MAT 2-Year Plan
A complete 730-day plan covering 48 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.
- Days
- 730
- Topics
- 48
- Subjects
- 5
- Phases
- 4
How to actually use your 730 days
The long game: build from zero across two cycles, with depth and a sustained mock habit most candidates never reach.
This 2-year plan gives you 730 days to work through 48 weighted MAT topics across 5 subjects — roughly 0.07 new topics a day at 1.5–2.5 hours of focused study. That gentle daily load is the whole advantage of a two-year run — you build mastery slowly enough that it actually sticks.
MAT marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Language-Comprehension, Mathematical-Skills, and Data-Analysis carry the heaviest weightage in recent papers, so this plan front-loads them — so the first year builds genuine mastery of them, not just familiarity. Nothing is cut and nothing is rushed. At this length the differentiator is depth on the hardest, lowest-frequency topics and relentless revision — the work most candidates skip.
Two years is a genuine head start. You can build MAT from zero in year one and convert understanding into rank-grade speed and accuracy in year two — every one of the 48 topics, twice over, with room for the hardest material. The two-year risk is losing momentum in the long flat middle. Set quarterly milestones and treat year-one mocks as checkpoints, or the early lead quietly evaporates.
What to prioritise & cut
Nothing is cut and nothing is rushed. At this length the differentiator is depth on the hardest, lowest-frequency topics and relentless revision — the work most candidates skip.
Mock tests & revision
Year one: topic and sectional tests only, building accuracy. Year two: monthly then fortnightly then weekly full-length mocks, with a disciplined error log you actually revisit.
Weekly rhythm
Think in semesters, not weeks: build, deepen, revise, simulate — repeated across two cycles so every subject is seen many times on a spaced schedule.
Phase-by-phase plan
104 weeks totalA 730-day plan only works when you sequence it. Here is how the 2-Year Plan breaks down — foundation, depth, then mocks.
- 1
Y1 Foundation
24 weeksConcept depth + NCERT-level coverage
Subject-wise masteryTopic notesMonthly tests - 2
Y1 Advanced
28 weeksReference-book level problems + first PYQ pass
Topic-wise problem masteryPYQ pass 1Weak-area journal - 3
Y2 Practice
26 weeksPYQ deep-dive + topic-wise mocks
PYQ pass 2Topic-mock cyclesConcept-gap closure - 4
Y2 Mocks + final
26 weeksWeekly full-length mocks + final revision
20+ mocksLast-mile cheatsheetsExam-mode drills
Week-by-week schedule
| Week | Days | Topics covered |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1–7 | Language-Comprehension: Reading Comprehension Fundamentals (w3) |
| 2 | 8–14 | Mathematical-Skills: Number System & Basics (w3) |
| 3 | 15–21 | Data-Analysis: Tables & Caselets (w3) |
| 4 | 22–28 | Reasoning: Topic 1 (w3) |
| 5 | 29–35 | General Knowledge: Ancient Indian History (w3) |
| 6 | 36–42 | Language-Comprehension: Main Idea & Theme Questions (w3) |
| 7 | 43–49 | Mathematical-Skills: Basic Arithmetic Operations (w3) |
| 8 | 50–56 | Data-Analysis: Data Comparison & Caselets (w3) |
| 9 | 57–63 | Reasoning: Topic 2 (w3) |
| 10 | 64–70 | General Knowledge: Medieval & Modern Indian History (w3) |
| 11 | 71–77 | Language-Comprehension: Inference & Conclusion in RC (w3) |
| 12 | 78–84 | Mathematical-Skills: Time, Speed & Distance (w3) |
| 13 | 85–91 | Data-Analysis: Pie Charts & Circle Diagrams (w3) |
| 14 | 92–98 | Reasoning: Topic 3 (w3) |
| 15 | 99–105 | General Knowledge: Indian Geography & Environment (w3) |
| 16 | 106–112 | Language-Comprehension: Vocabulary in Context (w3) |
| 17 | 113–119 | Mathematical-Skills: Percentages and Profit-Loss (w3) |
