Many students preparing for IPMAT want to know how many hours they should study daily to get a good score. The answer depends on your current preparation level and how many months are left before the exam.
In general, studying 2–3 hours daily is enough in the beginning stages of preparation. As the exam gets closer, most students increase their study time to around 5–6 focused hours a day for mocks, revision, and practice.
Here, you will understand how many hours to study for IPMAT at different stages of preparation and how to use your study time effectively.
IPMAT (Integrated Program in Management Aptitude Test) is conducted by IIM Indore, IIM Rohtak, and a few other institutions for admission to their 5-year integrated MBA programs. The exam tests you on:
Quantitative Ability (QA): Math up to Class 10–12 level, covering arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and number theory.
Verbal Ability (VA): Reading comprehension, grammar, vocabulary, and sentence correction.
Logical Reasoning (LR): Applicable for IIM Rohtak’s IPMAT, which includes an LR section.
Knowing the syllabus upfront helps you divide your study time meaningfully across subjects rather than studying randomly.
Here’s a realistic breakdown of how many hours to put in, based on how far you are from the exam:
|
Phase |
Daily Hours |
Focus Areas |
|
6+ months away |
2–3 hours |
Concept building in QA; reading habit for VA; light daily practice |
|
3–6 months away |
3–5 hours |
Topic-wise tests; introduce sectional mocks; timed practice sets |
|
1–3 months away |
5–6 hours |
Full-length mocks; deep error analysis; revision of weak areas |
|
Final 2 weeks |
4–5 hours |
Light revision, 1 mock every 2 days, rest and mental clarity |
Studying for 8 hours but spending half of that distracted is less effective than 4 focused hours. Here are a few habits that make your study time count:
Study in blocks: Work in 45–1-hour focused sessions with short breaks in between. This keeps your brain sharp and prevents burnout.
Follow a daily topic plan: Don’t pick up whatever feels easy. Assign specific topics to specific days so nothing gets skipped.
End each day with a short review: Spend 10–15 minutes going over what you learned or where you made mistakes. This reinforces memory.
Balance QA and VA: Many students over-invest in one section. Ideally, split your daily time with roughly 60% on your weaker section and 40% on your stronger one.
If you are in Class 12 and preparing for both boards and IPMAT, you do not have to study everything separately. Many IPMAT quantitative topics are already covered in your board syllabus, especially in mathematics.
A practical approach for Class 12 students:
Dedicate your main study hours to boards (4–6 hours).
Set aside 1–2 hours specifically for IPMAT-focused practice, especially VA and LR, which boards don’t cover.
After your board exams, shift your full attention to IPMAT with 5–6 hours daily.
Putting in the hours is important, but knowing what to study in those hours matters just as much. PW offers dedicated IPMAT preparation courses that give you an organized, day-by-day study plan so you are never wondering what to do next. PW helps you make the most of every study hour—whether you have 6 months or 6 weeks left.
Here is how PW helps you maximize your daily study time:
Concept Videos: Learn every shortcut and formula from scratch through engaging, easy-to-understand video lectures.
Topic-Wise Practice Sets: Master individual chapters and build your speed right after finishing a topic.
Full-Length IPMAT Mocks: Experience the real exam environment and get detailed performance analytics to track your weak areas.
Live Doubt-Clearing Sessions: Never get stuck on a difficult question with quick support from expert faculty.
There is no magic number of hours that guarantees success in IPMAT. What matters more is showing up consistently, studying with focus, and reviewing your progress regularly. Even 3 well-spent hours a day, over several months, can take you very far.
Start with a schedule you can actually follow, build the habit, and increase your hours as the exam approaches. Steady and consistent always beats frantic and last-minute.
