A good UCAT plan is not a list of every resource you can find — it is a sequence. You benchmark, you learn a method, you drill the weak parts, you simulate the real thing, and then you taper. This roadmap lays that out week by week. The week numbers are a guide, not a law: compress them if your test is close, stretch them if you have longer. The order is what matters.
Phase 1 (roughly weeks 1–2): benchmark and orient
Before you fix anything, find out where you stand. Sit a short, honest, timed set in each of Verbal Reasoning, Decision Making and Quantitative Reasoning, and note your accuracy section by section. Do not revise first — you want a true baseline. At the same time, read the foundation guide so you understand the format and scoring. By the end of this phase you should be able to name your weakest section and your rough starting score. That single insight is what makes the rest of the plan efficient.
Phase 2 (roughly weeks 3–7): learn the method, section by section
Now build technique. Take one section at a time and learn a clear, repeatable approach to it — how to read a VR passage, how to attack each Decision Making question type, how to decide when to calculate versus estimate in QR. Most students give Verbal Reasoning and Decision Making a little more time here because they have more moving parts, then add Quantitative Reasoning once those methods feel familiar. Practice in focused, untimed-then-timed blocks so the method becomes automatic before you add the clock fully.
Phase 3 (roughly weeks 6–9): drill your weak spots deliberately
This phase overlaps with the last one on purpose. As your methods settle, shift from learning to targeted drilling. Use your review notes to find the specific question types and habits that cost you marks — a particular DM puzzle, slow VR reading, calculator fumbles — and drill those, not the things you are already good at. This is where deliberate practice beats volume. Sitting a thousand random questions feels productive but moves the needle far less than fixing your three biggest leaks.
Phase 4 (roughly weeks 8–11): full timed mocks
Once your sections are solid, start sitting full, timed mocks under realistic conditions — same time of day, no pauses, the on-screen calculator only. Mocks do two jobs: they build the stamina to concentrate across the whole exam, and they expose the cracks that only appear under pressure. Review every mock properly. The review is where the improvement actually happens; the mock itself just tells you what to review.
Phase 5 (the final week): taper, do not cram
In the last seven days you stop trying to learn anything new and start protecting the form you have built. Reduce volume slightly, prioritise reviewing your own mistakes over fresh questions, fix your sleep, and rehearse your test-day routine. Cramming in the final week tends to add stress without adding marks. We have a dedicated final-week guide that walks through exactly how to taper and steady your nerves.
How to read your mock scores honestly
Track accuracy per section, not just one overall percentage, and watch the trend rather than any single result. Scores naturally wobble — a bad mock is data, not a verdict. Bank-style practice and analytics that estimate your scaled score over time make the trend visible, which is far more useful than obsessing over one number. If your weakest section is climbing while the others hold, the plan is working even if the headline total bounces around.
Make the plan yours
This roadmap is a sensible default, but the best plan is shaped around your own benchmark — there is no point spending equal time on a section you are already strong in. If your test date is tight, keep the order and shorten each phase. If you are stuck on what to prioritise, that is exactly the kind of thing a free consult can sort out in a single conversation: we look at where you are, what you are aiming for, and build the next few weeks around it.