Scotland National Qualifications 2026 Timetable

Scotland SQA Exam Dates 2026: National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher Timetable

This guide brings together the full Scotland 2026 National Qualifications exam timetable for National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher courses in one easy-to-scan page. The exam window begins on Wednesday 22 April 2026 and finishes on Tuesday 2 June 2026, with Tuesday 2 June listed as the contingency day. Results day is Tuesday 4 August 2026. Use the filterable table below to search by subject, level, date, paper or session, then read the planning guide to turn the timetable into a practical revision plan.

Exam window startsWednesday 22 April 2026
Exam window endsTuesday 2 June 2026
Results dayTuesday 4 August 2026
Covered levelsNational 5, Higher, Advanced Higher

Important timetable symbol: an asterisk * after an exam time means candidates usually need separate accommodation, normally in a practical room or another suitably equipped room. Always confirm your personal timetable with your school, college or training provider, especially if you have clashes, additional arrangements, practical exams or language listening papers.

Complete SQA 2026 exam timetable for National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher

The table below is designed for students, parents, tutors and schools who need a fast, practical way to check the Scotland 2026 exam schedule. It includes the date, session, subject, level, paper name and time. Because many learners sit a mixture of National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher subjects, the table is intentionally arranged by date rather than by subject only. This makes it easier to spot heavy weeks, same-day exams, close turnarounds and potential revision bottlenecks.

Use the search box for a subject such as Mathematics, English, Physics, Biology, History or Spanish. Use the level filter to isolate National 5, Higher or Advanced Higher. Use the session filter to separate morning and afternoon exams. The clear button restores the full table.

