How Many Hours a Day Should You Study for CLAT? One of the most common questions among CLAT aspirants is how many hours of studying is actually required to crack the exam. The answer is not as straightforward as most people expect, and anyone who gives you a fixed number without context is oversimplifying it.
The truth is, the right number of study hours depends entirely on where you are in your preparation journey. A Class 11 student has a very different reality than a Class 12 student racing against boards, and a repeater has an entirely different set of challenges than both.
Let’s break it down.
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Before getting into numbers, it is important to establish one thing clearly. More hours at the desk do not automatically translate into a better CLAT rank. CLAT is not a test of how much you have memorised; it tests your reading ability, analytical thinking, and reasoning skills. These are built through consistent, focused practice over time.
A student who puts in 3 distraction-free, well-structured hours every day will almost always outperform someone sitting at a desk for 8 unfocused hours. So the real question is not just how many hours, but how well you are using them.
With that said, here is a realistic breakdown based on your current stage of preparation.
If you are in Class 11, you are in the most advantageous position of any CLAT aspirant. You have time, and that is arguably your biggest asset right now.
At this stage, the goal is not to cover the entire CLAT syllabus but to build strong foundations and the right habits. Dedicating 2 to 3 hours daily is more than sufficient, and in fact, pushing beyond this can lead to burnout well before the actual exam year arrives.
Here is how to make those hours count:
Class 11 is about playing the long game. Use this phase to become a stronger reader and thinker; the rest will follow.
Class 12 is where preparation gets real, and where most aspirants feel the pressure of balancing board exams alongside CLAT. It is challenging, but it is absolutely manageable with a structured approach.
On school days, aim for 4 to 5 focused hours split across the day. Mornings before school are ideal for newspaper reading or vocabulary revision. Evenings should be dedicated to one CLAT section at a time, rotating across the week so no section gets neglected.
Weekends deserve a different approach entirely:
One important reminder: do not let CLAT preparation come at the cost of your board exam performance. Your board percentage matters for NLU eligibility. The two are not in conflict if your time is managed well.
If you are preparing for CLAT a second time, you already have one significant advantage over first-time aspirants: you know the exam. You have seen the paper, you understand the pattern, and you are aware of where you went wrong.
That is precisely why repeaters should not simply study more; they should study differently.
The most common mistake repeaters make is repeating the same preparation strategy and expecting a different result. This time, your approach needs to be built entirely around identifying and fixing your specific weak areas rather than covering everything from scratch.
Aim for 6 to 8 focused hours daily. Structure your day around:
If you are looking for a structured program built specifically for retakers, CL-LST Repeater’s Program is designed to address exactly this: focused, gap-based preparation rather than starting from zero.
| Stage | Recommended Daily Hours |
| Class 11 | 2-3 hours |
| Class 12 | 4-5 hours (weekdays), 6-7 hours (weekends) |
| Repeater / Dropper | 6-8 hours |
Cracking CLAT has never been about who studied the most hours. It has always been about who studied consistently, smartly, and with a clear sense of purpose. Whatever your stage, start well, stay disciplined, and let your preparation speak on exam day.