Study Planner Generator

Create a personalised day-by-day study schedule. Enter your exam date, subjects, and available hours — get an instant plan you can download as PDF.

What is the Study Planner Generator?

The Study Planner Generator is a free online tool that creates a personalised, day-by-day study schedule tailored to your exam timeline. Whether you're preparing for board exams, university finals, standardised tests, or professional certifications — this planner helps you organise your revision efficiently.

Simply enter your exam date, add the subjects you need to cover, and specify how many hours you can study each day. The tool instantly generates a balanced study timetable that distributes your available time equally across all subjects. No more guessing how to split your day — the planner does the math for you.

Once your plan is ready, you can download it as a PDF to print or keep on your phone. Everything runs in your browser — no signup, no account, and your data is never stored on any server. Start planning smarter today.

Why You Should Bother Making a Plan

Look, nobody loves making timetables. But here's the reality: students who follow even a rough study plan consistently do better than those who wing it. It's not about being disciplined or organised — it's about not wasting time figuring out "what should I study right now?" every single day.

Without a plan, most of us drift towards the subjects we like and avoid the ones we don't. You might spend 3 hours on Biology because it's interesting and then "run out of time" for Physics. Sound familiar? A planner catches this and spreads your time evenly, whether you want it to or not.

How People Actually Use This

A Few Things That'll Make the Plan Work Better

  1. Don't lie about hours. If you realistically study 4 hours a day, enter 4 — not 8. Our study hours guide can help you figure out a honest number.
  2. Include subjects you think you "already know." You don't. Or at least, you won't by exam day if you don't review them.
  3. Download the PDF. Having it on paper or on your home screen makes it feel real. Stick it where you study.
  4. Use a timer during study sessions. The Pomodoro Timer keeps you honest — 25 minutes of real work, then a break. Check out our Pomodoro guide if you haven't tried it.
  5. Tick off sessions as you complete them. Small wins build momentum.

Why This Beats a Blank Notebook

A hand-drawn timetable works fine — until you have to figure out how to evenly split 7 subjects across 18 days while accounting for weekends. That's annoying maths nobody wants to do. This tool does it in about 2 seconds and gives you a clean PDF you can actually follow.

Want the full guide on building a study schedule? Read: How to Make a Study Timetable That Actually Works.

How many hours can you dedicate to studying each day?

How to Use the Study Planner

  1. Select your exam date using the date picker above.
  2. Add all the subjects you need to study by typing each name and clicking "Add".
  3. Enter how many hours you can study per day.
  4. Click "Generate Study Plan" to create your personalised schedule.
  5. Review your day-by-day plan and download it as a PDF to keep handy.

Frequently Asked Questions

The planner evenly distributes your available study hours across all subjects for each day. If hours don't divide evenly, the remaining time is distributed to the first subjects in your list.

Currently the schedule is generated based on your inputs. To adjust, simply modify the subjects, hours, or exam date and regenerate. Your downloaded PDF will always reflect the latest plan.

Yes! The PDF is generated entirely in your browser — no internet connection is needed after the page loads. You can save and print it anytime.

No. We do not collect, store, or transmit any of your data. Everything runs locally in your browser.

Yes, there is no hard limit on subjects. However, if you have many subjects with limited hours per day, each subject may receive very short study blocks.

The planner will still generate a schedule for the remaining time. If the plan seems too tight, consider focusing on your weakest subjects first.