| 18 | 120–126 | Data-Analysis: Bar Graphs & Column Charts (w3) |
| 19 | 127–133 | Reasoning: Topic 4 (w3) |
| 20 | 134–140 | General Knowledge: Indian Polity & Constitution (w3) |
| 21 | 141–147 | Language-Comprehension: Para Jumbles (Sentence Rearrangement) (w3) |
| 22 | 148–154 | Mathematical-Skills: Number Systems and Decimals (w3) |
| 23 | 155–161 | Data-Analysis: Line Graphs & Trend Analysis (w3) |
| 24 | 162–168 | Reasoning: Topic 5 (w3) |
| 25 | 169–175 | General Knowledge: Indian Economy & Banking (w3) |
| 26 | 176–182 | Language-Comprehension: Fill in the Blanks (w3) |
| 27 | 183–189 | Mathematical-Skills: Probability & Permutation-Combination (w3) |
| 28 | 190–196 | Data-Analysis: Mixed Graphs & Data Fusion (w3) |
| 29 | 197–203 | Reasoning: Topic 6 (w3) |
| 30 | 204–210 | General Knowledge: General Science & Technology (w3) |
| 31 | 211–217 | Language-Comprehension: Word Usage & Analogies (w3) |
| 32 | 218–224 | Mathematical-Skills: Simple & Compound Interest (w3) |
| 33 | 225–231 | Data-Analysis: Data Sufficiency Problems (w3) |
| 34 | 232–238 | Reasoning: Topic 7 (w3) |
| 35 | 239–245 | General Knowledge: World Geography & Current Affairs (w3) |
| 36 | 246–252 | Language-Comprehension: Critical Reasoning (w3) |
| 37 | 253–259 | Mathematical-Skills: Simple & Compound Interest (w3) |
| 38 | 260–266 | Data-Analysis: Logical Reasoning Caselets (w3) |
| 39 | 267–273 | Reasoning: Topic 8 (w3) |
| 40 | 274–280 | General Knowledge: Sports, Awards & Miscellaneous (w3) |
| 41 | 281–287 | Language-Comprehension: Para Completion & Assertion (w3) |
| 42 | 288–294 | Mathematical-Skills: Ratio, Proportion & Partnership (w3) |
| 43 | 295–301 | Data-Analysis: Venn Diagrams & Set Theory (w3) |
| 44 | 302–308 | Reasoning: Topic 9 (w3) |
| 45 | 309–315 | Language-Comprehension: Summary & Passage Questions (w3) |
| 46 | 316–322 | Mathematical-Skills: HCF, LCM, Average, Age Problems & Chain Rule (w3) |
| 47 | 323–329 | Data-Analysis: Mixed Data Sets & Data Integration (w3) |
| 48 | 330–336 | Reasoning: Topic 10 (w3) |
Subject-wise topic split
Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.
Language-Comprehension
10 topics- Reading Comprehension Fundamentals ●●●○○
- Main Idea & Theme Questions ●●●○○
- Inference & Conclusion in RC ●●●○○
- Vocabulary in Context ●●●○○
- Para Jumbles (Sentence Rearrangement) ●●●○○
- Fill in the Blanks ●●●○○
- Word Usage & Analogies ●●●○○
- Critical Reasoning ●●●○○
- + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →
Mathematical-Skills
10 topics- Number System & Basics ●●●○○
- Basic Arithmetic Operations ●●●○○
- Time, Speed & Distance ●●●○○
- Percentages and Profit-Loss ●●●○○
- Number Systems and Decimals ●●●○○
- Probability & Permutation-Combination ●●●○○
- Simple & Compound Interest ●●●○○
- Simple & Compound Interest ●●●○○
- + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →
Data-Analysis
10 topics- Tables & Caselets ●●●○○
- Data Comparison & Caselets ●●●○○
- Pie Charts & Circle Diagrams ●●●○○
- Bar Graphs & Column Charts ●●●○○
- Line Graphs & Trend Analysis ●●●○○
- Mixed Graphs & Data Fusion ●●●○○
- Data Sufficiency Problems ●●●○○
- Logical Reasoning Caselets ●●●○○
- + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →
Reasoning
10 topics- Topic 1 ●●●○○
Seating Arrangement and Puzzles: Linear, circular, and square seating arrangements with directional facing; complex puzzles involving multiple parameters like age, colour, profession - a high-scope reasoning section in RBI Phase I with moderate to high difficulty.
- Topic 2 ●●●○○
Blood Relations and Direction Sense: Family tree problems, coded blood relations, cardinal directions, shadow-based direction problems, and distance-direction combined questions - direct and scoring if practiced thoroughly.
