Build an SAT study plan that fits the time you actually have
Most "study plans" assume a perfect student with three empty months. Tell us your real test date and where you're starting, and we'll build a plan scaled to that, honest about what's possible. No score promises, nothing saved.
Why "more hours" isn't a plan
The honest truth about SAT timelines is that the same number of weeks is worth wildly different amounts depending on what's actually costing you points. If your problem is a content gap (you never nailed comma rules, or quadratics are shaky), that closes fast, and a few focused weeks can move a score a lot. If your problem is behavioral (you know the material but rush, misread, or talk yourself out of right answers), no amount of new content fixes it, and "study more" just means making the same mistakes more times.
That's why every plan this tool builds starts the same way: find out which one you're dealing with before you spend a single evening drilling. A plan aimed at the wrong problem is just busywork with a calendar attached.
What a good plan actually looks like
Diagnose, then target, then review. You take a real diagnostic to see how you miss, not just what. You weight your practice toward the weaker side and the specific habits that are leaking points. You do it under real timed conditions so test day isn't a surprise. And, the step almost everyone skips, you review every miss until you can name why it happened. Then you re-test every couple of weeks to confirm the number is actually moving, not just your confidence.
Step 1 of every plan above is the same: find out why you miss.
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