The Week Before Your GMAT®: What to Do (and Not Do)
If you are reading this, you probably have a GMAT® exam coming up in the next few days.
And you probably have a lot of feelings about it. Excitement. Anxiety. Maybe a little exhaustion.
That is all normal.
You may also be hearing conflicting advice. Some people tell you to stop studying. Others say to take a practice exam every day. Someone on Reddit said to only review old material.
Most of that advice is trying to help. But some of it is the opposite of what works.
After years of coaching students through this exact week, we have found that there are five things that matter most. They are not glamorous. They just work.
Here is what to do in your final week of GMAT® prep.
Key 1: Keep Studying (But Do It Right)
The most common advice for the final week is "stop studying and just rest."
That makes sense on the surface. You want to be fresh for test day. But not studying for seven days and then sitting for a three-hour exam is a recipe for feeling rusty and caught off guard.
A higher score is almost always better than a lower score. Even a little studying in the final week can help.
But how you study in the final week matters just as much as whether you study.
The second most common advice is to "only review material you have already seen." The logic sounds reasonable. Get solid on what you know. Do not introduce anything new.
But there is a major problem with this approach.
On test day, every question you see will be new. You will almost never see a question you have practiced before. GMAC spends a lot of money making sure of that.
If you spend your entire final week only looking at old problems, the first new question on test day might feel jarring. You have not trained for the experience of seeing something unfamiliar under time pressure for seven days.
Here is what works instead.
Spend about 20% of your study time reviewing old material. Flashcards. Study sheets. Key concepts you want to keep fresh. That is valuable and prevents you from going backwards.
Spend the other 80% on new problems and new concepts. Use that time to raise your ceiling in one specific area.
Look at your most recent practice exam data and ask yourself one question. What one thing, if I improved it, would turn the most wrong answers into right answers?
Then spend all of your 80% time working on that one thing.
You might not be able to improve everything in seven days. But you can improve one thing. And one improvement can move your score.
If you are working on a specific topic, do questions one at a time and review after each one. Do not do sets of 20 questions on the same topic. That is not how the real exam works, and it can reinforce bad timing habits.
If you are working on timing instead of a specific topic, do mixed sets that match the real exam length. Quant sets of 21 questions. Verbal sets of 23. Data Insights sets of 20. Mix the content areas the way the real exam does.
One more thing. You may hear advice to do shorter practice sets in the final week to "avoid burning yourself out." That advice is understandable, but it can backfire. Shorter sets train you to expect shorter sets. You want to be used to the real thing.
Key 2: Take Practice Exams Based on Skill Growth
There is no magic number of practice exams to take in your final week.
Some students should take zero. Some should take two. It depends on where you are in your skill growth cycle.
The wrong approach is to follow a fixed rule like "take a practice exam every three days" or "never take a practice exam within 48 hours of the real thing." Those rules ignore your actual skill level.
Here is how to decide.
If you are not hitting 80% accuracy at your target difficulty level with an average time of about two minutes and 15 seconds per question, you should not be taking a practice exam. You should be working on your focus area instead.
If you are hitting those numbers, a practice exam can be useful. It gives you stamina practice, timing practice, and new data about what to work on next.
The priority order for improvement is:
First, fix your timing. If you are running out of time on sections, almost nothing else matters until you solve that. There is a significant penalty for not finishing a section.
Second, stop missing questions you know how to do. If you are missing questions you understand, learning more content will not help. Fixing this is usually possible on a tight timeline.
Third, improve content knowledge in your top focus area. This is where new material helps.
If you have improved your timing, you are not missing more than one question you know how to do per section, and you have the energy for it, take another practice exam. The data will probably help.
But do not take a practice exam just because you feel like you should. Bad data is worse than no data. It can send you in the wrong direction.
When you do take a practice exam, take it in realistic conditions. Same time of day as your real exam. Same breaks. Same snacks. Same section order. If you would not take the real GMAT® at 10 PM after work, do not take a practice exam at 10 PM after work.
