SAT Study Plan – 8-week, 12-week and 6-month options
Three SAT prep plans tailored to your current level, target score, and test date. Built around a diagnostic → study → practice test → analysis cycle.
How is the plan chosen?
Plan choice depends on three variables: test date, target score, and current level. With more than 6 months to test day, the comprehensive plan is recommended; around 3 months, the standard plan; with 6-8 weeks remaining, the intensive plan. Every plan starts with a diagnostic test.
Which SAT plan fits you?
8-Week Intensive
For students whose diagnostic is near the target band, with 8 weeks to test day.
8-12 hours / week
- Diagnostic + adapted plan in week 1
- Math and R&W lessons every week
- 2 full-length practice tests
- Test-week camp in the final week
12-Week Standard
The most common plan: solid content coverage plus enough room for practice tests and analysis.
6-9 hours / week
- Diagnostic + plan in weeks 1-2
- Full Math and R&W content blocks
- 4-6 full-length practice tests
- Final two weeks: full tests + test-week camp
6-Month Comprehensive
When the diagnostic is below the target band, and there is enough lead time before the test.
4-6 hours / week
- Foundations: math fundamentals + grammar review
- Topic-by-topic SAT content
- Practice tests every 4 weeks
- Two plan revisions across the prep window
What a typical week looks like
Mon - Tue
Math content/strategy lesson + homework
Wed - Thu
Reading & Writing lesson + homework
Fri
Question bank set assigned for the weekend
Sat - Sun
After the unit closes: full-length practice test + 1:1 analysis call
About the SAT study plan
How long should an SAT study plan be?
Length depends on three variables: target score, current diagnostic score, and test date. Typical ranges are 8 weeks (intensive, when the test is near), 12 weeks (standard), and 6 months (comprehensive, built from the ground up). All three start with a diagnostic test and can be revised mid-plan.
Who is the 8-week plan for?
Students whose diagnostic score is close to their target band and who have around 8 weeks until the test. The weekly tempo is intensive; students with significant content gaps should use the 12-week or 6-month plan instead.
What does the 12-week plan cover?
First two weeks: diagnostic + plan. Next eight weeks: Math and R&W content/strategy lessons. Final two weeks: full-length practice tests and a test-week camp. Math and R&W run in parallel within each week.
When is a 6-month prep needed?
When the diagnostic score sits below the target band, the test is at least six months away, and weekly study time is limited. Prep starts at content fundamentals and ends each unit with practice; the plan is revised multiple times along the way.
How do practice tests fit into the plan?
Practice tests are the measurement phase, not the testing phase. Once a unit is closed, a full-length test is run; a typical 12-week plan includes 4-6 full tests. Every test is followed by a 1:1 analysis call, which shapes the next weeks.
How is time split between Math and R&W?
Both sections aren't worked the same way. Weekly class hours and homework load are weighted by the diagnostic's strong/weak section. Time shifts toward whichever section needs more work, but both are touched every week.
Let's build your path to your target SAT score
Share your current level, target score and test date — we'll send you a personalized package recommendation and weekly study plan. No purchase required.