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Updated 2026-04-06 · 2026 Edition

NMAT (Philippines) 5-Day Block

A complete 5-day plan covering 7 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.

Days
5
Topics
7
Subjects
1
Cost
Free
Last-mile sprint one rapid pass over high-weight topics, with a short review of the weakest

How to actually use your 5 days

One fast, weight-prioritised pass over what actually appears on the paper.

Daily study
6–8 hours
New topics / day
≈ 1.4
Approach
one rapid pass over high-weight topics, with a short review of the weakest

This 5-day block gives you 5 days to work through 7 weighted NMAT (Philippines) topics across 1 subject — roughly 1.4 new topics a day at 6–8 hours of focused study. That pace is brisk but survivable if you protect your highest-weight subjects first.

NMAT (Philippines) marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Verbal carry the heaviest weightage in recent papers, so this plan front-loads them — so they get your first and best hours, before fatigue sets in. Cover NMAT (Philippines)'s weight 4–5 topics properly, starting with Verbal. Touch weight-3 topics only if you finish early; skip weight 1–2 entirely.

5 days is enough for one disciplined pass over the high-weight portion of NMAT (Philippines), not the full 7-topic syllabus. The trap is starting too slow. Begin with the heaviest subjects on day one — you do not have a buffer week.

What to prioritise & cut

Cover NMAT (Philippines)'s weight 4–5 topics properly, starting with Verbal. Touch weight-3 topics only if you finish early; skip weight 1–2 entirely.

Mock tests & revision

Sit two or three timed previous-year NMAT (Philippines) papers in the second half and review every wrong answer the same day.

Weekly rhythm

Front-load new NMAT (Philippines) learning into the first 60% of days; reserve the last 40% for previous-year papers and error review.

Subject-wise topic split

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

Verbal

7 topics
  • Parts of Speech and Sentence Structure ●●●○○
  • Tenses and Their Usage ●●●○○
  • Subject-Verb Agreement ●●●○○
  • Reading Comprehension Strategies ●●●○○
  • Vocabulary Building ●●●○○
  • Analogies ●●●○○
  • Sentence Correction ●●●○○

Why a 5-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book

DimensionTypical NMAT (Philippines) bookThis 5-Day Block
Time to startHours of reading before any study startsSeconds — plan is already here
PersonalisationOne-size-fits-allFits exactly your 5 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 NMAT (Philippines) plans

NMAT (Philippines) 5-Day Block — common questions

Is 5 days enough to prepare for NMAT (Philippines)? +

5 days is enough for one disciplined pass over the high-weight portion of NMAT (Philippines), not the full 7-topic syllabus. The honest answer depends on your starting point, but this 5-day block is built to get the most from the time you have: one fast, weight-prioritised pass over what actually appears on the paper.

How many hours a day does this NMAT (Philippines) 5-day block need? +

Plan for 6–8 hours of focused study, covering about 1.4 new topics a day. Front-load new NMAT (Philippines) learning into the first 60% of days; reserve the last 40% for previous-year papers and error review.

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

Cover NMAT (Philippines)'s weight 4–5 topics properly, starting with Verbal. Touch weight-3 topics only if you finish early; skip weight 1–2 entirely.

When should I start mock tests on this plan? +

Sit two or three timed previous-year NMAT (Philippines) papers in the second half and review every wrong answer the same day.

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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