Showing all timetable entries.
Date Session Course Level Paper Time
Wednesday 22 AprilMorningEnvironmental ScienceNational 509:00–11:30
Wednesday 22 AprilMorningSpanishHigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:00
Wednesday 22 AprilMorningSpanishHigherListening11:30–12:00* approx
Wednesday 22 AprilMorningSpanishAdvanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Wednesday 22 AprilMorningSpanishAdvanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing11:00–12:20*
Wednesday 22 AprilAfternoonSpanishNational 5Reading and Writing13:00–14:30
Wednesday 22 AprilAfternoonSpanishNational 5Listening15:00–15:30* approx
Wednesday 22 AprilAfternoonEnvironmental ScienceHigherPaper 112:45–13:30
Wednesday 22 AprilAfternoonEnvironmental ScienceHigherPaper 214:00–16:30
Thursday 23 AprilMorningGeographyHigherPhysical and Human Environments09:00–10:50
Thursday 23 AprilMorningCruinn-eòlasHigherÀrainneachdan Fiosaigeach agus Daonna09:00–11:10
Thursday 23 AprilMorningGeographyHigherGlobal Issues and Geographical Skills11:20–12:30
Thursday 23 AprilMorningCruinn-eòlasHigherCùisean Cruinneil agus Sgilean Cruinn-eòlais11:40–13:10
Thursday 23 AprilMorningGeographyAdvanced Higher09:00–11:30
Thursday 23 AprilMorningCruinn-eòlasAdvanced Higher09:00–11:30
Thursday 23 AprilAfternoonGeographyNational 513:00–15:20
Thursday 23 AprilAfternoonCruinn-eòlasNational 513:00–15:40
Friday 24 AprilMorningBusiness ManagementNational 509:00–11:00
Friday 24 AprilMorningBusiness ManagementHigher09:00–11:45
Friday 24 AprilMorningBusiness ManagementAdvanced Higher09:00–11:45
Friday 24 AprilAfternoonEngineering ScienceNational 513:00–14:50
Friday 24 AprilAfternoonEngineering ScienceHigher13:00–15:30
Friday 24 AprilAfternoonEngineering ScienceAdvanced Higher13:00–15:30
Monday 27 AprilMorningHealth and Food TechnologyNational 509:00–10:50
Monday 27 AprilMorningHealth and Food TechnologyHigher09:00–11:00
Monday 27 AprilMorningHealth and Food TechnologyAdvanced Higher09:00–11:30
Monday 27 AprilAfternoonMusicNational 512:00–12:45*
Monday 27 AprilAfternoonMusicHigher13:15–14:15*
Monday 27 AprilAfternoonMusicAdvanced Higher14:45–16:00* approx
Monday 27 AprilAfternoonMusic: PortfolioAdvanced Higher14:45–16:00* approx
Tuesday 28 AprilMorningBiologyHigherPaper 1 Multiple Choice09:00–09:40
Tuesday 28 AprilMorningBiologyHigherPaper 210:10–12:30
Tuesday 28 AprilMorningHuman BiologyHigherPaper 1 Multiple Choice09:00–09:40
Tuesday 28 AprilMorningHuman BiologyHigherPaper 210:10–12:30
Tuesday 28 AprilMorningBiologyAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Tuesday 28 AprilAfternoonBiologyNational 513:00–15:30
Wednesday 29 AprilMorningEconomicsNational 509:00–11:00
Wednesday 29 AprilMorningGàidhligNational 5Leughadh agus Litreachas09:00–10:40
Wednesday 29 AprilMorningGàidhligNational 5Èisteachd11:10–11:35*
Wednesday 29 AprilMorningPhotographyHigher09:00–10:00
Wednesday 29 AprilMorningEconomicsAdvanced Higher09:00–11:30
Wednesday 29 AprilAfternoonMediaNational 512:30–14:30
Wednesday 29 AprilAfternoonEconomicsHigher12:30–15:00
Wednesday 29 AprilAfternoonGàidhligHigherLeughadh agus Litreachas12:30–14:20
Wednesday 29 AprilAfternoonGàidhligHigherÈisteachd14:50–15:30*
Wednesday 29 AprilAfternoonMediaHigherAnalysis of Media Content12:30–14:15
Wednesday 29 AprilAfternoonMediaHigherThe Role of Media14:45–15:45
Thursday 30 AprilMorningEnglishNational 5Reading for Understanding, Analysis and Evaluation09:00–10:00
Thursday 30 AprilMorningEnglishNational 5Critical Reading10:30–12:00
Thursday 30 AprilAfternoonEnglishAdvanced HigherLiterary Study13:00–14:30
Thursday 30 AprilAfternoonEnglishAdvanced HigherTextual Analysis15:00–16:30
Friday 01 MayMorningEnglishHigherReading for Understanding, Analysis and Evaluation09:00–10:30
Friday 01 MayMorningEnglishHigherCritical Reading11:00–12:45
Friday 01 MayAfternoonNo exams
Monday 04 MayFull dayNo exams: bank holiday
Tuesday 05 MayMorningDramaNational 509:00–10:30
Tuesday 05 MayMorningDramaHigher09:00–11:00
Tuesday 05 MayMorningGàidhligAdvanced HigherSgrùdadh09:00–10:30
Tuesday 05 MayMorningGàidhligAdvanced HigherLitreachas agus Sgrìobhadh11:00–12:40
Tuesday 05 MayAfternoonAdministration and ITNational 513:00–15:00*
Tuesday 05 MayAfternoonAdministration and ITHigher13:00–14:30
Tuesday 05 MayAfternoonGàidhligAdvanced HigherEadar-theangachadh13:30–14:00
Wednesday 06 MayMorningDanceNational 509:00–10:00
Wednesday 06 MayMorningDanceHigher09:00–11:00
Wednesday 06 MayMorningFrenchHigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:00
Wednesday 06 MayMorningFrenchHigherListening11:30–12:00* approx
Wednesday 06 MayMorningFrenchAdvanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Wednesday 06 MayMorningFrenchAdvanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing11:00–12:20*
Wednesday 06 MayAfternoonFrenchNational 5Reading and Writing13:00–14:30
Wednesday 06 MayAfternoonFrenchNational 5Listening15:00–15:30* approx
Thursday 07 MayMorningMathematicsHigherPaper 1 Non-calculator09:00–10:15
Thursday 07 MayMorningMathematicsHigherPaper 210:45–12:15
Thursday 07 MayMorningMatamataigHigherPaipear 1 Gun àireamhair09:00–10:15