- Topic 3 ●●●○○
Coding-Decoding: Letter coding, number coding, mixed coding, sentence coding, and new pattern coding - a speed-intensive section testing pattern recognition skills with increasing complexity in recent exams.
- Topic 4 ●●●○○
Syllogism and Logical Arguments: Premise-conclusion relationships, Venn diagrams for syllogism, possibility cases, reverse syllogism, and logical consistency checks - a conceptual section requiring practice of rules.
- Topic 5 ●●●○○
Input-Output and Machine Input: Sequences derived from rearrangement patterns, step-by-step transformation rules, and analyzing output to determine input - tests logical sequencing ability.
- Topic 6 ●●●○○
Data Sufficiency: Problems from various reasoning topics presented as data sufficiency questions - tests ability to evaluate whether given statements are sufficient to answer a question without actually solving it.
- Topic 7 ●●●○○
Inequalities and Comparisons: Direct inequalities, coded inequalities, relationship-based comparisons, and ranking-order problems - straightforward when concepts are clear.
- Topic 8 ●●●○○
Verbal Reasoning: Statement-assumption, statement-argument, statement-course of action, cause and effect, and critical reasoning - tests higher-order reasoning and decision-making ability.
- + 2 more topics on the full roadmap →
General Knowledge
8 topics- Ancient Indian History ●●●○○
Current Affairs - National: Major government policies, schemes (PM-KISAN, Digital India, Make in India), legislative updates, and important national events from the past year - a high-weight area in RAS Prelims General Knowledge.
- Medieval & Modern Indian History ●●●○○
Current Affairs - International: Important summits (G20, BRICS, ASEAN), international organizations, global economic developments, conflicts, treaties, and India foreign policy engagements.
- Indian Geography & Environment ●●●○○
Rajasthan-Specific GK: Districts, capitals, tourist places, folk traditions, famous personalities, sports achievements, and current events specific to Rajasthan - direct and scoring questions in RAS Prelims.
- Indian Polity & Constitution ●●●○○
Awards and Honors: Major national awards (Padma, Bharat Ratna), international awards (Nobel, Oscar, Grammy), sports awards (Arjuna, Khel Ratna), and recognition for Rajasthan achievers.
- Indian Economy & Banking ●●●○○
Science and Technology: Government S&T missions, space program (ISRO), IT and cybersecurity developments, defence achievements, recent inventions, and science awards - increasing weight in GK section.
- General Science & Technology ●●●○○
Sports GK: Major sporting events, Indian and global athletes, cricket world events, Olympics, Asian Games, Commonwealth Games results, and sports-related awards and records.
- World Geography & Current Affairs ●●●○○
Important Days and Themes: International and national days of significance (Environment, Health, Education), their themes, and why they matter in the context of government schemes and policies.
- Sports, Awards & Miscellaneous ●●●○○
Books and Authors: Important books by Indian and world authors, literary awards (Jnanpith, Booker), Rajasthani literature and authors - a minor but distinctive area in GK.
Why a 730-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book
| Dimension | Typical MAT book | This 2-Year Plan |
|---|---|---|
| Time to start | Hours of reading before any study starts | Seconds — plan is already here |
| Personalisation | One-size-fits-all | Fits exactly your 730 days |
| Freshness | Printed months ago | Updated for the 2026 cycle · verified 2026-05-30 |
| 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 MAT plans
MAT 2-Year Plan — common questions
Is 730 days enough to prepare for MAT? +
Two years is a genuine head start. You can build MAT from zero in year one and convert understanding into rank-grade speed and accuracy in year two — every one of the 48 topics, twice over, with room for the hardest material. The honest answer depends on your starting point, but this 2-year plan is built to get the most from the time you have: the long game: build from zero across two cycles, with depth and a sustained mock habit most candidates never reach.
How many hours a day does this MAT 2-year plan need? +
Plan for 1.5–2.5 hours of focused study, covering about 0.07 new topics a day. Think in semesters, not weeks: build, deepen, revise, simulate — repeated across two cycles so every subject is seen many times on a spaced schedule.
What should I skip if I am short on time? +
Nothing is cut and nothing is rushed. At this length the differentiator is depth on the hardest, lowest-frequency topics and relentless revision — the work most candidates skip.
When should I start mock tests on this plan? +
Year one: topic and sectional tests only, building accuracy. Year two: monthly then fortnightly then weekly full-length mocks, with a disciplined error log you actually revisit.
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.
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