SSC CGL Daily Timetable for Working Aspirants
A working aspirant needs a timetable that survives office workload. The plan should use short weekday sessions and protect weekends for mocks.
The main rule is simple: do not waste limited study time deciding what to study.
Who this is for
This page is for aspirants preparing with a 9-to-5 job, commute or other daily responsibilities.
Practical action plan
- Use 45 to 60 minutes for Quant or Reasoning on weekdays.
- Use 20 minutes for English vocabulary, grammar or GK recall.
- Use 10 minutes at night for mistake-book revision.
- Reserve weekend time for full mock plus analysis.
What to do next
| Focus | Action |
|---|---|
| Morning | Formula, vocab or static GK revision |
| After office | One topic practice set or sectional test |
| Night | Mistake-book review and next-day target |
| Weekend | Mock test, analysis and weak-topic repair |
How ExamRocket helps
ExamRocket reduces planning friction by showing the next daily mission and adaptive practice set, which is useful when time after office is limited.
Preparation Use
How this working timetable guide should change your SSC CGL preparation
SSC CGL Daily Timetable for Working Aspirants is useful only when it changes your timetable, mock strategy, or revision order. Treat this guide as a decision page: understand the rule or strategy, convert it into a weekly target, and test it through SSC CGL mock tests and PYQ-based practice.
Before you practise
- Note the exact rule, pattern, or strategy that affects your preparation.
- Decide which subject or topic needs practice today.
- Keep official SSC instructions separate from coaching-site assumptions.
During mock analysis
- Check whether your mistakes come from speed, accuracy, or wrong topic priority.
- Compare your section-wise time with the latest exam pattern.
- Revise only the weak areas that repeatedly hurt your score.
After this guide
- Take one free topic test to confirm understanding.
- Add difficult mistakes to revision.
- Attempt a mixed mock so the rule is tested under exam pressure.
Join and turn this guide into practice
ExamRocket connects guides, free mock tests, PYQ-based practice, daily missions, and mistake review. That matters because reading a guide does not improve rank unless it changes what you practise next.
Join free and start practiceFrequently asked questions
- Can I prepare for SSC CGL after office?
- Yes, if your sessions are focused and you use weekends for mocks and analysis.
- How many hours should a working aspirant study?
- A realistic weekday target is 1.5 to 2.5 focused hours, with longer blocks on weekends.
Exam rules can change each cycle. Always confirm the latest details against the official SSC notification at ssc.gov.in.