Thursday 07 MayMorningMatamataigHigherPaipear 210:45–12:15
Thursday 07 MayMorningMathematicsAdvanced HigherPaper 1 Non-calculator09:00–10:00
Thursday 07 MayMorningMathematicsAdvanced HigherPaper 210:30–13:00
Thursday 07 MayMorningMatamataigAdvanced HigherPaipear 1 Gun àireamhair09:00–10:00
Thursday 07 MayMorningMatamataigAdvanced HigherPaipear 210:30–13:00
Thursday 07 MayAfternoonPractical ElectronicsNational 513:30–14:30
Friday 08 MayMorningMathematicsNational 5Paper 1 Non-calculator09:00–10:00
Friday 08 MayMorningMathematicsNational 5Paper 210:30–12:00
Friday 08 MayMorningMatamataigNational 5Paipear 1 Gun àireamhair09:00–10:00
Friday 08 MayMorningMatamataigNational 5Paipear 210:30–12:00
Friday 08 MayAfternoonMusic TechnologyNational 513:00–14:00*
Friday 08 MayAfternoonMusic TechnologyHigher14:30–15:30*
Monday 11 MayMorningReligious, Moral and Philosophical StudiesNational 509:00–11:20
Monday 11 MayMorningReligious, Moral and Philosophical StudiesHigherWorld Religion, Morality and Belief09:00–11:15
Monday 11 MayMorningReligious, Moral and Philosophical StudiesHigherReligious and Philosophical Questions11:45–12:30
Monday 11 MayMorningReligious, Moral and Philosophical StudiesAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Monday 11 MayAfternoonGraphic CommunicationNational 513:00–15:00
Monday 11 MayAfternoonGraphic CommunicationHigher13:00–15:30
Monday 11 MayAfternoonGraphic CommunicationAdvanced Higher13:00–15:30
Tuesday 12 MayMorningChemistryHigherPaper 1 Multiple Choice09:00–09:40
Tuesday 12 MayMorningChemistryHigherPaper 210:10–12:30
Tuesday 12 MayMorningChemistryAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Tuesday 12 MayAfternoonChemistryNational 513:00–15:30
Wednesday 13 MayMorningEnglish for Speakers of Other LanguagesHigherReading09:00–10:10
Wednesday 13 MayMorningEnglish for Speakers of Other LanguagesHigherWriting10:40–12:20
Wednesday 13 MayAfternoonDesign and ManufactureNational 513:00–14:45
Wednesday 13 MayAfternoonDesign and ManufactureHigher13:00–15:15
Wednesday 13 MayAfternoonEnglish for Speakers of Other LanguagesHigherListening13:00–13:45* approx
Wednesday 13 MayAfternoonDesign and ManufactureAdvanced Higher13:00–15:15
Thursday 14 MayMorningHistoryHigherBritish, European and World History09:00–10:30
Thursday 14 MayMorningEachdraidhHigherEachdraidh Bhreatannach, Eòrpach agus An t-Saoghail09:00–10:50
Thursday 14 MayMorningHistoryHigherScottish History11:00–12:30
Thursday 14 MayMorningEachdraidhHigherEachdraidh Albannach11:20–13:10
Thursday 14 MayMorningHistoryAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Thursday 14 MayMorningEachdraidhAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Thursday 14 MayAfternoonHistoryNational 513:00–15:20
Thursday 14 MayAfternoonEachdraidhNational 513:00–15:40
Friday 15 MayMorningApplications of MathematicsNational 5Paper 1 Non-calculator09:00–09:50
Friday 15 MayMorningApplications of MathematicsNational 5Paper 210:30–12:10
Friday 15 MayMorningGnìomhachas MatamataigsNational 5Paipear 1 Gun àireamhair09:00–10:00
Friday 15 MayMorningGnìomhachas MatamataigsNational 5Paipear 210:30–12:20
Friday 15 MayAfternoonApplications of MathematicsHigher13:00–15:05*
Friday 15 MayAfternoonGnìomhachas MatamataigsHigher13:00–15:20*
Monday 18 MayMorningGermanHigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:00
Monday 18 MayMorningGermanHigherListening11:30–12:00* approx
Monday 18 MayMorningGermanAdvanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Monday 18 MayMorningGermanAdvanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing11:00–12:20*
Monday 18 MayAfternoonGermanNational 5Reading and Writing13:00–14:30
Monday 18 MayAfternoonGermanNational 5Listening15:00–15:30* approx
Monday 18 MayAfternoonPhysical EducationHigher13:00–15:30
Tuesday 19 MayMorningModern StudiesHigherPaper 109:00–10:45
Tuesday 19 MayMorningNuadh-eòlasHigherPaipear 109:00–11:05
Tuesday 19 MayMorningModern StudiesHigherPaper 211:15–12:30
Tuesday 19 MayMorningNuadh-eòlasHigherPaipear 211:35–13:10
Tuesday 19 MayMorningModern StudiesAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Tuesday 19 MayMorningNuadh-eòlasAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Tuesday 19 MayAfternoonModern StudiesNational 513:00–15:20
Tuesday 19 MayAfternoonNuadh-eòlasNational 513:00–15:40
Wednesday 20 MayMorningComputing ScienceNational 509:00–10:30
Wednesday 20 MayMorningSociologyNational 509:00–11:00
Wednesday 20 MayMorningComputing ScienceHigher09:00–11:00
Wednesday 20 MayMorningGaelic (Learners)HigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:00
Wednesday 20 MayMorningGaelic (Learners)HigherListening11:30–12:00* approx
Wednesday 20 MayMorningComputing ScienceAdvanced Higher09:00–11:00
Wednesday 20 MayMorningGaelic (Learners)Advanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Wednesday 20 MayMorningGaelic (Learners)Advanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing11:00–12:20*
Wednesday 20 MayAfternoonGaelic (Learners)National 5Reading and Writing13:00–14:30
