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How to prepare for CAT in 1 year: Complete 54 Weeks Study Plan for Beginners

Author : Lalita Vishwakarma

February 10, 2026

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Quick Answer: To understand how to prepare for CAT exam in 1 year, you need a clear strategy, strong basics, regular practice, and consistent mock analysis. Following a 54-week expert-curated study plan helps you stay on track, cover the full syllabus smartly, and significantly improve your chances of scoring 99%ile.

Key Takeaways

  • CAT 2026 Year-long preparation helps build and consolidate concepts gradually for VARC, DILR, QA.
  • Structured planning (from foundations to mocks) and a good grasp of the CAT syllabus ensure paced learning and progress tracking.
  • CAT Section-wise strategies improve strengths and minimise weaknesses in VARC, QA, and DILR.
  • Mock tests and analyses are vital to mastering exam-time management.
  • Revision focuses on retention of key concepts and boosts confidence before the exam

What is the CAT exam and why is one year enough to prepare?

Answer: The CAT (Common Admission Test) is a competitive MBA entrance exam. One year gives aspirants ample time to build concepts, practice rigorously, and improve time management.

Details:
Preparing for the CAT in a year allows you to break down the extensive syllabus into manageable phases, from building foundational knowledge to intensive mock practice. 

With consistent effort over 12 months, aspirants can cover all key sections VARC, QA, and DILR thoroughly and refine exam strategies without last-minute stress.

Also read: CAT Exam Eligibility 2026

How to prepare for CAT in 1 year?

Answer: Begin by understanding the complete exam pattern and syllabus. Building a strong foundation in basics early boosts confidence and reduces learning gaps.

Details: Understanding the CAT Exam Pattern 2026

You must understand the basic exam pattern to pass the CAT entrance exam. The CAT exam is divided into three parts.

CAT Exam Sections Total No. of Questions MCQs TITA Questions Marks Duration
Verbal Ability and Reading Comprehension (VARC) 24 21 3 72 40 min
Data Interpretation and Logical Reasoning (DI & LR) 20 14 6 60 40 min
Quantitative Ability (QA) 22 14 8 66 40 min
Total 66 49 17 198 120 (2 hours)

Check | How to VARC for CAT Exam?

What is a suitable 54-week study plan for preparing for the CAT exam in 1 year?

Answer: A structured 54 weeks plan usually includes foundation building, advanced learning, targeted problem solving, and revision phases. Planned preparation keeps progress consistent.

Phase 1 – Getting Started & Daily Study Habit (Weeks 1–4)

Week

VARC (Verbal Ability & RC)

DILR (Data Interpretation & LR)

Quantitative Aptitude

Week 1

• Read 1 editorial / long article daily

• Write a 3–4 line summary in your own words

• Note 5–7 new words each day with meaning & usage

• 3 easy LR puzzles (arrangements, ranking, direction)

• 2 simple DI sets (tables/bar graphs)

• Practice Sudoku Daily

• Revise basic arithmetic: integers, fractions, decimals

• Practice 10-15 Ques/Day (Easy)

• Make notes for every topic

Week 2

• Practice 1 Editorial daily + make summary

• Start 1 short RC passage every alternate day

• 10 parajumble / odd sentence questions over the week

• 3 LR sets (seating, grouping)

• 2 DI sets using percentage/ratio data (Easy Level)

• Practice Sudoku Daily

• Percentages basics: % to fraction, increase/decrease

• Practice 10-20 questions/day

• End the week with a 15-question mini quiz on basics

Week 3

• Practice 1 Editorial daily + make summary

• 1 RC passage (easy) every other day

• 10–15 parajumble questions

• Maintain a small notebook of common RC mistakes

• 4 mixed sets (2 DI + 2 LR)

• Try one timed block: 2 sets in 35–40 minutes

• Note where you spent unnecessary time

• Practice Sudoku Daily

• Ratios & Proportions, Averages

• 50–60 questions spread across the week

• Revisit 10 earlier questions you got wrong

Week 4

• Practice 1 Editorial daily + make summary 

2 RC sets this week under a timer (10–12 min each)

• 15 questions of para summary / main idea

• Re-solve 1 previous RC and compare the improvement

• 4 sets total – some from earlier topics

• Try at least 1 “slightly uncomfortable” puzzle

• Write down a standard approach for arrangements

• Profit & Loss, Discount basics

• 50–60 questions

• Weekend: 25-question mixed Arithmetic drill (Percentages + Ratios + Averages + P&L)

