Today is 20th September 2025. The IFSCA Grade A Phase 1 exam is on 11th October 2025, as per the official notification. That means you now have only 24 days left, out of which 20 must be dedicated solely to revision. So, let us ask you, ‘’How much have you really prepared till now? Have you gone through the entire syllabus once? Or are you still stuck revising just a few topics? The truth is, these last 20 days will decide your performance. At this stage, revision is the torch that can light your path to success. Today, we’ll share with you a super-effective schedule that will help you revise the entire syllabus in 20 days. If you follow it, you’ll not only polish your concepts, boost your accuracy levels, and increase your answering speed before the real exam. Let’s get started.
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Before we dive into the timetable, let’s quickly go through the topics you cannot afford to miss. Why? Because not all topics carry the same weight. Some appear every year and contribute maximum marks. Based on previous years’ analysis, here’s where you should focus your revision energy.
Weightage Analysis:
Here’s the breakdown:
Paper 1 – High-Weightage Topics:
Paper 2 – High-Weightage Topics (As Per Previous Year’s Exam)
So, these are the topics where you must spend maximum revision hours. If you master them, you cover 70–75% of the paper.
These last 20 days are gold. You don’t need to study new topics now. You just need to revise, practice, and repeat. Below are two separate timetables for 20 days, from Sept 17 to Oct 11, 2025. The first timetable is for full-time students, and the other is crafted for working professionals. The time tables are divided into four focused time slots for a daily study schedule. Focus on the one that suits you best and stick to it strictly.
Note: One slot is for Paper 1, another for Paper 2, and two for practice + revision. Sundays include mocks.
20-day revision schedule for full-time students (Sept 17 to Oct 11, 2025):
| 20-Day Revision Plan for Full-Time Students | |||||
| Date | 7–10 AM | 11 AM–1 PM | 3–6 PM | 7–9 PM | Focus Area (High Weightage) |
| Sept 17 (Day 1) | Reading Comprehension (RC) practice | Finance – Core Concepts | Puzzles & Seating Arrangement | Accounts – Basics & Journal Entries | RC (10–12), Finance (12), Reasoning (8–10), Accounts (16) |
| Sept 18 (Day 2) | Error Spotting + Cloze Test | Management – Principles & Functions | Data Interpretation (DI Sets) | Costing – Basics | English (8–10), Management (12), DI (6–8), Costing (14) |
| Sept 19 (Day 3) | Para Jumbles + Grammar Rules | Economics – National Income, Inflation | Current Affairs (July–Sept, Financial Focus) | Finance – Markets & Instruments | English (8–10), Economics (14), GA (10–12), Finance (12) |
| Sept 20 (Day 4) | RC + Vocabulary Practice | Accounts – Final Accounts | Puzzles + Seating Arrangement | Management – Motivation & Leadership | RC (10–12), Accounts (16), Reasoning (8–10), Management (12) |
| Sept 21 (Day 5 – Sunday) | Take Mock Test 1 | Mock Test Analysis | Revise Mistakes from Mock | Current Affairs Revision | Take Mock Test + Weak Areas |
| Sept 22 (Day 6) | Data Interpretation (Moderate Level) | Costing – Marginal & Standard Costing | Current Affairs (Banking Schemes) | Economics – Monetary Policy | DI (6–8), Costing (14), Schemes (12), Economics (14) |
| Sept 23 (Day 7) | RC + Cloze Test | Finance – Derivatives & Risk Mgmt | Puzzles (Circular/Linear) | Accounts – Depreciation & Ratios | RC (10–12), Finance (12), Reasoning (8–10), Accounts (16) |
| Sept 24 (Day 8) | Error Spotting + Fillers | Management – HRM & Strategic Mgmt | Current Affairs (Aug–Sept) | Economics – Fiscal Policy | English (8–10), Management (12), GA (10–12), Economics (14) |
| Sept 25 (Day 9) | Para Jumbles + RC | Accounts – Cash Flow Statements | DI (Caselets + Charts) | Finance – Financial System | English (8–10), Accounts (16), DI (6–8), Finance (12) |
| Sept 26 (Day 10) | RC (Mixed Sets) | Costing – Variance Analysis | Puzzles + Inequalities | Management – Organization & Communication | RC (10–12), Costing (14), Reasoning (8–10), Management (12) |
| Sept 27 (Day 11 – Sunday) | Full Mock Test 2 | Mock Analysis | Revise Mock Mistakes | Current Affairs Quick Notes | Mock + Weak Areas |
| Sept 28 (Day 12) | Grammar + Error Spotting | Economics – International Trade, BoP | Current Affairs (Schemes Focus) | Finance – Capital Budgeting | English (8–10), Economics (14), Schemes (12), Finance (12) |
| Sept 29 (Day 13) | RC Practice | Accounts – Partnership & Companies | Puzzles + Seating Arrangement | Costing – Budgetary Control | RC (10–12), Accounts (16), Reasoning (8–10), Costing (14) |
| Sept 30 (Day 14) | DI (Advanced) | Management – Leadership Theories | Current Affairs (Banking/Financial) | Economics – Growth & Development | DI (6–8), Management (12), GA (10–12), Economics (14) |
| Oct 1 (Day 15) | RC + Cloze Test | Finance – Bonds, Shares, Mutual Funds | Puzzles (Mixed Types) | Accounts – Consolidation | RC (10–12), Finance (12), Reasoning (8–10), Accounts (16) |
| Oct 2 (Day 16 – Sunday) | Full Mock Test 3 | Mock Analysis | Revise Weak Topics | Current Affairs Revision | Mock + Weak Areas |
| Oct 3 (Day 17) | Error Spotting + Para Jumbles | Economics – RBI, Banking System | Current Affairs (Sept Recap) | Costing – Decision Making | English (8–10), Economics (14), GA (10–12), Costing (14) |
