NEET-PGRevision Strategy30 Day Plan

How to Revise NEET-PG in 30 Days — The Final-Month Roadmap

The exact daily breakdown for the last 30 days before NEET-PG — mock cadence, wrong-question revision, what NOT to do, and how to walk into the exam hall calm.

Kinase Editorial TeamMay 29, 20266 min read

Quick Answer

The final 30 days before NEET-PG should be 60% Grand Tests + wrong-question revision, 30% short-note review of weak subjects, and 10% rest. No new content. No new books. Take a full 200-MCQ Grand Test every 3 days, spend the next day analysing it deeply, and use Kinase Fix My Weakness for the wrong-question pool. The final 48 hours: read-only revision, no new MCQs, 8 hours sleep both nights.

The final 30 days before NEET-PG decide whether your 12 months of prep convert to marks. Most aspirants under-perform because they switch to wrong-mode in the last month — starting new books, chasing new questions, breaking sleep cycles. This is the exact day-by-day plan that consistently converts.

The 30-day framework

DaysFocusDaily Pattern
1–20Grand Test cycles + wrong-question revision1 Grand Test every 3 days, 60–80 MCQs on other days from Fix My Weakness
21–25Final mocks + short-note revision1 Grand Test every 2 days, drug-of-choice + image-pattern review
26–28Wrong-question-only revision100 MCQs/day from your wrong-question pool, no new content
29Read-only revisionHigh-yield notes only, no MCQs, normal sleep
30 (exam day)Light morning, focused examNo prep in the morning, eat normally, arrive 45 min early

The Grand Test cadence (days 1–25)

Take a full 200-MCQ Grand Test every 3 days for the first 20 days, then every 2 days for days 21–25. Total: 8–10 full-length tests. Each test must mirror the real NEET-PG exactly:

  • 200 MCQs in 3 hours 30 minutes — single shift, no breaks.
  • +4 / -1 / 0 marking. Practise pacing for negative marking — every blind guess costs 1 mark.
  • Mixed subjects in random order. Subject-only blocks during prep are fine; mock tests must be mixed.
  • Same time of day as your real exam slot — train your body clock to perform at that hour.

The day-after-mock analysis routine

The lesson is in the analysis, not the test. After every Grand Test, spend 2–3 hours next day on:

  • Subject-wise accuracy — identify the 2 weakest subjects from that test.
  • Time-per-question by subject — slow subjects need pacing practice, not more content.
  • Trap distractor patterns — what option was tempting but wrong? Log it.
  • Concept gaps vs application gaps — did you not know it, or did you misapply it? Different fixes.

The "no new content" rule

Hardest rule to follow, biggest difference-maker. After day 20, no new books, no new question banks, no new subjects. New content in the final 10 days produces shallow encoding that breaks under exam stress. Trust your existing prep. Tighten what you already know.

The final 48 hours

  • Day -2: Light read-only revision of drug-of-choice lists, classifications, and image patterns. No MCQs. Sleep by 11 PM.
  • Day -1: 2 hours review in the morning, the rest of the day relaxed. Normal meals, normal coffee dose, light walk. Pack admit card, ID, water, snack. Sleep by 10 PM.
  • Exam morning: Wake up at your normal exam-day time. Light breakfast. Arrive 45 minutes before reporting time. Do not study at the venue — chat with no one, breathe slowly, trust your prep.

For Kinase users: the AI Exam Countdown Planner auto-shifts your daily MCQ target to wrong-question-only mode from day 20. Fix My Weakness becomes your single anchor — every day, 100 MCQs from the questions you have got wrong before. No surprises. Just compounding gains.