How to Balance Discipline and Rest in GMAT Studying
We generally recommend that GMAT students devote about 10 hours during the week and 5 or more hours on the weekend to their preparation. That adds up to roughly 15 or more hours per week, which is a solid and realistic target for making meaningful progress. While this may sound simple in theory, consistently putting in those hours is not always easy in practice. Life has a way of filling our time, and unless studying is deliberately scheduled, it often falls to the bottom of the priority list.
To stay on track, it is important to create a structured study schedule and commit to it. Do not rely on the idea that you will “find time” for the GMAT. Instead, block off specific hours in your calendar, just as you would for a meeting or a class, and protect that time. With work, family, and other commitments, study time rarely appears on its own. You will need to be disciplined, intentional, and in some cases creative in finding opportunities. Some students prefer shorter study sessions spread across the week, while others thrive with fewer but longer, focused blocks of time. The key is to experiment until you find a routine that fits your life and that you can sustain for the months leading up to test day.
It also helps to recognize that consistency over time is far more valuable than occasional bursts of effort. Studying intensely for one week and then skipping the next is not nearly as effective as maintaining a steady rhythm of preparation. Think of your progress as compounding. Each study session builds on the last, and the discipline of showing up every week is what steadily pushes your skills forward.
At the same time, balance matters. No one can sustain peak focus indefinitely. Reward yourself for consistent studying by occasionally taking a day off to recharge. Watch a movie, enjoy a nice meal, spend time with friends, or do something else that allows your mind to reset. The point of these breaks is not to derail your momentum but to ensure you come back refreshed and ready to learn. Planned breaks prevent burnout and actually support long-term productivity.
By combining a realistic study plan with a structured schedule, steady discipline, and thoughtful rest, you create a sustainable framework for success. Over time, those weekly 15 hours compound into hundreds of hours of targeted preparation. That consistency, more than anything else, will separate you from other test takers and position you to perform at your best on exam day.
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep