TimetableMaker
✦ Free · No sign-up · Instant export

Free GCSE Revision Timetable Maker

The free online revision timetable maker built for GCSE students. Colour-code every subject, spread revision across 8 weeks, and download your printable PDF plan instantly.

Create Free Timetable
No sign-up PDF & Excel Shareable link

Design Your GCSE Revision Plan

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Why use our Revision Timetable Maker?

Everything you need, built in — for free.

Up to 12 GCSE Subjects

Cover Maths, English, Science, History, Geography and more side by side.

Colour-Coded Subjects

Assign a unique colour per subject to spot workload imbalances instantly.

Spaced Repetition Layout

Spread revision blocks across 6–8 weeks to avoid last-minute cramming.

Printable PDF

Download a clean A4 PDF and pin it on the wall where you study.

Clash-Free Planning

Conflict detection ensures no two revision sessions overlap.

Share With Teachers

Send your revision plan via link to a teacher or tutor for feedback.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I make a GCSE revision timetable?+

List all your GCSE subjects and note the exam date for each. Spread 45-to-60 minute revision blocks across the 6–8 weeks before your first exam. Prioritise subjects where you lose the most marks, and use different colours per subject so the balance is visible at a glance.

When should I start my GCSE revision timetable?+

Ideally 8 weeks before your first exam. This gives you enough time to cover every topic at least twice — once for initial revision and once for past-paper practice in the final fortnight.

How many subjects can I add?+

As many as you need. Most GCSE students plan across 8–12 subjects. Assign a unique colour to each one so you can instantly see which subjects are getting enough attention.

Should I include breaks in my GCSE revision plan?+

Yes — explicitly schedule breaks as real events on the timetable. A 10-minute break every 50 minutes is evidence-backed and makes the plan realistic enough to stick to.

How do I structure a GCSE revision timetable?+

Block your hardest or lowest-grade subjects into your peak energy hours (typically morning). Interleave different subjects each day rather than spending an entire day on one subject. Reserve the final week for pure past-paper practice, not new content.

Is this GCSE revision timetable maker free?+

Yes, fully free. No sign-up and no watermarks. Download as PDF or PNG and print immediately.

How to Create Your Revision Timetable Maker

01

List Your Subjects & Exam Dates

Write down every GCSE subject and when its first exam falls. Work backwards to calculate how many revision weeks you have per subject.

02

Assign Colours & Fill the Grid

Give each subject a colour, then fill blocks across the 8-week grid. Give more slots to subjects where you are currently performing below your target grade.

03

Print, Pin & Tick Off

Download the PDF, print it at A4, and pin it above your desk. Tick off each completed session with a pen — this simple habit keeps motivation high through exam season.

Why GCSE Students Need a Dedicated Revision Timetable

GCSE exam season typically covers 8–12 subjects across a condensed 6-week period. Without a structured revision timetable, it is almost impossible to give each subject adequate attention. Our free GCSE revision timetable maker lets you visualise every subject side by side, identify which topics you are neglecting, and redistribute your time before it is too late. Colour-coding subjects means a single glance at your printed plan tells you exactly what the next revision session should be — no more wasting time deciding.

The most effective GCSE revision plans block out time in 45-to-60 minute focused sessions with explicit breaks built in. By scheduling breaks as real events on your timetable, you make the plan achievable rather than aspirational — and you are far more likely to stick to it through the final weeks.

How to Make a GCSE Revision Timetable That Actually Works

The most common mistake GCSE students make is giving equal time to every subject regardless of their current grade or how much content each involves. A better approach is to audit your predicted grades first: subjects where you are already on track need maintenance revision (1–2 sessions per week), while subjects below your target grade need heavy investment (3–4 sessions per week).

Use the colour-coded grid in our free revision timetable maker to make this imbalance visible. If Maths is taking up half your grid, you will immediately see it — and can rebalance before you run out of weeks. Download the plan as a PDF and update it every Sunday evening as you track which topics you have genuinely mastered versus which still need more work.

The Science of Spaced Repetition for GCSE Revision

Spaced repetition is the single most evidence-backed revision technique. Rather than marathon sessions on one subject, distributing shorter revision blocks across multiple days forces your brain to recall information just as it begins to fade — each successful recall strengthens the neural pathway a little more. Our online GCSE revision planner makes implementing spaced repetition effortless: instead of blocking off five hours of History on Monday, schedule 90 minutes of History on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Combine spaced repetition with active recall — closing your notes and testing yourself on what you just revised — and you have the two most powerful revision techniques working together. Use the notes field in each block to write one self-test question, and answer it at the start of the next session.

Printable GCSE Revision Timetable: Why Paper Still Wins

A revision timetable that lives only on your phone is too easy to swipe away. The most effective approach is to build your plan in our free online maker, download the high-resolution PDF, and pin it visibly on the wall where you study. Physical proximity creates a constant, low-level commitment reminder that a notification cannot replicate.

Our free GCSE revision timetable PDF exports are clean, A4-formatted, and designed to be read at arm's length. Once printed, mark each completed session with a pen — this simple act of ticking off blocks is a proven motivational technique that keeps momentum going through the toughest weeks of exam season. Planning A Levels too? See our dedicated A Level Revision Planner.