Read more: CAT Previous Year Question Papers 

Phase 2 – Covering Basics Topic-Wise (Weeks 5–16)

Week

VARC

DILR

Quant

Week 5

• Practice 1 Editorial daily + make summary

• 2 RC sets (economy/business themes)

• 10 inference questions

• Keep tracking question types you often miss

• 4 LR sets: distribution, selection, team formation

• 1 DI set with slightly heavier calculations

• Try to draw tables/diagrams neatly

• Simple & Compound Interest basics

• 50–60 questions

• Revise Percentages + Ratios once this week

Week 6

• Practice 2 Editorial daily + make summary

• 3 RC sets from science/tech topics

• 10 para summary questions

• Start noticing author’s tone (positive/negative/neutral)

• 4 DI sets: tables + bar/line graphs

• 1 LR set from older mocks/PYQs (easy level)

• After each set, write “what I should have spotted early”

• Time, Speed & Distance (including relative speed)

• 50–60 questions

• 10 examples on trains/boats type questions

Week 7

• Daily 30–40 min reading (magazines/blogs/books)

• 2 RC sets + 10 VA questions (mix types)

• Maintain list of confusing option patterns

• 3 LR sets (family tree, puzzles)

• 2 DI sets from caselets (paragraph DI)

• Do at least 1 timed 2-set block (35–40 min)

• Time & Work, Pipes & Cisterns

• 50–60 questions

• Weekend: 20-question test combining TSD + T&W

Week 8

• 3 RC sets, moderate difficulty

• 10 questions on “title / central idea”

• Re-attempt 1 older RC without seeing answers

• 4 mixed sets (2 DI + 2 LR), moderate level

• Try to finish each set under 20–22 minutes

• Mark sets that felt “comfortable”

• Percentages + Ratios revision (faster now)

• Introduction to Mixtures & Alligations

• 50–60 questions total

Week 9

• 3 RC sets from humanities / philosophy topics

• 10–15 parajumble questions

• Note 5–7 new words from each RC

• 4 LR sets with multi-condition constraints

• 1 DI set focusing on approximation skills

• Re-solve 1 tough puzzle slowly

• Algebra – linear equations, basic inequalities

• 50–60 questions

• 10 conceptual examples in your notes

Week 10

• 3 RC sets, focus on dense language

• 10 para summary questions

• Try one 30-min mini-section (2 RCs + 5 VA)

• 3 DI sets on percentage change, growth rates

• 2 LR sets: seating + selection

• After each set, rate difficulty (Easy/Med/Hard)

• Algebra – quadratic equations & roots

• 50–60 questions

• Weekend: 20-question test on Algebra 1

Week 11

• 2 RC sets + 15 mixed VA questions

• Re-solve 1 week-5/6 RC to check progress

• Update your “common errors” list

• 4 sets: 2 DI + 2 LR mixed

• Try 1 two-set block in 30 minutes

• Write one learning per set

• Number Systems – factors, multiples, HCF/LCM

• 50–60 questions

• Quick revision of Arithmetic formulas

Week 12

• 3 RC sets, varied topics

• 10 questions each of parajumble and odd sentence

• 1 40-min VARC drill (2 RCs + 10 VA)

• 4 sets, including at least 1 Venn-diagram style set

• Redo 1 earlier set that you found confusing

• Track your accuracy (%) this week

• Number Systems – divisibility, remainders, last digits

• 50–60 questions

• 15 PYQ-style questions mixed in

Week 13

• 3 RC sets with timer (12–14 min each)

• 10 inference / assumption questions

• Analyse every wrong option’s logic

• 4 DI sets (tables + graphs)

• 1 LR set from games/tournaments

• Try to improve your initial “data scan” speed

• Geometry – lines, angles, triangles, quadrilaterals

• 50–60 questions

• Draw accurate figures to understand concepts

Week 14

• 3 RC sets at moderate difficulty

• 10 VA questions focusing on para summary

• Re-attempt an old VA practice set

• 4 LR sets: arrangements, distribution, ranking

• At least 1 set solved twice (second time faster)

• Note typical starting point for each puzzle type

• Geometry – circles & polygons

• Intro to coordinate geometry (distance, midpoint)

