When Should You Start Studying for the MCAT? The Complete Timeline
The most common question I get from pre-med students: "When should I start studying?" The answer depends on three factors: your test date, your baseline knowledge, and how many hours per week you can dedicate.
The Short Answer
Most students need 3-6 months of dedicated prep. Here's the breakdown:
| Timeline | Best For | Hours/Week |
|---|---|---|
| 3 months | Students with strong science GPA (3.7+) who completed all prerequisites recently | 30-40 |
| 4-5 months | Most students — the sweet spot for thorough coverage without burnout | 20-30 |
| 6+ months | Students balancing school/work, or those who need significant content review | 15-20 |
| 12+ months | Only if studying part-time (5-10 hrs/week). Risk of burnout and forgetting early material | 5-10 |
How to Calculate Your Start Date
Step 1: Find your test date on the AAMC website. Common dates are January, March, May, June, July, August, and September.
Step 2: Count backwards 4-5 months. That's your ideal start date.
Step 3: Adjust based on your situation:
- Add 1 month if you haven't taken biochemistry yet
- Add 1 month if you're working full-time while studying
- Subtract 1 month if you scored 500+ on a cold diagnostic
The Biggest Mistake: Starting Too Early
Counterintuitively, starting too early is almost as bad as starting too late. Here's why:
- Burnout: MCAT prep is mentally exhausting. Sustaining peak intensity for more than 4-5 months is extremely difficult.
- Forgetting: Content you learn in month 1 fades by month 8 if you're not actively reviewing it.
- Diminishing returns: After about 400-500 hours of total prep, each additional hour produces less improvement.
The ideal total study time is 300-500 hours. Spread over 4 months at 25 hours/week, that's 400 hours — right in the sweet spot.
Month-by-Month Breakdown
Month 1: Content Review
Cover all four sections: Biology, Biochemistry, General Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physics, Psychology, Sociology. Use textbooks for initial learning and flashcards for retention.
Month 2: Content Review + Questions
Finish content review. Start doing 30-50 practice questions per day. Begin daily CARS passages. Take your first full-length practice test.
Month 3: Practice-Heavy
80% of your time should be practice questions and test review. Take one full-length test per week. Identify and drill weak areas using performance analytics.
Month 4: Test Simulation
Take 2-3 AAMC full-length tests. Review all AAMC materials (Section Bank, QPacks). Final content review of weak areas only. Taper study intensity in the last week.