Prioritize the official practice exams on MBA.com. They use real GMAT® questions and the real scoring algorithm. You can take each of the six official practice exams twice without seeing repeat questions. No third-party platform gives you better data.
Key 3: Handle Logistics in Advance
This one is not glamorous, but it matters.
Every minute you spend handling logistics on test day is a minute you are not focused on your exam. And the stress of last-minute problem solving can follow you into the testing room.
Get all of this done the day before at the latest.
If you are testing at a center, pack your bag the night before. Two forms of ID. Snacks for your break. Water. Any other materials you need.
Figure out your transportation in advance. If possible, drive the route to the test center beforehand. Find out where to park. Find out which floor the testing room is on. Check the security protocol.
If you get there early on test day, know what you will do with the extra time. You cannot bring study materials into the testing center. Will you sit in your car and review flashcards on your phone? Will you do a short meditation? Decide in advance and practice it before your practice exams so you know what works.
If you are testing online, read the room and desk requirements on MBA.com. Set up your space the day before. The online exam has specific rules about desk surfaces, external monitors, and what can be in the room. If your space is not compliant, the proctor will make you fix it before your exam starts. That is not how you want to spend the first 20 minutes of test day.
Figure out what snacks make you feel best during the break. Know what section order you will use. These seem like small things, but small decisions on test day add up and drain mental energy.
If you are still deciding between online and testing at a center, our guide on GMAT® online vs. test center walks through the key differences.
Key 4: Control the Variables Outside the Test
The GMAT® is hard enough. Do not make it harder by showing up sleep-deprived, undernourished, or stressed about something you could have handled earlier.
The basics matter. Sleep. Food. Movement.
You do not need to optimize these to perfection in your final week. You just need them to be good enough.
If you do not have a sleep routine, now is a good time to start one. If you do not know what foods make you feel clear and energized, experiment a little. If you do not exercise regularly, even a 20-minute walk can help.
Do not try anything new or extreme in the final week. No new supplements. No crazy sleep protocols. No dramatic diet changes. The goal is stability, not optimization.
Stress is the other variable. You cannot control everything that happens to you in a given week. But you can improve how you respond.
Set aside two to five minutes during each study session to try a stress management technique. Mindfulness meditation has a lot of research behind it for standardized test performance. There are free options on YouTube. If meditation is not your thing, a web search for stress management techniques will give you plenty of options.
If there are stressful conversations or commitments you can delay until after the exam, delay them. If you cannot delay them, work on how you respond to the stress rather than trying to eliminate the source.
The last variable is fatigue. Some people have demanding jobs. Some have family obligations. Some are dealing with both.
The goal is not to be perfectly rested on some abstract scale. The goal is to be as well-rested as you can be given your situation.
If there are projects you can push back, push them back. If there are commitments you can renegotiate, renegotiate them. Focus on what you can control.
If you are feeling deeper exhaustion than just a busy week, read our guide on GMAT® burnout for a fuller framework.
Key 5: On Test Day, Focus on Inputs
This is the one that matters most.
When you sit down for the exam, your job is not to get a certain score. Your job is to execute each question well.
Focusing on your score during the exam almost always hurts your performance. It pulls your attention away from the question in front of you. It makes you second-guess yourself. It adds stress that harms your execution.
Instead, focus on inputs. Read carefully. Write out your work. Double-check your calculations. Follow your process for each question type.
If you find your mind drifting to the outcome, use that as a signal. Refocus on the next question. Refocus on the process.
Great inputs produce great outcomes. Focusing on outcomes rarely does.
This is not easy. The exam is long and stressful, and your mind will wander. The goal is not to stay perfectly focused. The goal is to notice when you have drifted and bring yourself back.
For a deeper look at building the mental side of test day, our guide on GMAT® mindset covers resilience strategies that go beyond the basics.
Common Advice to Ignore in Your Final Week
There is a lot of questionable advice circulating in GMAT® forums and social media. Here are the most common things you can probably skip.
