CLAT PREP | APRIL 2026
CLAT PREPARATION STRATEGY — COMPLETE 6-MONTH PLAN
• Students starting CLAT preparation with 6 months remaining
• Class 11 and Class 12 students targeting CLAT 2027
• Droppers and repeaters who want a structured reset strategy
• Anyone who wants to crack a top-5 NLU through disciplined preparation
Last Updated: April 2026
Six months is the ideal preparation window for CLAT — long enough to build genuine skills across all five sections, yet short enough to maintain intensity and focus. Students who start 6 months before CLAT and follow a structured, section-by-section strategy consistently outperform those who begin earlier but without direction, or those who start late and rely on shortcuts.
This guide lays out the complete, evidence-based 6-month CLAT preparation strategy — week by week, section by section — with honest benchmarks, common mistakes to avoid, and the mindset required to crack a top NLU. Whether your target is NLSIU Bengaluru, NALSAR Hyderabad, or any of the other 24 National Law Universities, this is the roadmap you need.
Understanding What CLAT Actually Tests
Before diving into the strategy, you must clearly understand what CLAT tests — because the answer is very different from what most students assume.
• NOT memorisation — CLAT does not reward rote learning
• NOT legal knowledge — you do not need to know any law before the exam
• YES to reading speed and comprehension — every question is passage-based
• YES to logical inference — can you draw conclusions from text?
• YES to time management — 120 questions in 120 minutes = 1 min per question
• YES to accuracy under pressure — 0.25 negative marking penalises guessing
This means your preparation strategy must prioritise reading speed, comprehension quality, and analytical reasoning — not rote facts. Students who understand this from Day 1 have a significant structural advantage.
The 6-Month CLAT Preparation Roadmap
Month 1 — Foundation and Diagnosis
The first month is not about studying hard — it is about studying smart. Your primary goals are:
- Attempt one full CLAT PYQ (any year from 2022-2025) without time pressure. Understand where you currently stand across all five sections.
- Read the complete CLAT Syllabus to understand exactly what is and is not tested. Check our detailed CLAT Syllabus 2027 guide.
- Start daily newspaper reading — The Hindu or Indian Express, minimum 45 minutes daily. This cannot be postponed. CA covers 10-12 months before the exam date.
- Begin English vocabulary building — read editorials actively, noting unfamiliar words in context.
- Complete one Legal Reasoning chapter — understand the principle-application method with basic examples.
| Month | Primary Focus | Weekly Mocks | Key Milestone |
|---|---|---|---|
| Month 1 | Diagnosis + Foundation | 1 sectional per week | Know your baseline score |
| Month 2 | Section-wise skill building | 1 full mock + 2 sectionals | Legal Reasoning method mastered |
| Month 3 | PYQ analysis + CA consolidation | 2 full mocks per week | All 2022-2025 PYQs attempted |
| Month 4 | Mock test intensive + weak area drill | 3 full mocks per week | Consistent 80+ score in mocks |
| Month 5 | Speed + accuracy optimisation | 3-4 full mocks per week | Consistent 88+ score in mocks |
| Month 6 | Final revision + exam simulation | 1 mock daily (last 2 weeks) | Peak performance on exam day |
Month 2 — Section-Wise Skill Building
Month 2 is where you build the specific skills each section demands. Allocate time based on your Month 1 diagnosis — spend more time on weaker sections without completely neglecting stronger ones.
– English Language: Read 2 full-length passages daily; identify inference vs. vocabulary vs. main idea questions
– Legal Reasoning: Study the principle-application method; practice 20 principle-fact sets daily
– Logical Reasoning: Begin Critical Reasoning (assumption, inference, strengthen/weaken); 15 CR questions daily
– Current Affairs: Daily newspaper + weekly consolidation notes; use a CA digest for older events
– Quantitative Techniques: Practice DI from tables and bar graphs; 2 sets daily (10-15 minutes total)
Months 3-4 — The Critical Phase
Months 3 and 4 are the make-or-break phase of CLAT preparation. This is when you transition from learning to applying — from understanding concepts to performing under exam conditions.
Month 3 priorities: Attempt all CLAT PYQs from 2022-2025 under timed conditions. Analyse every error. Begin full-length mock tests — target 2 per week minimum. Start Current Affairs revision for events covered in months 1-3.
Month 4 priorities: Increase mock frequency to 3 per week. Track your score trajectory — you should see consistent improvement. Deep-dive into your persistent weak areas. Add puzzle-type Logical Reasoning (arrangements, blood relations) alongside Critical Reasoning.
