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Updated 2026-04-02 · 2026 Edition

LAT (Law Admission Test) Study Plan 2026

Free, ready-made LAT (Law Admission Test) roadmaps for whatever time you have left — from a last-week sprint to a full-year foundation build. Each one covers 60 weighted topics across 5 subjects, prioritised by weight, with a day-by-day schedule. No signup, no fees.

Choose your LAT (Law Admission Test) timeline

Each plan is built differently — not just a shorter version of the same thing. Pick the one that matches the days you have before LAT (Law Admission Test).

What every LAT (Law Admission Test) plan covers

All 60 topics across these 5 subjects, ordered by weightage so the highest-yield material comes first. Legal Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning, and English carry the most marks.

Legal ReasoningAnalytical ReasoningEnglishCurrent AffairsGeneral Knowledge

All LAT (Law Admission Test) durations

Shorter than two weeks? Those are crash/revision tools — use them, but the indexed plans above are the ones built for a full preparation.

LAT (Law Admission Test) study plan — FAQs

How long do I need to prepare for LAT (Law Admission Test)? +

It depends on your starting point and target score. LAT (Law Admission Test) has 60 weighted topics across 5 subjects, so most candidates use a 3-to-6-month plan for a first serious attempt and a 1-year-plus plan to build from scratch. Shorter LAT (Law Admission Test) plans (2 weeks to 2 months) work for revision or a focused retake. Pick the timeline that matches the days you actually have.

Which subjects carry the most weight in LAT (Law Admission Test)? +

Across recent LAT (Law Admission Test) papers, Legal Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning, and English carry the heaviest weightage, so every plan here front-loads them. The full breakdown — all 5 subjects with per-topic weight — is shown on each duration's page.

Are these LAT (Law Admission Test) study plans really free? +

Yes. Every LAT (Law Admission Test) plan on StudyRoadmap is free with no signup and no paywall — the full day-by-day schedule, subject split, and weightage are all open on the page. You can also generate a personalised plan that adapts to topics you mark done.

How are these LAT (Law Admission Test) plans built? +

Topics are ordered by weightage derived from recent LAT (Law Admission Test) papers, then distributed across your chosen timeline so the highest-yield material is covered first. Plans were last reviewed 2026-04-02 for the 2026 cycle.

Want a plan that adapts as you study?

Generate a personalised LAT (Law Admission Test) roadmap that tracks completion and reprioritises weak topics as you mark them done.

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