Is there a three-month study plan for the GMAT?

Asked by Rajeev D about 2 months ago

3 Answers
Preet J

Preet J

Education consultant | Expertise in Client Relationship Management & Business Development | Driving Revenue Growth

Yes, a three-month GMAT study plan is not only possible  it’s actually one of the most common timelines people use to prepare.

In 3 months, you have enough time to build your basics, practice consistently, and take mock tests. The first month should focus on learning core concepts in Quant and Verbal. Use this time to identify your weak spots. In the second month, start solving questions regularly and slowly increase the difficulty. By the third month, focus on mock exams and review don’t just take the tests, but deeply analyze your mistakes too.

Stick to a fixed routine. Even 2–3 hours a day can be enough if you’re focused. Tools like GMAT Club, OG guides, and targeted prep videos can really help.

So yes  with steady effort and smart planning, three months is a solid amount of time to get ready for the GMAT.


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Mohit C

Mohit C

Business analyst

A weekly plan works best for the GMAT Focus Edition, especially when each section carries equal weight, Quant, Verbal, and Data Insights all count for one-third of your score.

  • Week 1–2: Start with one section at a time. Build confidence in core topics like arithmetic in Quant or sentence structure in Verbal.
  • Week 3–4: Shift to mixed sets. Write down mistakes and spot patterns—maybe you're rushing assumptions in DS or skipping key words in Verbal.
  • Week 5–6: Begin short section-wise drills with a timer. It helps train your brain for actual pacing without the full test pressure.
  • Week 7–8: Alternate section sets in one sitting. For example, do Verbal + DI one day, then Quant + Verbal the next.
  • Week 9–12: Full mocks every 5 days. Focus on review more than quantity. Check where you’re losing time or falling into traps.

If Data Insights feels unfamiliar, spend more time there, schools are watching how you perform across all three sections.

For more details you can read this blog on "GMAT Study Plan" it has   expert strategies to help you ace your exam 


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Three months is more than enough for the GMAT Focus Edition if prep is steady and structured.

In the first month, focus on core concepts from each section, Quant, Verbal, and Data Insights. Use MentR-Me, the GMAT Official Guide, and a daily error log. Aim for two focused hours a day and build your base slowly.

By the second month, start doing small mixed sets and track timing. Don’t jump into full mocks yet, work on getting consistent accuracy first. Review your errors twice a week, not just once.

In month three, take full-length mocks every 5–6 days. Try to take them at the same time your real test is scheduled. After each test, spend an entire day reviewing what went wrong and why. In the final stretch, give extra time to Data Insights, it’s a newer section and often trips people up.


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