Preparing for the GMAT in India starts with a sample test to understand your current level, use the free GMAT Focus mini test on the official site. Then, set up a weekly plan based on which section needs the most work.
For Verbal, Sentence Correction tends to trip up a lot of Indian test-takers. Block 30–40 minutes daily to solve 15 SC questions, then review grammar rules tied to your mistakes. For Data Sufficiency in Quant, solve 10 questions every other day and track which question types consistently confuse you.
Around week 5 or 6, begin taking full-length mocks, start with once a week, then increase to twice in the final month. Focus more on reviewing your mistakes than chasing more tests.
Tools like MentR-Me can help lay this out into daily tasks and remind you where your accuracy is dropping. But don’t use too many platforms, stick to the GMAT Official Guide plus one or two reliable sources.