Free student tool
Create a simple revision timetable from your subjects, exam date, and available study time. Use it to plan consistent study sessions before exams.
Revision timetable planner
Build a realistic exam revision schedule with priority-weighted subjects.
hrs
Subjects and priority
Your revision plan
This plan gives you a balanced revision rhythm with time for recall and practice.
Days left
21
Sessions
30
Focus hours
25
Hours/week
8.3
Subject split
Math
18 sessions · 15h
Biology
8 sessions · 6.7h
History
4 sessions · 3.3h
Make each block active
Use notes for the first pass, then switch to quizzes, flashcards, and timed practice. Muneo AI can turn your source material into those sessions.
Create AI study sessionsSuggested timetable
Showing your first 30 planned sessions. Keep repeating the same priority pattern after that.
Thu, May 21
Math
Review core notes · 50 min
Thu, May 21
Math
Summarize key ideas · 50 min
Fri, May 22
Math
Build recall prompts · 50 min
Fri, May 22
Math
Review core notes · 50 min
Sun, May 24
Biology
Summarize key ideas · 50 min
Sun, May 24
Biology
Build recall prompts · 50 min
Mon, May 25
History
Review core notes · 50 min
Mon, May 25
Math
Summarize key ideas · 50 min
Wed, May 27
Math
Build recall prompts · 50 min
Wed, May 27
Math
Review core notes · 50 min
Thu, May 28
Math
Summarize key ideas · 50 min
Thu, May 28
Biology
Flashcards and active recall · 50 min
Fri, May 29
Biology
Practice questions · 50 min
Fri, May 29
History
Fix weak spots · 50 min
Sun, May 31
Math
Flashcards and active recall · 50 min
Sun, May 31
Math
Practice questions · 50 min
Mon, Jun 1
Math
Fix weak spots · 50 min
Mon, Jun 1
Math
Flashcards and active recall · 50 min
Wed, Jun 3
Biology
Practice questions · 50 min
Wed, Jun 3
Biology
Fix weak spots · 50 min
Thu, Jun 4
History
Flashcards and active recall · 50 min
Thu, Jun 4
Math
Timed past paper · 50 min
Fri, Jun 5
Math
Mark mistakes · 50 min
Fri, Jun 5
Math
Final recall sprint · 50 min
Sun, Jun 7
Math
Timed past paper · 50 min
Sun, Jun 7
Biology
Mark mistakes · 50 min
Mon, Jun 8
Biology
Final recall sprint · 50 min
Mon, Jun 8
History
Timed past paper · 50 min
Wed, Jun 10
Math
Mark mistakes · 50 min
Wed, Jun 10
Math
Final recall sprint · 50 min
A strong revision timetable is more than a calendar. It should answer what to study, when to study it, and how each session will move you closer to exam readiness. Use the planner above to balance subjects by time available, priority, and confidence.
Start with the exam date
Your available days decide how intense the plan needs to be. A close exam needs shorter feedback loops and more practice.
Weight weak subjects higher
A subject that is high priority and low confidence should receive more sessions than a subject you already understand well.
Rotate review and practice
Early sessions can rebuild notes and concepts. Later sessions should shift toward active recall, past papers, and mistake review.
A revision timetable turns vague exam prep into specific study sessions. Instead of deciding what to study each day, you can focus on completing the next subject block and adjusting the plan as your weak spots become clearer.
Give more time to subjects that are difficult, heavily weighted, or close to the exam date. You can pair this timetable with the Weighted Grade Calculator to decide which classes or categories deserve the most attention.
The schedule matters, but the method matters more. Fill each study block with active work: recall from memory, solve questions, mark mistakes, and return to weak topics. This is why the timetable mixes notes, practice, flashcards, and past paper sessions.
Active recall
Past paper practice
Flashcards
Mistake review
Timed questions
Topic summaries
The best revision sessions include practice, not just rereading. Use the PDF to Quiz Generator or YouTube to Quiz Generator to turn source material into practice questions. If you are learning from lectures, the YouTube Notes Generator can turn long videos into notes, explanations, quizzes, flashcards, and study sessions inside Muneo AI.
List your subjects, choose an exam date, decide how many days per week you can study, then give more sessions to subjects that are important or currently feel difficult.
Most students do best with focused blocks of 45 to 90 minutes, followed by a short break. Longer study days should be split into multiple blocks.
Yes. Give high-priority subjects more sessions, especially when they carry more grade weight or you feel less confident with the material.
Mix review with active recall: summarize notes, answer practice questions, make flashcards, and review mistakes before moving on.
A timetable is usually better because it removes daily decision-making, spreads practice over time, and makes it easier to notice when a subject is being ignored.
Most students do best with one to three subjects per day. Too many subjects can make sessions shallow, while one subject all day can lead to fatigue.
YouTube learning
Paste a lecture link and turn it into notes, quizzes, flashcards, and a focused study session.
Muneo Solve
Drop in a problem, image, screenshot, or question and get step-by-step help that explains why.