How To Start Preparing For CAT In 6 Months

 

Understanding the CAT Exam First

 

Before jumping into preparation, you need clarity on what you’re preparing for.

The CAT exam tests you in three major areas:

  1. VARC (Verbal Ability & Reading Comprehension) 
  2. DILR (Data Interpretation & Logical Reasoning) 
  3. QA (Quantitative Aptitude) 

Key facts:

  • Duration: 2 hours 
  • Each section: 40 minutes (time-bound) 
  • Difficulty: Moderate to high 
  • Focus: Speed + Accuracy + Decision-making 

 

6-Month Preparation Roadmap

 Month 1–2: Build Fundamentals

This phase is about strengthening basics.

Quantitative Aptitude

  • Topics to cover: 
    • Arithmetic (Percentages, Profit & Loss, Time & Work) 
    • Number System 
  • Focus on: 
    • Concept clarity 
    • Basic problem-solving 

 Do 20–30 questions daily.

 

VARC

  • Start reading daily (non-negotiable): 
    • Newspapers (editorials) 
    • Articles (economics, philosophy, science) 
  • Practice: 
    • 2–3 RC passages daily 
    • Vocabulary in context (not rote learning) 

 

 DILR

  • Begin with: 
    • Basic puzzles 
    • Simple DI sets (tables, bar graphs) 

Solve 2 sets daily.

 

Goal for Phase 1:

  • Build conceptual clarity 
  • Improve reading speed 
  • Get comfortable with question types 

 

Month 3–4: Strengthen & Practice

Now you shift from learning to applying.

QA

  • Move to advanced topics: 
    • Algebra 
    • Geometry 
    • Modern Math 
  • Start mixed problem sets 

 

 VARC

  • Increase RC difficulty 
  • Practice: 
    • Para jumbles 
    • Summary questions 

DILR

  • Solve moderate-to-difficult sets 
  • Learn set selection (very important skill) 

 

 Start Sectional Tests

  • 2–3 per week 
  • Analyze mistakes deeply 

 

Goal for Phase 2:

  • Increase accuracy 
  • Improve speed 
  • Identify strengths & weaknesses 

 

Month 5–6: Mock Tests & Optimization

This is the most critical phase.

Full-Length Mock Tests

  • Take: 
    • 2–3 mocks per week 
  • Simulate real exam conditions 

 

Mock Analysis (MOST IMPORTANT)

After every mock:

  • Identify: 
    • Wrong questions → why wrong? 
    • Skipped questions → could you solve them? 
  • Track: 
    • Time spent per section 
    • Accuracy rate 

 

Section Strategy Building

  • Decide: 
    • Which questions to attempt first 
    • When to skip 
    • Time allocation 

 

DILR Focus

  • Practice set selection 
  • Don’t attempt all sets—choose wisely 

 

 VARC Focus

  • Improve comprehension accuracy 
  • Avoid over thinking options 

 

QA Focus

  • Revise formulas 
  • Practice high-frequency topics 

 

Goal for Phase 3:

  • Maximize score 
  • Build exam temperament 
  • Eliminate weak areas 

 

Daily Study Plan (Sample)

Weekday (3–4 hours):

  • 1 hour QA 
  • 1 hour VARC 
  • 1 hour DILR 
  • 30 min revision 

Weekend (6–8 hours):

  • Full mock test 
  • 3–4 hours analysis 
  • Practice weak areas 

 

Smart Strategies for CAT Success

1. Focus on Quality over Quantity

Solving 100 random questions is less useful than solving 20 thoughtfully.

 

2. Master Time Management

  • Learn when to skip 
  • Avoid getting stuck 

 

3. Mock Analysis is King 

Your improvement comes from analysis—not just taking tests.

 

4. Sectional Strength Strategy

You don’t need equal marks in all sections—maximize your strengths.

 

5. Consistency Beats Motivation

Even 2–3 hours daily is enough—if done consistently for 6 months.

 

 Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Ignoring DILR (many students do this) 
  • Not analyzing mocks 
  • Switching strategies too often 
  • Focusing only on strong areas 
  • Burnout from over studying 

 

Recommended Resources

QA:

  • Magme Medal (Quantitative Aptitude) 
  • Previous Year CAT Questions 

VARC:

  • Editorials (The Hindu, Indian Express) 
  • RC practice platforms 

DILR:

  • Previous CAT sets 
  • Puzzle-based practice sources 

 

Final Mindset Tips

  • CAT is not about knowing everything—it’s about choosing the right questions 
  • Stay calm during mocks (simulate pressure) 
  • Improvement is gradual—don’t expect instant results 

 

Final Thought

Six months is more than enough to crack CAT if you:

  • Stay consistent 
  • Analyze your mistakes 
  • Practice smartly

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