MCAT for Non-Science Majors: A Complete Strategy Guide
About 40% of medical school applicants majored in something other than biology or biochemistry. If you're a humanities, social science, business, or engineering major preparing for the MCAT, this guide is for you.
Over 20 years of tutoring, I've worked with English majors who scored 520+ and biology majors who struggled to break 500. Your major matters far less than your preparation strategy. Here's how non-science majors can not only compete but often outperform on the MCAT.
Your Secret Weapon: CARS
The Critical Analysis and Reasoning Skills section is the great equalizer. It requires zero science knowledge — just the ability to read dense passages, analyze arguments, and identify assumptions. Humanities and social science majors typically have years of practice doing exactly this.
CARS is also the hardest section to improve quickly. Pre-med students who spent four years in labs often struggle with it, while English and philosophy majors find it intuitive. A 129+ on CARS is a serious differentiator on your application, and you likely have a head start. See our CARS strategy guide for specific techniques.
The Content Gap: How Big Is It Really?
Non-science majors typically need to learn (or relearn):
- Biology/Biochemistry — the largest content area; 2-3 semesters worth
- General Chemistry — 2 semesters
- Organic Chemistry — 1-2 semesters
- Physics — 1-2 semesters
- Psychology/Sociology — most non-science majors find this section approachable
If you completed pre-med prerequisites, you've already covered most of this content. The MCAT doesn't test advanced topics — it tests your ability to apply intro-level science to novel scenarios. That's a fundamentally different skill from memorizing a textbook.
The 5-Month Study Plan for Non-Science Majors
I recommend 5 months instead of the standard 3 for students without a strong science background. Here's the breakdown:
Months 1-2: Content Foundation
Focus exclusively on learning the science content. Use a structured resource (Kaplan books, Khan Academy, or our study guides). Don't try to rush. Understanding is more important than speed at this stage.
- Week 1-2: Biology fundamentals (cell biology, genetics, molecular biology)
- Week 3-4: Biochemistry (amino acids, metabolism, enzyme kinetics)
- Week 5-6: General chemistry (atomic structure, bonding, thermodynamics, equilibrium)
- Week 7-8: Organic chemistry and physics basics
During this phase, do 1 CARS passage daily to maintain your natural advantage.
Month 3: Integration
Start doing practice questions alongside content review. This is where you shift from "learning" to "applying." You'll discover which concepts you understood superficially vs. deeply. Use our Question Bank in tutor mode to get instant explanations.
Months 4-5: Practice and Refinement
Full-length practice tests, timed QBank sessions, and targeted review of weak areas. Take one full-length test per week. Review every missed question — not just what the right answer is, but why you got it wrong.
Psych/Soc: Your Other Advantage
The Psychological, Social, and Biological Foundations of Behavior section is heavily based on intro psychology and sociology — courses many non-science majors took as electives or requirements. The content is more about vocabulary and concepts than calculation, which plays to your strengths.
Key areas to focus on: learning theories, social psychology, identity and socialization, health disparities, and neuroanatomy basics. Our Psych/Soc guide covers the highest-yield topics.
Common Mistakes Non-Science Majors Make
- Spending too long on content review. You'll never feel "ready." Start doing questions after 6-8 weeks of content review, even if you don't feel prepared.
- Neglecting CARS practice. Just because it's your strength doesn't mean you can ignore it. Maintain your edge with daily practice.
- Comparing yourself to pre-med classmates. They may know more content, but the MCAT rewards application and critical thinking — skills you've been developing in your own coursework.
- Trying to memorize everything. The MCAT is not a recall test. It's an analytical reasoning test with science content. Focus on understanding principles and applying them to new situations.
Real Results from Non-Science Majors
Some of my highest-scoring students came from non-traditional backgrounds. One student who was a humanities major with no science research experience scored 525. Multiple students who started with diagnostic scores below 500 improved by 15+ points by following this approach.
Your background is not a handicap — it's a different starting point. And in many ways, the critical thinking skills you've developed give you an edge that science majors have to work harder to build.