Wednesday 20 MayAfternoonGaelic (Learners)National 5Listening15:00–15:30* approx
Wednesday 20 MayAfternoonSociologyHigher13:00–15:40
Thursday 21 MayMorningPhysicsHigherPaper 1 Multiple Choice09:00–09:45
Thursday 21 MayMorningPhysicsHigherPaper 210:15–12:30
Thursday 21 MayMorningPhysicsAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Thursday 21 MayAfternoonPhysicsNational 513:00–15:30
Friday 22 MayMorningClassical StudiesNational 509:00–11:00
Friday 22 MayMorningClassical StudiesHigherClassical Literature09:00–10:10
Friday 22 MayMorningClassical StudiesHigherClassical Society10:40–12:30
Friday 22 MayMorningClassical StudiesAdvanced Higher09:00–12:00
Friday 22 MayMorningStatisticsAdvanced HigherPaper 109:00–10:00
Friday 22 MayMorningStatisticsAdvanced HigherPaper 210:30–13:15
Friday 22 MayAfternoonChildcare and DevelopmentHigher13:30–15:00
Monday 25 MayMorningFashion and Textile TechnologyNational 509:00–10:00
Monday 25 MayMorningFashion and Textile TechnologyHigher09:00–10:30
Monday 25 MayMorningPoliticsHigherPaper 109:00–10:45
Monday 25 MayMorningPoliticsHigherPaper 211:15–12:30
Monday 25 MayAfternoonAccountingNational 513:00–15:00
Monday 25 MayAfternoonCareNational 513:00–14:10
Monday 25 MayAfternoonAccountingHigher13:00–15:30
Monday 25 MayAfternoonCareHigher13:00–14:30
Monday 25 MayAfternoonAccountingAdvanced Higher13:00–15:30
Tuesday 26 MayMorningArt and DesignNational 509:00–10:20
Tuesday 26 MayMorningArt and DesignHigher09:00–11:00
Tuesday 26 MayAfternoonPsychologyNational 513:00–15:00
Tuesday 26 MayAfternoonPsychologyHigher13:00–15:00
Tuesday 26 MayAfternoonMathematics of MechanicsAdvanced Higher13:00–16:00
Wednesday 27 MayMorningCantoneseNational 5Reading and Writing09:00–11:00
Wednesday 27 MayMorningCantoneseNational 5Listening11:30–12:00* approx
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin SimplifiedNational 5Reading and Writing09:00–11:00
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin SimplifiedNational 5Listening11:30–12:00* approx
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin TraditionalNational 5Reading and Writing09:00–11:00
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin TraditionalNational 5Listening11:30–12:00* approx
Wednesday 27 MayMorningCantoneseHigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:40
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin SimplifiedHigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:40
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin TraditionalHigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:40
Wednesday 27 MayMorningCantoneseAdvanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin SimplifiedAdvanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Wednesday 27 MayMorningMandarin TraditionalAdvanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Wednesday 27 MayAfternoonCantoneseHigherListening13:00–13:30* approx
Wednesday 27 MayAfternoonMandarin SimplifiedHigherListening13:00–13:30* approx
Wednesday 27 MayAfternoonMandarin TraditionalHigherListening13:00–13:30* approx
Wednesday 27 MayAfternoonCantoneseAdvanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing13:00–14:45*
Wednesday 27 MayAfternoonMandarin SimplifiedAdvanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing13:00–14:45*
Wednesday 27 MayAfternoonMandarin TraditionalAdvanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing13:00–14:45*
Thursday 28 MayMorningItalianNational 5Reading and Writing09:00–10:30
Thursday 28 MayMorningItalianNational 5Listening11:00–11:30* approx
Thursday 28 MayMorningItalianHigherReading and Directed Writing09:00–11:00
Thursday 28 MayMorningItalianHigherListening11:30–12:00* approx
Thursday 28 MayMorningItalianAdvanced HigherReading and Translation09:00–10:30
Thursday 28 MayMorningItalianAdvanced HigherListening and Discursive Writing11:15–12:35*
Thursday 28 MayAfternoonPractical CookeryNational 513:30–14:30
Friday 29 MayMorningEnglish for Speakers of Other LanguagesNational 5Reading09:00–10:10
Friday 29 MayMorningEnglish for Speakers of Other LanguagesNational 5Listening10:40–11:15* approx
Friday 29 MayMorningEnglish for Speakers of Other LanguagesNational 5Writing11:45–12:55
Friday 29 MayMorningPhilosophyNational 509:00–11:20
Friday 29 MayMorningPhilosophyHigherPaper 109:00–11:15
Friday 29 MayAfternoonPhilosophyHigherPaper 212:30–14:15
Monday 01 JuneMorningLatinNational 5Paper 1: Literary Appreciation09:00–10:45
Monday 01 JuneMorningLatinNational 5Paper 2: Translating11:15–12:15
Monday 01 JuneMorningUrduNational 5Reading and Writing09:00–10:30
Monday 01 JuneMorningUrduNational 5Listening11:00–11:30* approx
Monday 01 JuneMorningLatinHigherPaper 1: Literary Appreciation09:00–11:40
Monday 01 JuneMorningLatinAdvanced HigherPaper 1: Literary Appreciation09:00–10:45
Monday 01 JuneAfternoonLatinHigherPaper 2: Translating13:00–14:00
Monday 01 JuneAfternoonUrduHigherReading and Directed Writing13:00–15:00
Monday 01 JuneAfternoonUrduHigherListening15:30–16:00* approx
Monday 01 JuneAfternoonLatinAdvanced HigherPaper 2: Translating13:00–14:30
Tuesday 02 JuneFull dayNo exams: contingency day

