CAT 12-Hour Crash
A complete 1-day plan covering 14 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.
- Days
- 1
- Topics
- 14
- Subjects
- 3
- Cost
- Free
How to actually use your 1 day
Maximise marks per hour — there is no time for anything but the highest-yield topics.
This 12-hour crash gives you 1 day to work through 14 weighted CAT topics across 3 subjects — roughly 14.0 new topics a day at every available hour of focused study. That is not a study plan in the normal sense — it is damage control, and done right it can still move your score.
CAT marks are not spread evenly across subjects. DILR, VARC, and QA carry the heaviest weightage in recent papers, so this plan front-loads them — with only the heaviest topics in scope, everything else is deliberately out of frame. Study weight-5 topics only. Everything weight-4 and below is noise at this range — skip it without guilt.
In 1 day you cannot cover 14 topics, so this plan does not try. It targets only the handful that historically carry the most marks. The failure mode here is spreading thin. Pick the top topics and go deep enough to actually score, rather than skimming everything.
What to prioritise & cut
Study weight-5 topics only. Everything weight-4 and below is noise at this range — skip it without guilt.
Mock tests & revision
No full mocks. Spend every minute on previous-year questions for your highest-weight topics and memorise their solution patterns.
Weekly rhythm
There is no week — work in 90-minute focused blocks with short breaks, prioritising recall over re-reading.
Subject-wise topic split
Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.
VARC
5 topics- Reading Comprehension ●●●●●
Comprehending and answering questions from passages on diverse topics including humanities, business, science, and social issues.
- Critical Reasoning ●●●●●
Evaluating arguments, identifying assumptions, conclusions, and logical flaws in reasoning-based questions.
- Verbal Ability ●●●●○
Contextual usage of words, fill-in-the-blank, and sentence completion based on logical and semantic coherence.
- Summary ●●●●○
Identifying the main idea and picking the most accurate summary from multiple options for a given passage.
- Para Jumbles ●●●●○
Rearranging jumbled sentences to form a coherent paragraph by identifying logical flow and connectors.
DILR
5 topics- Data Interpretation Tables ●●●●●
Extracting and computing values from structured tabular data including schedules, registers, and statistical tables.
- Logical Reasoning Arrangements ●●●●●
Linear and circular seating arrangements, sequencing, and ranking puzzles with multiple conditional constraints.
- Logical Reasoning Puzzles ●●●●●
Complex puzzles involving tournaments, team selections, floor arrangements, and binary logic conditions.
- Data Interpretation Charts ●●●●○
Reading and interpreting pie charts, bar charts, and mixed chart types to answer calculation-based questions.
- Data Interpretation Graphs ●●●●○
Analysing line graphs, radar graphs, and other graph formats for trends and comparative values.
QA
4 topics- Percentages ●●●●●
Percentage conversions, successive percentage changes, and applications in profit-loss, SI-CI, and ratio problems.
- Profit-Loss ●●●●●
CP-SP relationships, discount and marked price, and gain/loss percentage calculations in business scenarios.
- Time-Work ●●●●●
Work equivalence, efficiency-based problems, pipes and cisterns, and work-sharing in partnerships.
- Time-Distance ●●●●●
Speed-time-distance relationships, average speed, relative speed, train problems, and boats in streams.
Why a 1-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book
| Dimension | Typical CAT book | This 12-Hour Crash |
|---|---|---|
| Time to start | Hours of reading before any study starts | Seconds — plan is already here |
| Personalisation | One-size-fits-all | Fits exactly your 1 days |
| Freshness | Printed months ago | Updated for the 2026 cycle · verified 2026-04-06 |
| Weightage signal | Author guess | Derived from last 5 years' papers |
| Cost | ₹500–2,500 | ₹0 |
| Sign-up required | Often (with a trial trap) | None |
Other CAT plans
CAT 12-Hour Crash — common questions
Is 1 day enough to prepare for CAT? +
In 1 day you cannot cover 14 topics, so this plan does not try. It targets only the handful that historically carry the most marks. The honest answer depends on your starting point, but this 12-hour crash is built to get the most from the time you have: maximise marks per hour — there is no time for anything but the highest-yield topics.
How many hours a day does this CAT 12-hour crash need? +
Plan for every available hour of focused study, covering about 14.0 new topics a day. There is no week — work in 90-minute focused blocks with short breaks, prioritising recall over re-reading.
What should I skip if I am short on time? +
Study weight-5 topics only. Everything weight-4 and below is noise at this range — skip it without guilt.
When should I start mock tests on this plan? +
No full mocks. Spend every minute on previous-year questions for your highest-weight topics and memorise their solution patterns.
Already know the pattern? Generate a topic-by-topic plan.
The full personalised roadmap covers weak topics first, tracks completion, and adapts as you mark topics done.
Generate Personalised Plan →