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Updated 2026-04-06 · 2026 Edition

GMAT 6-Month Plan

A complete 180-day plan covering 33 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.

Days
180
Topics
33
Subjects
3
Phases
3
Full foundation a concept-first pass, a depth pass, a revision pass, and a structured mock series

How to actually use your 180 days

Build real understanding, then layer depth, two revision passes, and a structured mock series.

Daily study
2.5–3.5 hours
New topics / day
≈ 0.18
Approach
a concept-first pass, a depth pass, a revision pass, and a structured mock series

This 6-month plan gives you 180 days to work through 33 weighted GMAT topics across 3 subjects — roughly 0.18 new topics a day at 2.5–3.5 hours of focused study. That moderate daily load is the point of starting this early — you trade intensity for retention.

GMAT marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Mathematics, English, and Gk carry the heaviest weightage in recent papers, so this plan front-loads them — so they become the conceptual backbone the rest of the syllabus hangs off. Cover everything, and give weight 3–5 topics a second problem-solving pass. Low-weight topics get one solid pass — at this length they are worth keeping, not cutting.

Around 6 months lets you do far more than cover GMAT — you can understand it: a concept pass, a problem-solving pass, then spaced revision across all 33 topics. A multi-month plan fails by drifting in the early, low-pressure weeks. Anchor each month to a concrete checkpoint so the slack does not become a late scramble.

What to prioritise & cut

Cover everything, and give weight 3–5 topics a second problem-solving pass. Low-weight topics get one solid pass — at this length they are worth keeping, not cutting.

Mock tests & revision

Topic and sectional tests through the build phase; full-length mocks every other week from the midpoint, weekly in the final two months. Maintain an error log from the start.

Weekly rhythm

Three arcs: a concept-building phase, a depth-and-problems phase, and a revision-plus-mocks phase. Each subject gets at least two spaced passes.

Phase-by-phase plan

24 weeks total

A 180-day plan only works when you sequence it. Here is how the 6-Month Plan breaks down — foundation, depth, then mocks.

  1. 1

    Foundation

    8 weeks

    Build concept depth across full syllabus

    Topic-wise notes
    Concept tests
    Recap docs
  2. 2

    Advanced + PYQs

    10 weeks

    PYQs of last 7-10 years; advanced problems

    Year-wise PYQ solving
    Topic-wise problem mastery
    Concept gap-fix list
  3. 3

    Mocks + final revision

    6 weeks

    Weekly full-length mocks; targeted revision

    10+ full mocks
    Weak-topic eradication
    Last-mile drill

Week-by-week schedule

Week Days Topics covered
1 1–7 English: Topic 1 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 1 (w3)
2 8–14 Gk: Ghana Geography and Physical Features (w3)English: Topic 2 (w3)
3 15–21 Mathematics: Topic 2 (w3)Gk: Ghana History and Independence Movement (w3)
4 22–28 English: Topic 3 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 3 (w3)
5 29–35 Gk: Ghana Political System and Governance (w3)English: Topic 4 (w3)
6 36–42 Mathematics: Topic 4 (w3)Gk: Ghana Economy and Trade (w3)
7 43–49 English: Topic 5 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 5 (w3)
8 50–56 Gk: Ghana Cultural Heritage and Traditions (w3)English: Topic 6 (w3)
9 57–63 Mathematics: Topic 6 (w3)Gk: Ghana's Cities, Districts and Population (w3)
10 64–70 English: Topic 7 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 7 (w3)
11 71–77 Gk: Ghana's International Relations and Regional Organizations (w3)English: Topic 8 (w3)
12 78–84 Mathematics: Topic 8 (w3)Gk: Ghana Current Affairs and Recent Developments (w3)
13 85–91 English: Topic 9 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 9 (w3)
14 92–98 English: Topic 10 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 10 (w3)
15 99–105 Mathematics: Topic 11 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 12 (w3)
16 106–112 Mathematics: Topic 13 (w3)Mathematics: Topic 14 (w3)
17 113–119 Mathematics: Topic 15 (w3)

Subject-wise topic split

Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.

English

10 topics
  • Topic 1 ●●●○○
  • Topic 2 ●●●○○
  • Topic 3 ●●●○○
  • Topic 4 ●●●○○
  • Topic 5 ●●●○○
  • Topic 6 ●●●○○
  • Topic 7 ●●●○○
  • Topic 8 ●●●○○
  • + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →

Mathematics

15 topics
  • Topic 1 ●●●○○
  • Topic 2 ●●●○○
  • Topic 3 ●●●○○
  • Topic 4 ●●●○○
  • Topic 5 ●●●○○
  • Topic 6 ●●●○○
  • Topic 7 ●●●○○
  • Topic 8 ●●●○○
  • + 7 more topics on the full roadmap →

Gk

8 topics
  • Ghana Geography and Physical Features ●●●○○
  • Ghana History and Independence Movement ●●●○○
  • Ghana Political System and Governance ●●●○○
  • Ghana Economy and Trade ●●●○○
  • Ghana Cultural Heritage and Traditions ●●●○○
  • Ghana's Cities, Districts and Population ●●●○○
  • Ghana's International Relations and Regional Organizations ●●●○○
  • Ghana Current Affairs and Recent Developments ●●●○○

Why a 180-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book

DimensionTypical GMAT bookThis 6-Month Plan
Time to startHours of reading before any study startsSeconds — plan is already here
PersonalisationOne-size-fits-allFits exactly your 180 days
FreshnessPrinted months agoUpdated for the 2026 cycle · verified 2026-04-06
Weightage signalAuthor guessDerived from last 5 years' papers
Cost₹500–2,500₹0
Sign-up requiredOften (with a trial trap)None

Other GMAT plans

GMAT 6-Month Plan — common questions

Is 180 days enough to prepare for GMAT? +

Around 6 months lets you do far more than cover GMAT — you can understand it: a concept pass, a problem-solving pass, then spaced revision across all 33 topics. The honest answer depends on your starting point, but this 6-month plan is built to get the most from the time you have: build real understanding, then layer depth, two revision passes, and a structured mock series.

How many hours a day does this GMAT 6-month plan need? +

Plan for 2.5–3.5 hours of focused study, covering about 0.18 new topics a day. Three arcs: a concept-building phase, a depth-and-problems phase, and a revision-plus-mocks phase. Each subject gets at least two spaced passes.

What should I skip if I am short on time? +

Cover everything, and give weight 3–5 topics a second problem-solving pass. Low-weight topics get one solid pass — at this length they are worth keeping, not cutting.

When should I start mock tests on this plan? +

Topic and sectional tests through the build phase; full-length mocks every other week from the midpoint, weekly in the final two months. Maintain an error log from the start.

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 →