How to use the SQA 2026 timetable properly

A timetable is more than a list of dates. For students taking National 5, Higher or Advanced Higher courses, it is the structure that should guide the final months of revision, the order of past-paper practice, and the timing of lighter recovery days. The strongest students do not simply highlight their exam dates and hope for the best. They translate every date into an action: when to finish first-pass revision, when to move into timed papers, when to review marking instructions, when to rest, and when to avoid adding brand-new content that may increase anxiety.

The first step is to identify every exam you are actually sitting. Do not rely only on a general public timetable if your school has given you a personalised timetable. Your personal timetable may include rooming arrangements, candidate number, seat number, extra time, separate accommodation, practical arrangements or clash instructions. If the official timetable and your school timetable look different, speak to your school, college or training provider before making travel or study decisions.

The second step is to group your exams into clusters. An exam cluster is any period where two or more papers sit very close together. For example, a learner may have a language paper and a science paper in the same week, or Higher Mathematics on one day and another demanding subject soon after. Clusters do not automatically mean the timetable is unfair; they simply mean you need earlier preparation. The closer two papers are, the less realistic it is to revise both from scratch in the final forty-eight hours. That final period should be used for retrieval practice, command words, error logs and confidence building.

The third step is to identify paper structure. Some courses have one written paper. Others have several papers on the same day. English, Mathematics, sciences and languages often require a different kind of stamina because the exam experience may involve multiple components. A short break between papers is not the same as a full day of rest. Plan food, hydration, equipment and mental reset strategies for these multi-paper days.

