With CLAT 2027 expected in December 2026, students starting in July have exactly six months to build a structured preparation routine across all five sections of the exam.

The Common Law Admission Test (CLAT) 2027 is conducted by the Consortium of National Law Universities for admission to five-year integrated BA LLB and LLM programmes at National Law Universities across India. The UG paper carries 120 marks spread across English Language, Current Affairs and General Knowledge, Legal Reasoning, Logical Reasoning and Quantitative Techniques. A focused six-month plan starting in July gives you time to cover every section, take regular mock tests and revise thoroughly before the exam.

  • Total marks: 120 (120 questions, 1 mark each, -0.25 negative marking per wrong answer)
  • Exam duration: 2 hours, offline pen-and-paper mode
  • Five sections: English Language, Current Affairs and GK, Legal Reasoning, Logical Reasoning and Quantitative Techniques
  • Six months (July to December 2026) allows full syllabus coverage, two revision cycles and 20-plus full-length mock tests
  • Start reading a national newspaper daily from Day 1 — Current Affairs and GK carries 28–32 questions, the highest weightage in the paper

CLAT 2027 Exam Pattern at a Glance

Understanding the paper structure is the first step in your six-month plan. CLAT 2027 UG is a 120-question offline test of 2 hours with 0.25 marks deducted for every wrong answer. All questions are passage-based — you read a short extract and answer the questions that follow. Reading speed and comprehension matter across every section, not just English.

Section Approximate Questions Marks
English Language 22–26 22–26
Current Affairs including GK 28–32 28–32
Legal Reasoning 28–32 28–32
Logical Reasoning 22–26 22–26
Quantitative Techniques 10–14 10–14
Total 120 120

Month-Wise Study Plan (July to December 2026)

Each month has a distinct focus so no section is left uncovered and revision cycles are built in well before the exam.

Month Primary Focus Key Tasks
July 2026 Foundation and Habit Building Collect resources; start daily newspaper; cover English reading basics; map the full CLAT syllabus
August 2026 Legal Reasoning and Logical Reasoning Core Study legal concepts (torts, contract, constitutional basics); practise critical reasoning patterns
September 2026 Current Affairs Deep Coverage Compile monthly current affairs notes; revise static GK (polity, history, economy); continue Legal Reasoning practice
October 2026 Full Syllabus Completion and Topic Tests Complete Quantitative Techniques; run section-wise timed tests; identify and address weak areas
November 2026 Full-Length Mock Tests and Error Analysis 2–3 full mocks per week; build and review an error log weekly; continue current affairs diary
December 2026 Revision and Exam Readiness Rapid revision of notes; 1 mock every 2–3 days; 6-month current affairs recap; exam logistics

July — Foundation Month

July is for building the daily habits that will carry you through the next five months. Start every morning with a national newspaper — The Hindu or Indian Express. Spend 20–30 minutes taking notes on government decisions, Supreme Court verdicts, international events and economic policy. Download the last three years of CLAT question papers and read through the passage style before attempting them. This month is for orientation and consistency, not speed.

August — Legal and Logical Reasoning

Legal Reasoning is what separates CLAT from most other entrance exams. You do not need a law background — you apply the given legal principle to the given facts, nothing more. Study core legal areas: torts (negligence, nuisance, defamation), contract law (offer, acceptance, consideration) and constitutional principles (fundamental rights, directive principles). For Logical Reasoning, focus on critical reasoning passages, syllogisms and analytical puzzles practised under timed conditions.

September — Current Affairs and Static GK

CLAT 2027 will test current affairs from roughly December 2025 through November 2026 — build your month-by-month notes throughout this period. Organise your current affairs booklet by category: Supreme Court and High Court judgements, government schemes and policy, international summits, science and technology developments, sports and awards and important appointments. Pair this with static GK revision covering Indian polity, the Constitution, modern history and basic economics.

October — Full Coverage and Weak Area Attack

By October you should have covered all five sections at least once. Take a full-length diagnostic mock at the start of October to identify your weakest section and allocate extra time there. Finish Quantitative Techniques — covering basic arithmetic, ratios, percentages and data interpretation — this month since it requires the least preparation time of the five sections. Run section-wise timed tests every week across Legal Reasoning, English and Current Affairs to track progress.

