Set your exam timeline

Use the dates and daily hours you can actually follow. The planner will mix subjects across days and keep revision near the exam.

Keep it simple: add subjects, pending topics, and preparation level. Weak subjects get earlier learning and practice blocks; strong subjects get lighter revision.
Subject Pending topics Preparation level Planner estimate Actions

How to use this tool

  1. Enter the plan name, start date, exam date, daily study hours, and the number of final revision days.
  2. Add subjects with pending topics. Use realistic topic counts rather than writing the whole syllabus as one topic.
  3. Choose preparation level honestly: Weak, Normal, or Strong. This helps the planner decide which subjects need earlier attention.
  4. Generate the plan and check the overload message. If the plan is overloaded, start earlier, reduce topics, or increase daily study time.
  5. Download the PDF after reviewing the plan. Treat it as a study guide you can adjust, not a strict order that cannot change.

How the plan is created

The planner uses your available days, daily hours, pending topics, and preparation level to create a day-wise schedule. Weak subjects get earlier learning and practice blocks. Normal subjects get regular study blocks. Strong subjects get lighter revision so they do not consume time that weaker subjects need more.

The final revision days are reserved for recap, mixed practice, formulas, short notes, and weak-point review. The planner tries to rotate subjects so one day does not become mentally heavy with only one subject. This makes the timetable easier to follow for most students.

Use the result realistically

A study plan works only when the inputs are honest. If you write very low daily hours or very high topic counts, the tool may show overload. That warning is useful because it tells you that the plan is not practical in the available time.

The planner does not know your concentration level, coaching schedule, college classes, travel time, health, or unexpected work. Keep some buffer. If one day is missed, regenerate the plan or manually shift tasks instead of trying to force everything into the next day.

When this tool is useful

Use it before semester exams, internal tests, board exams, practical preparation, certification tests, back paper preparation, or any exam where multiple subjects need balanced attention. It is especially useful when a student knows the pending topics but does not know how to distribute them over days.

The tool can also help reduce anxiety. A visible plan turns a large syllabus into smaller daily blocks. Students usually feel more in control when weak subjects, revision days, and daily limits are visible together.

Privacy and saved data

This study planner works in your browser. Plan name, dates, daily hours, subject names, pending topics, and preparation levels may be saved in localStorage so the form can stay filled when you return from the same browser. The tool does not need an account or database.

The study plan is not uploaded by this tool. If you are using a shared device, avoid entering sensitive personal details in subject names or plan names. Clearing browser data or using private browsing can remove saved planning inputs.

Study planner FAQ

Why does the planner give weak subjects more time?

Weak subjects usually need basics, examples, and practice before revision. Giving them earlier attention reduces last-minute pressure.

What does overload mean?

Overload means the estimated work is more than your available study hours. You should start earlier, add daily hours, or reduce topics.

Should I follow the plan exactly?

No. Use it as a practical guide. Adjust it when classes, health, travel, or unexpected work changes your day.

Does this tool upload my subjects or dates?

No. The planner works in the browser and stores values locally using localStorage.

Can I use it for non-exam goals?

Yes. You can use it for certification study, interview preparation, revision plans, or any multi-topic learning goal.