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Updated 2026-05-30 · 2026 Edition

Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) 2-Year Plan

A complete 730-day plan covering 11 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.

Days
730
Topics
11
Subjects
2
Phases
4
Two-year deep build a foundations year, a mastery-and-depth year, and a sustained mock campaign across both

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.

Daily study
1.5–2.5 hours
New topics / day
≈ 0.02
Approach
a foundations year, a mastery-and-depth year, and a sustained mock campaign across both

This 2-year plan gives you 730 days to work through 11 weighted Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) topics across 2 subjects — roughly 0.02 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.

Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Mathematics and Arabic 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 Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) from zero in year one and convert understanding into rank-grade speed and accuracy in year two — every one of the 11 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 total

A 730-day plan only works when you sequence it. Here is how the 2-Year Plan breaks down — foundation, depth, then mocks.

  1. 1

    Y1 Foundation

    24 weeks

    Concept depth + NCERT-level coverage

    Subject-wise mastery
    Topic notes
    Monthly tests
  2. 2

    Y1 Advanced

    28 weeks

    Reference-book level problems + first PYQ pass

    Topic-wise problem mastery
    PYQ pass 1
    Weak-area journal
  3. 3

    Y2 Practice

    26 weeks

    PYQ deep-dive + topic-wise mocks

    PYQ pass 2
    Topic-mock cycles
    Concept-gap closure
  4. 4

    Y2 Mocks + final

    26 weeks

    Weekly full-length mocks + final revision

    20+ mocks
    Last-mile cheatsheets
    Exam-mode drills

Week-by-week schedule

Week Days Topics covered
1 1–7 Arabic: Arabic Grammar (النحو) (w5)
2 8–14 Mathematics: Algebra and Equations (w5)
3 15–21 Arabic: Arabic Morphology (الصرف) (w4)
4 22–28 Mathematics: Functions and Graphs (w4)
5 29–35 Arabic: Vocabulary and Language Usage (w4)
6 36–42 Mathematics: Geometry and Measurement (w4)
7 43–49 Arabic: Text Comprehension and Reading (w4)
8 50–56 Mathematics: Arithmetic and Number Sense (w4)
9 57–63 Arabic: Rhetoric and Literary Analysis (البلاغة) (w3)
10 64–70 Mathematics: Trigonometry (w3)
11 71–77 Mathematics: Probability and Statistics (w3)

Subject-wise topic split

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

Arabic

5 topics
  • Arabic Grammar (النحو) ●●●●●

    Nahw (Arabic syntax) — sentence structure, case endings (إعراب), noun patterns, verb conjugation, and grammatical analysis. Core Qiya test component for Saudi university admission.

  • Arabic Morphology (الصرف) ●●●●○

    Sarf rules — word formation, root patterns (أوزان), derived nouns and verbs, conjugation patterns, and morphological analysis of Arabic words.

  • Vocabulary and Language Usage ●●●●○

    Classical and modern Arabic vocabulary, synonyms and antonyms, contextual word usage, idiomatic expressions, and lexical analysis in literary and religious texts.

  • Text Comprehension and Reading ●●●●○

    Reading comprehension passages from classical Arabic literature, Quranic excerpts, and modern texts. Inference, main idea, and vocabulary-in-context questions.

  • Rhetoric and Literary Analysis (البلاغة) ●●●○○

    Metaphor, simile, metonymy, hyperbole, and other rhetorical devices. Analysis of Quranic, prophetic, and classical literary texts — important for Qiya overall score.

Mathematics

6 topics
  • Algebra and Equations ●●●●●

    Linear and quadratic equations, inequalities, polynomials, rational expressions, logarithms, and exponential functions — core quantitative section for Saudi university admission tests.

  • Functions and Graphs ●●●●○

    Domain and range, composite functions, inverse functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, and graphical analysis of different function types.

  • Geometry and Measurement ●●●●○

    Plane geometry (triangles, circles, quadrilaterals), solid geometry, area, perimeter, volume, and properties of geometric shapes.

  • Arithmetic and Number Sense ●●●●○

    Fractions, decimals, ratios, proportions, percentages, and basic number theory (divisibility, primes). Fast and accurate arithmetic is essential for Qiyas quantitative section.

  • Trigonometry ●●●○○

    Trigonometric ratios, identities, equations, and applications of trigonometry in geometry and physics — frequently tested in the quantitative section of Qiyas.

  • Probability and Statistics ●●●○○

    Basic probability, counting principles, permutations and combinations, mean, median, mode, and standard deviation — common in Qiyas quantitative section.

Why a 730-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book

DimensionTypical Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) bookThis 2-Year Plan
Time to startHours of reading before any study startsSeconds — plan is already here
PersonalisationOne-size-fits-allFits exactly your 730 days
FreshnessPrinted months agoUpdated for the 2026 cycle · verified 2026-05-30
Weightage signalAuthor guessDerived from last 5 years' papers
Cost₹500–2,500₹0
Sign-up requiredOften (with a trial trap)None

Other Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) plans

Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) 2-Year Plan — common questions

Is 730 days enough to prepare for Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT)? +

Two years is a genuine head start. You can build Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) from zero in year one and convert understanding into rank-grade speed and accuracy in year two — every one of the 11 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 Saudi General Aptitude Test (SGPAT) 2-year plan need? +

Plan for 1.5–2.5 hours of focused study, covering about 0.02 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.

Generate Personalised Plan →