The IFSCA Grade A Phase 1 exam 2025 is almost here. Only a few days remain. And every single day matters now. These last days are not for experimenting with new topics. Instead, they are for focused polishing of whatever you have already studied. Your aim is not just to acquire knowledge, but to achieve the accuracy levels, the speed, and the confidence needed to clear the exam. If you use the last 10 days smartly, you can revise all the key areas, plug the weak points, and prepare yourself for real exam pressure. This plan is best for students who can dedicate good hours daily, but even working professionals can adapt it. Let’s see how you can make the most of every day and achieve all your targets one by one.
Not all areas have equal importance. Some topics appear every year and directly shape your score. So, your first task is to target these high-return topics from the syllabus. Below is a list of topics from Paper 1 and Paper 2 that deserve maximum attention:
| Paper | Topics to Revise |
| Paper 1 (Phase 1) | Reading Comprehension, Error Spotting, Cloze Test, Para Jumbles, Puzzles, DI, Current Affairs (last 6 months) |
| Paper 2 | Finance, Accounts, Costing, Management, Economics, Government Schemes |
We’ve divided the 10 days into sharp blocks of focused study. Each block mixes theory, problem-solving, and review. Mock tests are spaced to test progress.
Let’s go day by day:
Day 1 to 2: Revise English and Reasoning basics. Practice Reading Comprehension, para jumbles, cloze tests. Work on puzzles and seating arrangement questions. In Paper 2, revise Finance fundamentals and Management principles.
Day 3 to 4: Focus on Quantitative Aptitude and Accounts. Practice Data Interpretation, caselets, and charts. Revise journal entries, trial balance, and key costing formulas. Also, revise Economics basics like national income, inflation, and fiscal policy.
Day 5 to 6: Mix English, Current Affairs, and Finance. Dedicate time to vocabulary, grammar, and error spotting. Revise the last three months of financial current affairs. Cover topics in Finance like markets, risk management, and instruments. Keep solving reasoning questions alongside.
Day 7: Take one full-length mock test in the morning slot. Analyze it thoroughly in the evening. Note down every mistake in your error log. Revise Management topics such as leadership and strategic management. Go through the costing once more.
Day 8: Go for mixed practice. Solve one RC, two DI sets, and one puzzle daily. Revise the Finance and Accounts side by side. For GA, quickly scan through government schemes and PIB summaries.
Day 9: Take another mock test in the exam slot. Spend half the day analyzing it. Revise weak areas highlighted by the test. Polish Economics concepts like monetary policy, growth, and development. Revise the short notes of formulas.
Day 10 (Exam Evening): Avoid heavy practice. Pay heed to light revision. Go through short notes, formulas, and last-minute reminders. Quickly go through current affairs headlines. Relax, sleep early, and keep your mind calm.
These last days are your golden period. Revision is no longer about just reading. It must translate into marks. Here’s how you can extract the most from these 10 days:
Begin every day with one high-weightage area. These are your scoring zones. Revise formulas, shortcuts, and key principles. Even if time falls short later, you’ll still be safe with the most important topics secure.
Weak areas eat marks silently. Spend at least one hour daily on them. Solve, analyze, and repeat. Every small daily improvement here can add extra marks to your final score.
Take at least two full-length mock tests in these 10 days, on Day 7 and Day 9. Analyze every mistake and revise accordingly. Mock tests don’t just test you; they prepare your mind for exam-day stress.
Your short notes are your best companion now. Revise them every morning and night for 10 to 15 minutes. These quick refreshers will save you on the last day when time and energy are limited.
Don’t just read passively. Close the notebook and try recalling concepts. Test yourself. This technique cements memory and ensures you retain information even under pressure.
Don’t overload your brain with just one subject. Mix Reasoning with English, Finance with Accounts. Variety keeps your mind active and avoids boredom. Use short breaks of 10 to 15 minutes after every 2 hours.
Write your daily targets, tick them off, and track your mock scores. This daily accountability keeps motivation alive and shows you real progress.
Here are some smart reminders for your final 10 days:
These 10 days are short but powerful. Revision now means sharpening—not starting fresh. By focusing on high-weightage topics, fixing weak areas, and practicing mocks, you prepare both knowledge and mindset. The key is consistency, not panic. Stay disciplined, use your short notes, and trust your preparation.
Start with high-weightage topics like Reading Comprehension, Puzzles, DI, Accounts, and Finance. Revise them daily with practice sets.
At least two full-length mock tests, Day 7 and Day 9. Analyze mistakes carefully to avoid repeating them.
Dedicate one focused hour daily to weak areas. Use mock test analysis to find them and practice more questions on those areas.
Use short notes and active recall. Revise them twice daily for quick memory refreshers.
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