• 50–60 questions

Week 15

• 3 RC sets from newspapers/magazines

• 10 questions on tone & attitude

• Maintain “favourite RC themes” list

• 3 DI sets using multiple graphs

• 2 LR sets with nested conditions

• Practise rough work neatly for DILR

• Mensuration – 2D area/perimeter; intro to 3D

• 50–60 questions

• Weekend: 25-question Geo + Mensuration drill

Week 16

• First full VARC sectional (40 min) this cycle

• Deep analysis: question choice, time spent, accuracy

• Note 3 improvement points

• 3–4 mixed DILR sets as a mini-section (50–60 min)

• Decide which types you find quickest

• Plan to prioritise those in later mocks

• Mixed test: Arithmetic + Algebra + Geometry

• 35–40 questions in 60 minutes

• Identify your 3 weakest chapters for the next phase

Phase 3 – Strengthening Concepts & Introducing Mocks (Weeks 17–28)

Week

VARC

DILR

Quant

Week 17

• 3–4 RC sets, at least 2 timed

• 10–15 VA questions of your weakest type

• Re-read explanations of 1 old sectional

• 4 mixed sets, moderate level

• Aim for 2 sets with 90%+ accuracy

• Keep a list of “must attempt” set patterns

• Focused revision of Arithmetic (all topics)

• 70–80 questions

• Re-solve 15–20 past wrong questions

Week 18

• 3 RC sets from tough topics (philosophy, art)

• 10 para summary / inference questions

• Track accuracy per RC

• 4 LR-heavy sets (puzzles, grids, games)

• Re-do 1 puzzle without timer to understand structure

• Start habit of underlining key conditions

• Algebra revision: linear, quadratic, inequalities

• 60–70 questions

• 15 moderate-level questions from PYQs

Week 19

• 3 RC sets mixing new and old ones

• 10 VA questions (random mix)

• Compare your speed with Week 10

• 4 DI sets using ratio/percentage calculations

• 1 LR set from previous sectional/mocks

• Write down tricks to simplify calculations

• Geometry + Mensuration revision

• 60–70 questions

• One 25-question mini-test (45 min)

Week 20

1 full VARC sectional (40 min)

• 2 extra RC sets during the week

• Analyse which RCs you should have skipped

• 4 mixed DILR sets

• 1 two-set timed block (35 min)

• Start thinking about set selection strategy

• Modern Maths intro – Permutation & Combination basics

• 40–50 questions

• Do simple counting problems first

Week 21

• 3 RC sets (focus on precision, not attempts)

• 10 VA questions focusing on parajumble

• Maintain accuracy log

• 4 sets including at least 2 DI caselets

• Time yourself and write finishing time for each set

• Note which sets gave maximum ROI

• Probability basics, simple events

• 40–50 questions

• One 20-question test on P&C + Probability

Week 22

• 1 VARC sectional + detailed review

• 2 RC sets from themes you fear the most

• Re-write at least 3 wrong explanations

• 4–5 mixed sets at moderate level

• Try to keep accuracy ≥ 80% overall

• Shortlist your “comfort” set types

• Mixed QA revision (Arithmetic + Algebra + Geometry)

• 70–80 questions

• Categorise mistakes: concept / calculation / haste

Week 23

• Experiment with attempt order (VA first vs RC first)

• 3 RC sets

• Note which order feels more natural

• 5 sets (3 LR, 2 DI), time-bound

• At least 2 sets chosen from earlier weak areas

• Record which sets you’d skip in a real exam

• Sequence & Series / Progressions basics

• 50–60 questions

• 10 questions revisiting Number Systems

Week 24

• 1 VARC sectional (40 min) + analysis

• 1 extra RC set later in week

• Focus on reducing silly errors

First full DILR sectional (60 min)

• Post-test: label sets as Easy/Medium/Hard

• Solve 1 unattempted set slowly

• First full QA sectional (60 min)

• 30–35 questions mixed

• Identify chapters you are avoiding

Week 25

• 3 RC sets (mix of easy and moderate)

• 10 VA questions focusing on your weakest area

• Re-read 1 old RC that you got badly wrong

• 4–5 sets similar to CAT pattern (4–5 questions per set)

• Try to finish 3 sets confidently

• Note starting steps clearly

• Targeted practice on 2 weakest QA topics

• 60–70 questions across those topics

• 10 questions on your strongest topic for balance

Week 26

• 1 VARC sectional + 1 RC re-attempt day

• For each error, decide: misread / concept/guess

• 4–5 mixed sets (increasing difficulty)

