Last 100 Days Plan for UPSC Prelims — A Day-Wise Revision and Mock Strategy
The last 100 days before UPSC Prelims are not for learning new things — they are for converting what you've studied into exam-day recall. This is the phase where disciplined aspirants pull ahead: they stop chasing new sources, switch to relentless revision and mocks, and walk in with a fixed strategy. Panic-driven new reading in this window does more harm than good. This guide gives you a focused, phase-wise plan for the final 100 days.
The core shift: from acquisition to retrieval
For most of your preparation you acquire knowledge. In the last 100 days you retrieve it — through revision and testing — because the exam tests recall, not reading. The single most important rule: no new sources. Finish what you have, and revise it until it's automatic. If you haven't read a book by now, don't start it. Build this window on the foundations in the Prelims preparation strategy and lean hard on the revision method.
Phase 1 — Days 100 to 60: full revision + mocks begin
Goal: one complete revision of the entire static syllabus from your notes, and the start of mock testing.
- Revise static subjects from notes, one block at a time — polity, geography, history, economy, environment. Not the original books; your condensed notes.
- Consolidate older current-affairs months through the monthly current-affairs hubs.
- Start one full-length GS mock per week, timed, under exam conditions.
- Begin CSAT practice if you haven't — one CSAT session a week. See CSAT strategy.
- Treat every mock's review as a study session — each wrong or skipped answer is a gap to fix.
Phase 2 — Days 60 to 30: second revision + more mocks
Goal: a faster second revision round and higher mock frequency.
- Second pass of static notes — quicker now; spend longer on weak areas surfaced by mocks.
- Cover the latest current-affairs months as they close.
- Two GS mocks a week, each reviewed thoroughly. Track your score trend and error types.
- Drill the question formats — statement-based, match-the-pairs, and 'how many' — see question types, and sharpen elimination.
- Keep CSAT warm with weekly timed practice.
Phase 3 — Days 30 to 10: rapid revision + peak testing
Goal: a third, rapid revision and exam-temperament training.
- Third, fast revision of notes, scheme lists, maps, and PYQs.
- Practise subject-wise MCQs on weak areas and revise only what you miss.
- Peak mock frequency — settle into your three-round attempt method and a fixed attempt range.
- Finalise your exam-day strategy: how many to attempt, when to guess, time per section.
- Full current-affairs revision of the exam-relevant months.
The final 10 days: revision only
- No new material — none. Only revise notes, scheme/index lists, maps, and the most recent current affairs.
- Light, broad passes over everything to keep it fresh; depth is done.
- One or two relaxed mocks at most — don't exhaust yourself chasing scores.
- Protect sleep and health. A rested brain recalls better than a crammed, tired one.
- Stay calm about difficulty: the cut-off moves with the paper. A hard paper is hard for everyone.
Current affairs in the last 100 days
Don't let current affairs sprawl now. Revise month by month through the hubs, weight the most recent months a little more, and stop adding new compilations. Convert your current-affairs notes into questions and test, rather than re-reading. The static-vs-current linkage is your friend — revising a static topic and its recent triggers together is efficient.
Mocks: how to use them (not abuse them)
Mocks train stamina, time management, and the judgement of which questions to leave — things pure revision can't build. But a mock is only as useful as its review. Spend more time reviewing a mock than taking it. Don't obsess over the raw score; track your error types (knowledge gap vs format misread vs careless) and fix the pattern. Don't take so many mocks that you have no time to revise the gaps they reveal.
Common last-100-days mistakes
- Starting new books or sources. The cardinal sin of this phase.
- Mocks without review. The score is worthless; the review is everything.
- Hoarding new current affairs instead of revising what you have.
- Neglecting CSAT until it's too late.
- Cramming in the final days and wrecking sleep — recall suffers.
- Panicking at a hard mock. Trend matters, not one bad day.
The bottom line
The last 100 days reward discipline, not heroics: stop acquiring, start retrieving. Revise the static syllabus in expanding rounds, consolidate current affairs month by month, take and review regular mocks, keep CSAT warm, and lock a fixed exam-day strategy. In the final week, revise only and protect your sleep. Run this plan on top of solid preparation and revision habits, and you'll walk into Prelims with exactly the recall the exam demands.
FAQ
What should I do in the last 100 days before UPSC Prelims?
Shift from learning new material to revision and mock testing. Do multiple revision rounds of your static notes, consolidate current affairs month by month, take and thoroughly review regular full-length mocks, keep CSAT warm, and finalise a fixed exam-day attempt strategy. The cardinal rule is no new sources.
Can I start new subjects or books in the last 100 days?
No. Starting new books or sources this late is the most common and damaging mistake. Finish and revise what you already have. New material won't be revised enough to become reliable recall and will eat the time you need for revision and mocks.
How many mock tests should I take before Prelims?
Build up from about one full-length mock a week at 100 days out to two or more a week in the final month. The exact number matters less than reviewing each one thoroughly — spend more time reviewing a mock than taking it, and don't take so many that you can't revise the gaps they reveal.
How do I revise current affairs in the last 100 days?
Revise month by month using consolidated current-affairs hubs, weight the most recent months slightly more, and stop adding new compilations. Convert your notes into questions and test yourself rather than re-reading, and revise static topics together with their recent current-affairs triggers.
What should I do in the final week before Prelims?
Revise only — notes, scheme and index lists, maps, and the most recent current affairs — with light, broad passes. Take at most one or two relaxed mocks, avoid new material entirely, and protect your sleep and health. A rested brain recalls better than a tired, crammed one.