November — Mock Test Month

Take at least 2 full-length CLAT mocks per week in November under timed exam-like conditions. After every mock, spend equal time analysing your errors. Classify each mistake: factual gap, time pressure, passage misread or calculation error. Keep an error log and revisit it weekly. This analysis habit is what separates students who improve across mocks from those who plateau.

December — Consolidation and Exam Week

Stop adding new material after the first week of December. Revise your current affairs booklet, legal concepts summary and vocabulary notes. Take one mock every two or three days to maintain speed and accuracy without burning out. In the final three days, revise your notes, confirm your exam centre location and admit card details and get adequate sleep.


Section-Wise Preparation Tips

Section Core Tip Common Mistake to Avoid
English Language Practise reading long passages quickly and answering inference questions; build vocabulary through reading not rote word lists Spending too long on a single passage; trying to memorise vocabulary without context
Current Affairs and GK Maintain a monthly current affairs booklet organised by category — courts, policy, international, science, sports Relying only on last-minute monthly magazines without sustained daily reading from July
Legal Reasoning Always apply the stated principle — never argue with it or substitute your own legal knowledge Using external legal knowledge instead of the principle given in the passage
Logical Reasoning Master critical reasoning argument types; practise timed sets from September to build speed Over-investing time in Logical Reasoning at the cost of higher-weightage sections
Quantitative Techniques Class 10 arithmetic is sufficient; focus on data interpretation graphs and ratio questions Over-preparing for Quantitative Techniques — it carries only 10–14 marks

Mock Test and Revision Strategy

Mock tests are the single most important preparation tool for CLAT 2027 — accuracy and time management matter as much as knowledge. With 120 questions in 120 minutes you have roughly one minute per question. Legal Reasoning and Current Affairs passages can each take 4–5 minutes. Practise strategic skipping: move past a difficult question and return to it later so easy marks are never lost to time pressure.

Target mock test schedule:

  • October: 1 full mock per week — diagnostic focus; map your section scores and time split after each attempt
  • November: 2–3 full mocks per week — speed and accuracy focus; maintain a weekly error log
  • December: 1 mock every 2–3 days — consolidation focus; no new topics after the first week

Based on previous year trends, most high-scoring students attempt 100–110 questions, not all 120. Attempting fewer questions with higher accuracy (80 percent and above) produces better final scores than rushing through all 120 with frequent errors. Your revision strategy in the final two weeks should focus on speed-accuracy balance, not on covering new content.

CLAT 2027 Preparation FAQs

Ques. Is 6 months enough to prepare for CLAT 2027?

Ans. Yes. Six months is widely considered an ideal preparation window for CLAT. Students who start in July, follow a structured month-wise plan across all five sections, take regular mocks from October and maintain a daily current affairs habit from Day 1 are well-placed to score competitively in CLAT 2027.

Ques. Which section should I focus on first in July?

Ans. Start with Current Affairs and English reading habits in July. Both require sustained daily practice over months and cannot be crammed in the final weeks. Legal Reasoning and Logical Reasoning core concepts can follow in August once a reading routine is established.

Ques. How many mock tests should I take for CLAT 2027?

Ans. Aim for at least 20–25 full-length CLAT mock tests between October and December 2026. Analysis matters as much as volume — spend equal time reviewing your errors after every mock to ensure improvement across attempts rather than repeating the same mistakes.

Ques. Which newspapers are best for CLAT 2027 current affairs?

Ans. The Hindu and Indian Express are the most widely recommended newspapers for CLAT current affairs preparation. Focus on national news, court verdicts, government policy and editorials. Editorials also build English reading speed and comprehension for the English Language section.

Ques. What is a good score in CLAT 2027?

Ans. Based on previous year trends, a score of 90 or above out of 120 is generally considered competitive for top National Law Universities. Scores above 100 are typically associated with admission at NLSIU Bangalore, NALSAR Hyderabad and WBNUJS Kolkata, though actual cutoffs vary each year depending on total applicants and seat availability.

Ques. How many hours should I study daily for CLAT 2027?

Ans. 4–6 hours of focused daily study is sufficient in the initial four months (July to October). Increase to 6–8 hours in November and December as the exam approaches. Consistency across six months matters more than marathon sessions concentrated in the final weeks.