Months 5-6 — Peak Performance Phase
The final two months are about peaking at the right time. Many students make the mistake of trying to learn new material in Month 5 and 6 — this is wrong. By now, your focus should be almost entirely on:
- Mock tests: 3-4 full-length mocks per week in Months 5, daily mocks in the last 2 weeks of Month 6
- Error analysis: Every mock is a diagnostic — identify and eliminate error patterns
- Current Affairs revision: Your news coverage should now span the full 10-12 month window
- Mental conditioning: Learn to manage exam-day stress, maintain concentration for 120 minutes
Section-by-Section Preparation Tips
C — Current Affairs: Daily newspaper from Day 1, no shortcuts
L — Legal Reasoning: Learn to apply principles, not memorise laws
E — English: Read quality prose daily — comprehension is built, not downloaded
A — Analytical (Logical) Reasoning: Master CR first, then puzzles
T — Tables/Data (QT): Practice DI daily — 15 minutes is enough
English Language Strategy
CLAT English tests passage inference (26% of questions) and vocabulary in context (19%). The key insight: vocabulary questions in CLAT are about the word’s meaning within the passage — not its dictionary definition. Read The Hindu editorial and Indian Express Op-Ed pages daily. When you encounter unfamiliar words, always look at the surrounding context before checking a dictionary.
Legal Reasoning Strategy
CLAT Legal Reasoning does NOT require any prior legal knowledge. The passage gives you the legal principle — your job is to apply it to the given facts. Practice the structured approach: (1) Read the principle carefully, (2) Identify the key conditions, (3) Map the facts to the conditions, (4) Draw the logical conclusion. Avoid bringing in outside legal knowledge — answer only from what the passage states.
Current Affairs Strategy
CA is the section where consistent daily effort creates the biggest advantage. Read one quality newspaper daily (45-60 minutes). After reading, spend 10 minutes noting key events in your own words. CLAT CA passages typically cover: Government schemes and policies, Constitutional amendments, International events, Economic policy, Science and Technology developments, Awards and appointments.
Logical Reasoning Strategy
By CLAT 2025, LR consists of approximately 50% Critical Reasoning + 50% Puzzle-based questions. For Critical Reasoning, master: Assumption questions, Inference questions, Strengthen/Weaken questions, and Paradox questions. For puzzles: linear and circular seating arrangements, blood relations, and coding-decoding are most common.
Quantitative Techniques Strategy
This is the section requiring the least dedicated study time — yet students frequently waste time here. QT is 100% Data Interpretation from tables, bar graphs, line graphs, and pie charts. Practice 2-3 DI sets daily (15 minutes maximum). Strong students complete QT in 10-12 minutes, freeing time for other sections.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
• Starting CA late: Many students delay newspaper reading — this is the costliest mistake. CA cannot be crammed in the final month.
• Memorising legal provisions: CLAT does not test IPC sections or case names. The passage gives you everything you need.
• Skipping mock analysis: Attempting mocks without analysing errors gives you a score — not improvement.
• Neglecting QT: Even though QT carries fewer questions, consistently scoring 8+/10 here is achievable and impactful.
• Studying new material in the final month: Month 6 is for revision, mocks, and peak performance — not new concepts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I crack CLAT in 6 months if I am starting from scratch?
Yes — many students crack CLAT with 6 months of focused preparation starting from zero prior knowledge. The key conditions are: (1) consistent daily study of 4-6 hours, (2) starting newspaper reading from Day 1, (3) following a structured section-wise plan, and (4) taking and analysing full-length mock tests from Month 3 onwards. CLAT does not test prior legal knowledge — it tests reading, reasoning, and analytical skills that can be built in 6 months.
Q: How many hours per day should I study for CLAT?
For a 6-month preparation window, 4-6 hours of focused study daily is recommended. Quality matters more than quantity — 4 focused hours with active engagement outperforms 8 hours of distracted study. Include: 1 hour newspaper reading, 1-2 hours section-wise study, 1 hour mock/PYQ practice, and 30 minutes of review and note-making.
Q: Which is the most important section in CLAT?
Current Affairs and GK and Legal Reasoning carry the highest weightage (~28-32 questions each). However, English Language is foundational — since all sections are passage-based, strong reading comprehension directly improves performance across the entire paper. Do not neglect any section, but prioritise CA from Day 1.
Q: How many mock tests should I take in 6 months?
Target a minimum of 30-50 full-length mock tests over 6 months. Begin with 1 mock per week in Months 2-3, increase to 2-3 per week in Months 4-5, and aim for daily mocks in the final 2 weeks. More important than the number: analysing every mock thoroughly to identify and eliminate error patterns.
Q: What is a realistic target score for CLAT 2027 preparation starting now?
With 6 months of focused preparation, a target of 88-95 out of 120 is realistic for a dedicated student. Scores of 90+ typically secure admission to top-5 NLUs. Your mock test scores at the end of Month 4 are a reliable predictor of your exam performance — aim to be consistently scoring 85+ in mocks by Month 4.
Ready to begin your CLAT journey? Take a Free CLAT Mock Test to establish your baseline, review the complete CLAT Syllabus 2027, or explore our structured CLAT Coaching programme with expert faculty, daily current affairs, and 50+ mock tests.
Source: CLAT Gurukul Research Team — April 2026
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Practice Quiz — 10 CLAT-Style Questions
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