• 1 two-set block under strict time

• Write “set selection rules” for yourself

• 30–40 PYQ-style QA questions

• 40–50 regular practice questions

• Mark all questions that felt “tricky but doable”

Week 27

• 3 RC sets focused on speed

• Track time per passage and try small improvements

• 10 VA questions

• 3 DI + 2 LR sets

• Simulate exam: attempt only those you find comfortable

• Check if your choices were correct

• Two 30-question mixed QA drills this week

• Time each drill (45–50 min)

• Analyse wrong & slow questions separately

Week 28

First full 3-section mock (VARC+DILR+QA)

• Spend at least 2–3 hours on analysis

• List 5 clear takeaways for VARC

• From mock, pick 2 non-attempted sets and solve

• Identify patterns of sets you misjudged

• Plan DILR set order for next mock

• From mock analysis, list chapters causing most damage

• Plan a 3-week correction schedule

• Review formula sheet

Phase 4 – Mock-Driven Learning & Full Revision (Weeks 29–40)

Week

VARC

DILR

Quant

Week 29

• 1 full mock this week

• 2 RC sets from your weak themes

• Update “RC theme – comfort level” list

• Re-solve 2 DILR sets from the mock (one good, one bad)

• 3 new sets for practice

• Track accuracy per set

• Arithmetic revision cycle (all topics)

• 70–80 questions

• Solve at least 10 wordy, exam-like problems

Week 30

• 1 mock + 1 short VARC drill (2 RCs + 10 VA)

• Try slightly different RC order and compare

• 4–5 mixed sets at moderate difficulty

• Measure average time per set

• Try to improve by 1–2 minutes overall

• Algebra revision cycle

• 70–80 questions

• 15 PYQs for Algebra

Week 31

• “RC re-attempt day”: 2 old passages without notes

• 2 fresh RC sets later in week

• 10 VA practice questions

• 1 DILR sectional (60 min)

• 2 extra sets from tough topic category

• Write down your “DILR exam algorithm”

• Geometry + Mensuration revision cycle

• 70–80 questions

• Pay extra attention to diagrams & visualisation

Week 32

• 1 mock + 1 VARC mini-section

• Focus on reducing random guesses

• After mock, classify each set: Must Do / Maybe / Avoid

• Practise one set of each type

• Observe how you choose sets

• Number Systems + Modern Maths revision

• 70–80 questions

• Re-visit divisibility and remainders thoroughly

Week 33

• 3–4 RC sets from “painful” topics only

• Note how many you get right despite discomfort

• 4–5 sets with multi-step logic

• Set slightly tighter timers

• Check where accuracy starts dropping

• Weekly QA mixed test (35–40 questions)

• Additional 30 practice questions on weak topics

Week 34

• 1 mock; observe if VARC score is stable

• 10 VA questions from previous mocks where you went wrong

• Re-attempt all unattempted sets from latest mock

• 2 new sets to maintain variety

• Drill on your 2 weakest areas (e.g., Probability / Geo)

• 70–80 questions

• Re-solve 15 earlier wrong questions

Week 35

• “Accuracy week”: fewer attempts, higher precision

• 2 RC sets + 10 VA questions

• Note error % and try to bring it down

• 3–4 sets targeting near-perfect accuracy

• Don’t rush; focus on clean logic and neat tables

• 15–20 minutes of mental calculations on 3 days

• 40–50 QA practice questions with focus on speed

Week 36

• 1–2 mocks across two weeks (depending on schedule)

• After each mock, write a 5-point VARC review

• Fix a DILR attempt strategy and test it in mocks

• 3–4 sets for regular practice

• Start a compact revision notebook (formulas + typical questions)

• 70–80 questions from mixed topics

Week 37

• Practise VARC when slightly tired to mimic exam fatigue

• 2 RC sets + 10 VA questions

• 4 sets that require careful reading of long statements

• Note how you break down blocks of information

• Second full revision of Arithmetic + Algebra

• 80–90 questions

• Mark 20 questions to be re-done near exam

Week 38

• 3 RC sets with very close options

• Go through explanations in detail

• Try to articulate why each wrong option is wrong

• 1 DILR sectional with 5 minutes less than normal time

• Observe how pressure affects your choices

• Second revision of Geometry, Number Systems, Modern maths

• 80–90 questions

Week 39

• Decide your VARC section gameplan: RC first or VA first, target attempts

• 2 RC sets to test that plan

• 4–5 sets focusing on picking the right sets, not all sets

• Treat every practice as a mini-exam

• 1 QA sectional (60 min)