| Oct 4 (Day 18) | RC (Mixed Sets) | Management – Case Studies | DI + Data Sufficiency | Finance – Risk & Return | RC (10–12), Management (12), DI (6–8), Finance (12) |
| Oct 5 (Day 19 – Sunday) | Take Full Mock Test 4 | Mock Analysis | Revise Weak Areas | Current Affairs (July–Sept Final) | Mock + Weak Areas |
| Oct 6 (Day 20) | Quick RC + Grammar Recap | Accounts (Final Revision – Key Chapters) | Economics (Final Revision – Macro) | Finance + Costing (Formulas & Concepts) | Final Revision of Heavy Subjects |
| Oct 7–10 (Buffer Days) | Daily RC + Error Spotting | Current Affairs (Last 6 Months – Final Brush-Up) | Take Full Mock Test 5 + Formula Revision | Revise Weak Areas & Short Notes | Light Review + Retention |
| Oct 11 (Exam Day) | Do some light exercises | Relax & Stay Calm | – | – | Exam |
Revision is what turns knowledge into marks. In the last 20 days, your goal is not to learn something brand new but to sharpen what’s already prepared. This plan works only if you follow it daily and stay away from distractions. Break your study into small blocks, revisit high-weightage topics, and solve questions regularly. Balance speed with accuracy. And track your daily output, because numbers never lie.
The smartest move now is to start with high-weightage topics. These carry maximum marks and decide most of your score. If you revise them first, you lock in the biggest scoring areas early. Make short notes of formulas, tricks, and key concepts, then practice questions linked to them daily. This way, even if you run out of time later, you’ll already have the strongest topics in your grip, ensuring a safe score cushion.
Weak areas are silent score-killers. If ignored, they eat into your marks without mercy. That’s why you should dedicate a fixed time every day to them. Don’t just reread; actively solve and check where you slip. Mock tests help you identify these gaps. With steady daily effort, weak areas stop being a fear point and turn into manageable topics. This routine not only boosts marks but also cuts down exam-day stress.
Mock tests are not optional now. They’re compulsory. They mimic the real exam and prepare you for timing, pressure, and smart question selection. Attempt at least one full-length mock every 4th day under strict exam conditions. Don’t stop at just attempting. Give equal time to analyzing each mistake and updating your mistake book. This process will help you improve your accuracy levels and your speed. It will also condition your brain to handle pressure. Every mock test will inject more skills and confidence in you.
Short notes, without doubt, are your best revision companion in the last days of the revision process. So, you must keep on writing very important formulas, shortcuts, and hard concepts in one place, so you can quickly revisit them just a few days before the exam. For this, you’ll have to invest 10 to 15 minutes every day revisiting them. Especially in the mornings and evenings. These notes will help you save time and recall everything faster on the day of the exam.
What most aspirants do is, they just read the study material passively again and again. You should actively read everything. So, you should try your best to recall concepts without looking at your notes. Then you can check how accurate you were. You need to repeat this process over spaced intervals. And this method will strengthen your memory.
Jeffrey Karpicke & Henry Roediger, in 2006, did a landmark study. They had students learn material, then either reread it or test themselves on it (active recall). One week later, students who used active recall remembered much more than those who just reread.
So, active recall will not only save your time but also improve your retention power. In short, during the exam you won’t forget important points under exam pressure.
Avoid overloading yourself with long and unplanned study time. Divide your day into smaller study sessions. These sessions must have short breaks. You should avoid monotony and keep your mind fresh by mixing different subjects. A balanced routine not only boosts productivity but also keeps stress in check. Your regularity in this routine will attract the best results in these 20 days.
You now have only 20 days to sharpen your preparation. These days are precious. Therefore, when you follow the revision timetable above, you should thoroughly revise all the topics having high weightage, keep practicing mock tests, and your chances of clearing the Phase 1 exam will improve drastically.
Don’t forget that discipline beats panic, revision beats cramming, and regularity beats last-minute rush. Start today with the revision plan above with full focus to ensure success.
Yes, if you revise only important topics, practice mock tests, and stay consistent, 20 days are enough to surpass the cutoff.
You should study for at least 6 to 8 hours, divided into Paper 1 and Paper 2, and revise at night.
No, you should avoid new topics. Instead, you should revise only what you have already studied and master the topics with high weightage.
One mock test every 4 to 5 days is enough. But taking a mock test means analyzing your mistakes properly to eliminate them for better performance.
Yes. Divide daily time blocks for each paper. Keep mornings for Paper 1 and evenings for Paper 2.
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