"You should not study in the final week." The idea of resting sounds nice. But not studying for seven days makes you slower and less sharp. Keep studying, just shift your approach.
"You should only review old material." It feels safe to stick with what you know. But you will see new questions on test day. You need to practice the experience of encountering unfamiliar problems under time pressure.
"Do shorter practice sets to avoid burnout." This is understandable, but shorter sets train you to expect shorter sets. You want to be conditioned for the real exam length.
"Take a practice exam every X days." This is too generic to be useful. The right number of practice exams depends on your skill level, not a calendar.
"Never take a practice exam the day before the exam." This is too absolute. If your skills are sharp and you have the energy, the data might help. Use your practice metrics, not blanket rules.
A Quick Checklist for the Day Before
Here is what to do the day before your exam.
Pack your test day bag. Two forms of ID. Snacks. Water. Any approved materials.
Confirm your transportation plan. Know the route. Know the parking. Know the building.
If testing online, verify your room setup against MBA.com requirements.
Decide your section order. You get to choose on the GMAT® Focus Edition.
Review your top focus area for about 30 to 60 minutes. Do not cram for six hours.
Get a reasonable night of sleep. Do not try to go to bed three hours earlier than usual. That usually backfires.
Set two alarms. One on your phone. One on something else.
FAQ
Should I stop studying the week before the GMAT®?
No. Not studying for seven days makes you slower and less prepared. Keep studying, but shift your approach. Spend about 20% of your time reviewing old material and 80% on new problems in your top focus area. Even a little studying is better than none.
How many practice exams should I take in the final week?
It depends on your skill level. If you are hitting 80% accuracy at your target difficulty with an average time of about two minutes and 15 seconds per question, you may benefit from a practice exam. If you are not at those numbers yet, spend your time on focused practice instead. There is no fixed number that works for everyone.
Should I take a practice exam the day before the real GMAT®?
There is no universal answer. If your skills are sharp and you have the energy, the data from one more exam can help. If you are exhausted or your skills are not yet at your target level, rest is probably the better choice. Use your practice metrics, not a blanket rule, to decide.
What should I do the night before the GMAT®?
Pack your test day bag. Confirm your transportation. Verify your online testing setup if applicable. Do a short review session of 30 to 60 minutes. Get a reasonable night of sleep. Do not try to cram or change your sleep schedule dramatically.
What should I bring to the GMAT® test center?
Two forms of ID as specified by GMAC. Snacks for your break. Water. Any other approved materials listed on MBA.com. If you are testing online, make sure your desk and room meet the requirements before test day.
Can I still improve my score in the final week?
Yes. You probably cannot overhaul your skills in seven days, but you can improve one specific area. Look at your most recent practice exam data. Find the one thing that would turn the most wrong answers into right answers. Spend your study time on that. One focused improvement can move your score.
Should I change my sleep schedule the week before the exam?
Do not make dramatic changes. If your exam starts at 9 AM, try to wake up at the time you would need to for the test. But do not try to shift your sleep schedule by three hours in one night. That usually backfires. Aim for adequate, consistent sleep.
What if I feel burned out in the final week?
Scale back your study volume. Do not stop entirely, but reduce the hours. A 30-minute focused session is better than a three-hour slog when you are exhausted. If you are experiencing deeper burnout, read our guide on GMAT® burnout for a fuller framework.
Want to learn even more?
This article is based on Episode 36 of our podcast series, "What To Do The Week Before Your GMAT®." For the full conversation, including more detail on practice exam timing and test-day logistics, listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
If you want a complete study plan that covers what to do from day one through test day, read our guide on how long to study for the GMAT®.
If you are working on pacing and timing for test day, our guide on when to let go of a GMAT® question walks through the system we recommend.
If you are stuck on a score plateau heading into the final week, our guide on breaking through a GMAT® score plateau can help you find the lever that moves your score.
You can also reach out to us anytime. We are @thegmatstrategy on social channels, or email contact@thegmatstrategy.com. We are here to help.