• 30-question mixed drill focusing on earlier error types

Week 40

• 1 mock + light extra RC practice

• Confirm final VARC approach from now on

• From mock, refine DILR “Must Do” and “Avoid” list

• 3 practice sets from “Must Do” zone

• Exam-style questions only (moderate–difficult)

• 60–70 questions

• Keep adding to formula + shortcut sheet

Phase 5 – Final Stretch & Exam Readiness (Weeks 41–52)

Week

VARC

DILR

Quant

Week 41

• 1–2 mocks depending on comfort

• Re-visit toughest RCs from previous tests

• Note patterns of traps that get you

• Redo 2–3 DILR sets from old mocks you couldn’t solve earlier

• 1–2 new sets just for freshness

• 60–70 mixed QA questions from weak areas

• Re-attempt selected past mistakes

Week 42

• Create a one-pager: “My VARC rules” (what I attempt/skip, time per RC, guess rules)

• Light practice: 2 RCs + 10 VA questions

• Draft your DILR one-pager: set types to start with, when to leave a set, ideal time per set

• 3 practice sets to test it

• Build/clean your formula flashcards

• 15–20 minutes of flashcard revision daily

• 40–50 light practice questions

Week 43

• Focus more on VA (non-RC): 20–25 questions

• 1 RC every alternate day

• 3–4 sets on recent CAT-like patterns

• Try to complete at least 2 with 100% accuracy

• 1 QA sectional

• Analyse whether you’re choosing questions that suit you first

Week 44

• 1 mock at approx. your expected exam time

• Keep rest of the day light but exam-like (meals, breaks)

• Some practice days: DILR immediately after VARC to simulate sequence

• 2–3 sets

• Review QA error log and common traps

• 40–50 practice questions from those themes

Week 45

• 1 mock + 1 short VARC drill (2 RCs + 10 VA)

• Focus more on revising than discovering new patterns

• 2–3 favourite set types for confidence building

• Avoid very exotic / extremely tough sets now

• 40–50 mixed QA questions timed

• Aim to trim unnecessary steps and calculations

Week 46

• Short but sharp sessions: 1 RC + 5–10 VA questions per sitting

• Detailed review of each small drill

• 3 timed sets

• Then re-solve 1 tough set slowly to explore alternate logic

• Only revision – no new theory

• 30-question mixed test; try to minimise unforced errors

Week 47

• 1 mock early in the week

• Later: only light VARC practice (1–2 RCs)

• Follow your fixed DILR approach in every test now

• 2–3 sets to maintain rhythm

• Keep strong chapters sharp with 40–50 questions

• Focus on accuracy more than volume

Week 48

• Re-do 3–4 old RC sets that once felt very tough

• First attempt untimed, then timed

• Redo 3–4 high-yield DILR sets that resemble CAT style

• Focus on pattern recognition

• 1 QA sectional at your actual exam slot time

• Light additional revision of formulas

Week 49

• Reduce volume: 1–2 RCs and 5–10 VA questions every other day

• More time on relaxation & sleep

• 2–3 easy to moderate sets only

• Avoid anything that dents confidence

• 30–40 easy–moderate questions

• Go through entire revision notebook once

Week 50

• Finalise written VARC exam strategy (attempt order, number of RCs, when to guess/skip)

• Finalise written DILR strategy (which set to pick first, max time before leaving a set)

• Scan through formula sheet 2–3 times this week

• A few light drills purely for confidence

Week 51

• Very light practice: 1 RC + a few VA questions every alternate day

• Prioritise calm over scores

• 1–2 short sets if you feel like it; otherwise just visualise your approach

• 20–30 simple mixed questions

• Stick to normal sleep & meal times

Week 52 (Exam Week)

• Only casual reading (newspaper/magazine) for comfort

• Maybe 1 RC mid-week if you really want

• No scores obsession

• Either zero or at most 1 very easy set early in the week

• Mental rehearsal of strategy instead

• Just skim formulas once or twice

• Focus on rest, light food, and staying relaxed for CAT day


Check | Can I crack CAT exam in 6 months?

How to prepare for CAT exam in 1 year for all 3 Sections?

Each section requires distinct preparation strategies and focuses. Let's take a look at the strategies to implement. 

Section-wise mastery

1. Conquering Quantitative Ability (QA)

QA demands strong mathematical foundations. Engage with topics like algebra, arithmetic, geometry, and number systems. Consistent problem-solving practice will enhance accuracy and speed. 

