Study Time Calculator

Turn chapters, topics, and exam dates into a practical study schedule before everything piles up.

FreeNo loginBrowser-basedReviewed 2026-05-27

Plan your exam study time

Estimate a study schedule from the topics left and the days you can realistically study.

Optional, but useful for intensity warnings.
Suggested study pace

1.09 hrs/session

Plan about 1.09 hours on each study day before Jun 16, 2026. Start with weak topics, then finish with mixed practice.

Total study hours
12.00
Days remaining
20
Estimated study sessions
11
Calendar-day average
0.60 hrs/day

Study time formula

Total study hours = topics x hours per topic. Hours per study session = total study hours / available study sessions.

Available study sessions are estimated from the days left before the exam and the number of days per week you can study.

When to use this tool

A study plan works better when it is small enough to actually follow. This calculator estimates total study hours and spreads them across the study days you have left.

Realistic examples

Use these examples to check whether your own inputs are in the right format before relying on the result.

Example 1: two weeks before biology

  • Exam in 14 days
  • 8 chapters
  • 1.5 hours per chapter
  • 4 study days per week

Total study hours: 12. Hours per study session: about 1.50.

Four study days per week over two weeks gives about eight study sessions, which keeps each session manageable.

Example 2: a packed exam week

  • Exam in 5 days
  • 10 topics
  • 1 hour per topic
  • 3 study days per week

Hours per study session: about 4.67.

That plan is intense. The student should reduce distractions, prioritize weak topics, or add extra study days.

How to plan study time

List the chapters or topics that will be tested, then estimate how long each one takes to review with practice questions.

Be honest about your available study days. A plan built on seven perfect evenings usually fails faster than a plan built on four reliable sessions.

Example study plan

If you need 12 hours and have 8 study sessions, aim for 1.5 hours per session. Use the first sessions for hard topics, the middle sessions for mixed practice, and the final sessions for review.

Keep one short buffer session if possible. It helps when a chapter takes longer than expected.

Why spacing helps

Spreading study across multiple days gives your brain more chances to retrieve the material. That is usually better than one long cram session.

Short review cycles also make it easier to notice which topics need another pass.