable is crucial for achieving top scores on the test. It aids in comprehensive coverage of all relevant topics and efficient time management. Remember to adapt your timetable based on your needs and goals, and don't hesitate to seek help if needed from our excellent team of tutors.
👉🏼 Read more: UCAT Courses
Section Time Allocation: How to Weight Your Practice
Across all three plans, VR receives the most attention. Here is the rationale:
Section | Average score in UCAT 2025 | Recommended time weighting | Why |
Verbal Reasoning | 602 | 30% | Lowest average score. Technique adjustment takes longest. |
Decision Making | 628 | 30% | Most variable. Syllogisms need explicit practice. |
Quantitative Reasoning | 661 | 25% | Improves quickly once mental arithmetic habits improve. |
Situational Judgement | Band 2 typical | 15% | Most manageable but Band 4 risk cannot be ignored. |
If your diagnostic mock shows a different weakness profile - for example you are significantly below average in QR but above average in VR - adjust these weightings to reflect your actual score distribution. The plans above are built for the average student. Your plan should be built for you.
The Most Important Rule: Review As Much As You Practice (If Not More)
Every plan above builds in review time on Saturdays and Sundays. Students consistently undervalue this and skip it. It is the highest-yield activity in UCAT preparation.
The mechanism is straightforward. Doing questions tells you whether you got something right or wrong. Reviewing tells you why you got it wrong. The why is what changes your score. Students who complete 100 questions and review 80 of them improve faster than students who complete 200 questions and review 20.
When reviewing a wrong answer, ask: was this a technique error (wrong decision rule for this question type), a careless error (misread the question), a time error (rushed and guessed), or a knowledge error (did not understand the passage topic)? Each has a different fix.
Technique errors require drilling the specific question type.
Careless errors require slowing down and using a flag-and-return strategy.
Time errors require pacing practice. Mixing up all of these and treating them all as "wrong answers to do again" produces much slower improvement.
Keep a written error log throughout your preparation. It takes two minutes per wrong answer. By the end of your preparation period, it will be the most useful document you have.
Common UCAT Questions From Our Students About Preparation
Is 8 weeks enough for the UCAT?
Yes - for many students this is the ideal preparation window. Enough time to develop technique properly without burning out. But you must start at a good pace.
Is 6 weeks enough for the UCAT?
Yes, if you are disciplined about the technique phase and do not skip straight to question grinding.
Is 4 weeks enough for the UCAT?
It is achievable, particularly if you are a fast learner or have some prior exposure to the formats. Expect to leave some improvement on the table versus a student who prepared for 8 weeks. If you can push your exam to September, do so.
Is 3 weeks enough for the UCAT?
Possible for students who are starting from a strong baseline or who have unusually fast aptitude for the question formats. Not recommended as a target. Use the 4-week intensive plan and accept you may be slightly undertrained.
Is 2 weeks enough for the UCAT?
We would recommend against this unless your exam date is fixed and unavoidable. Two weeks of preparation can still move your score meaningfully, but significant improvement requires more time than this. In this situation, focus entirely on your weakest section and SJT, use every official mock available, and review every wrong answer without exception.
Key Takeaway: 6–8 weeks is the sweet spot for most students. If you have less time, use it as effectively as possible - but if you can choose your exam date, choose one that gives you at least 6 weeks of structured preparation.
Practice Resources: What to Use and When
The official UCAT practice materials - four full mock exams and a question bank on the official UCAT website - are your most valuable resource and should be treated accordingly. Do not use them in week 1. Save them for weeks 4 onwards so they are available when your skills are developed enough to learn meaningfully from them.
For earlier weeks, use commercial question banks (Medify is the most commonly used and has the largest question volume). These are imperfect simulations, but are sufficient for technique practice. Do not use old UCAT question banks that include Abstract Reasoning - that section was removed in 2025, and practising it wastes preparation time.
Recommended resource order:
Section guides (free, on this site) - weeks 1–2
Commercial question bank (Medify or similar) - weeks 2–6
Official UCAT mock exams - weeks 4–8
Our Free UCAT Skills Trainer - throughout, for section-specific drilling
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should I prepare for the UCAT?
Depending on how relaxed you want to be, many start 4-6 months before the UCAT exam, but at a minimum, 6–8 weeks of structured preparation is the sweet spot for most students. The 8-week plan above is our recommended default. Starting earlier than 8 weeks out is fine if you use the extra time for light technique reading rather than intensive question practice.
How many hours a day should I revise for the UCAT?
1–1.5 hours in the early phase, 2–3 hours in the mid phase, 3–5 hours in the final phase. Reduce slightly in the week before your exam. Total preparation across 6–8 weeks should be 100–150 hours.
How many UCAT questions should I do per day?
30–50 untimed in the early technique phase. 50–80 with timing in the mid phase. Full timed section sittings in the final phase. Quality of review matters more than raw question count.
Is 4 weeks enough for the UCAT?
Yes, though you will likely be leaving some improvement on the table. Use the 4-week intensive plan above, prioritise your weakest section, and review every wrong answer without exception. If your exam date is flexible, push it to September for an extra 4 weeks.
What is the best UCAT revision timetable?
The best timetable is one that starts with technique before moving to timed practice, is weighted towards VR (the hardest section on average), includes full mock sittings from week 4 onwards, and builds in review time after every mock. The 8-week plan above follows all of these principles.
When should I start preparing for the UCAT?
Work backwards from your exam date. For a July exam, start in late April. For an August exam, start in early June. For a September exam, start in late July at the latest. Reading section guides from March or April without intensive practice is beneficial and does not count as your formal preparation start.
How do I know if my revision timetable is working?
Track your score on full mock sittings across your preparation period. If your score is not improving week on week by weeks 5–6, the problem is almost always in your review process - you are not diagnosing your error patterns specifically enough. Switch from doing more questions to reviewing the ones you have done more carefully.
Should I revise for the UCAT during A Levels?
Yes - balancing both is challenging but manageable with a realistic plan. Do not attempt 4+ hours of UCAT revision daily during exam season. 1–1.5 hours per day of focused technique work is sufficient in the early phase and keeps you progressing without compromising your A Level preparation.
⭐️ Check out our other UCAT articles:
👉🏼 UCAT Deciles
👉🏼 UCAT ANZ
👉🏼 UCAT Courses
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