  • Basic-level mathematics preparation is a must to score in this section of QA. 
  • The QA section's major topics include questions about seating arrangements, number systems, profit and loss, geometry, and blood relations. 
  • Practising mock tests for the section will be more beneficial. 
  • When solving Quantitative Ability questions, you should avoid using calculators. 

2. Excelling in Verbal Ability and Reading Comprehension (VARC)

Elevate your vocabulary and comprehension skills for VARC. Regularly reading newspapers, novels, and articles enhances reading speed and understanding. To comprehend question styles, tackle previous CAT papers. 

  • Candidates can develop vocabulary skills by regular reading habits and exploring different topics of CAT with major details. 
  • Go through journals, blog posts, articles, podcasts, etc., to improve this section. 
  • Practice topics like inferences, comprehensions and para jumbles 

Check | CAT preparation books

3. Dominating Data Interpretation and Logical Reasoning (DILR)

DILR necessitates logical thinking and swift decision-making. Regularly tackle puzzles, data interpretation sets, and logical reasoning questions. Develop techniques for efficient problem analysis and resolution. 

  • Considering the past records, this section of LR & DI is considered to be difficult to crack and hence requires a tough grind from the candidates' side. 
  • For this, reviewing the previous year's CAT question papers thoroughly is advisable. 

Check | CAT Total Marks

4. Mock Tests and Result Analysis 

  • Regular Mock Test Sessions: Replicate the actual exam environment through consistent full-length mock tests.
  • This cultivates time management skills, tracks your progress, and pinpoints areas requiring refinement. 
  • Thorough Result Analysis: Post-mock test, meticulously analyze your performance. Recognize patterns of errors, time-consuming sections, and missed questions.
  • Dedicate time to rectifying these shortcomings in subsequent tests. 

5. Revision

  • Revision:  Approaching the CAT exam emphasizes comprehensive revision of concepts, formulas, and strategies. Avoid initiating new topics; focus on consolidating existing knowledge. 
  • Maintain Calm and Confidence: Prioritize a healthy lifestyle, regular exercise, and sufficient sleep. A composed and confident mindset significantly influences performance. 

CAT 2026 Preparation with Coaching Institutes

Below are the benefits associated with CAT coaching if you are planning to attend a coaching institute for the CAT entrance exam 2026: 

  • Competitive environment to stay focused 
  • Sufficient study material 
  • Mock Test series 
  • Shortcut methods of solving difficult questions 

According to CAT Toppers, passing CAT involves both, i.e. self-study can make a difference, whereas coaching institutes provide a solid foundation, quick idea clarification, and straightforward instruction. 

Check | How to prepare for CAT exam at home?

CAT 2026 Preparation without Coaching Institutes

  • Some CAT experts and previous-year toppers agree that mentoring or joining CAT coaching can help to some extent. However, simply enrolling in a coaching program does not guarantee you will pass the entrance exam with flying colours. 
  • According to CAT toppers, enrolling in a CAT coaching program is not required for a candidate to consider admission to top B-schools.
  • According to some experts, around 500 hours of dedicated preparation for the CAT 2026 exam will be necessary to achieve peak potential and gain admission to the best B-Schools in India. 

Candidates who intend to study independently and without coaching for CAT 2026 can follow the one-year CAT study plan outlined in the article. 

The path to passing the CAT exam in a year requires unshakable commitment, persistent effort, and smart strategy.

Understanding the exam structure, creating a solid study strategy, and prioritising section-specific skills are your pillars of success.

Regular mock tests, analysis of results, and diligent last-minute revision boost your confidence and readiness for the big exam day. Your determination and effort will be critical to your CAT exam success. 

Check: How to prepare for CAT Exam in 4 months

Frequently Asked Questions

Is one year enough for CAT preparation?

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Which section is the toughest in the CAT?

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How many hours should I study daily?

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How often should I take mock tests?

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What's the significance of sectional tests?

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Can i crack CAT in 1 year?

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How many months of preparation is required for CAT exam?

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About the Author

Faculty
Lalita Vishwakarma

Content Writer

Lalita Vishwakarma is a professional content writer with 3 years of experience, distinguished by her ability to transform raw ideas into polished, high-impact content. She masterfully combines creative storytelling with strategic execution, ensuring that her work not only captures attention but also drives desired outcomes.... more

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