The fourth step is to mark asterisked entries. An asterisk after the time indicates that candidates are normally accommodated separately from candidates in other examinations, usually because the paper needs a practical or suitably equipped room. This matters for Music, Music Technology, Administration and IT, listening papers, and some mathematics applications entries. Students should treat asterisked papers as logistical events, not just academic events. You need to know where to go, what equipment is involved, how early to arrive and whether your school has any additional instructions.

The fifth step is to build a personal revision calendar backwards from the exam date. Work backwards in three layers: final review, timed practice, and content repair. Final review is the last week or few days before the exam. Timed practice is the period where you sit papers or paper sections under exam conditions. Content repair is where you fix weak topics. Many students make the mistake of spending too long on content repair and too little time on timed performance. By the final stage, the priority should be using knowledge under pressure.

Five-step timetable method

  1. Search the table and list every exam you are sitting.
  2. Copy each exam into your school planner or digital calendar.
  3. Mark papers that are close together, on the same day or in the same week.
  4. Set one final-review target, one timed-paper target and one weak-topic target for each subject.
  5. Confirm any clash, rooming or extra-time arrangement directly with your school or college.

What to check for each entry

  • Date: the day you must be available for the exam.
  • Session: morning, afternoon or full-day note.
  • Level: National 5, Higher or Advanced Higher.
  • Paper: the component you are sitting, such as Paper 1, Paper 2, Listening or Critical Reading.
  • Time: the start and end time, including any approximate listening paper times.

National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher: what the timetable means for each level

National 5 exam planning

National 5 exams often sit at a crucial point in a student’s school journey because they can shape course choices for the following year. The timetable shows National 5 exams across a wide range of subjects, including English, Mathematics, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Geography, History, Modern Studies, languages, Business Management, Computing Science, Art and Design, Drama, Music, Practical Cookery and many more. For National 5 students, the main priority is to turn the timetable into a clear sequence of manageable goals.

National 5 learners should pay particular attention to subjects with multiple papers or components. National 5 English has Reading for Understanding, Analysis and Evaluation followed by Critical Reading on Thursday 30 April. National 5 Mathematics has Paper 1 Non-calculator and Paper 2 on Friday 8 May. National 5 Applications of Mathematics has Paper 1 Non-calculator and Paper 2 on Friday 15 May. Languages usually include reading and writing plus a listening component. These structures require a balanced revision plan because one subject may test several different skill types on the same day.

A sensible National 5 revision plan should begin with the highest-mark topics and the topics where mistakes are repeated most often. Students should keep a small error log for each subject. After every past paper or question set, write down the exact mistake, the correct method and one reminder sentence. This turns revision from passive rereading into targeted improvement. For example, a Mathematics student might record “forgot to show units,” while an English student might record “analysis did not explain the effect of the quote.” The timetable tells you when the exam happens; the error log tells you what to fix before that date.

Higher exam planning

Higher exams are often more demanding because they may affect university, college or apprenticeship pathways. The 2026 Higher timetable includes major subjects such as English, Mathematics, Biology, Human Biology, Chemistry, Physics, History, Geography, Modern Studies, Business Management, Computing Science, Economics, languages and many others. Higher candidates should not only know the date of each paper; they should understand how each paper is weighted, what question types are common and which skills are most exposed under timed conditions.

Higher students should build revision around timed performance earlier than National 5 students. At Higher level, knowing the content is not enough. You must be able to select the right method quickly, manage time across sections, respond to command words precisely and avoid losing marks through vague wording. For science subjects, Higher Biology, Human Biology, Chemistry and Physics all include structured paper arrangements where speed, accuracy and interpretation matter. For essay-based subjects, the challenge is often planning, evidence selection and concise argument under time pressure.

The timetable also matters emotionally. Many Higher candidates feel pressure because the exams can feel more consequential. A good timetable plan reduces uncertainty. Instead of vaguely saying “revise Chemistry,” set a specific action such as “complete Paper 1 multiple-choice practice, mark it, list five weak areas, and review those before Paper 2 practice.” This kind of task is measurable. Measurable tasks are easier to start and easier to evaluate.

Advanced Higher exam planning

Advanced Higher exams require a mature revision style. The timetable includes Advanced Higher subjects such as Mathematics, Mathematics of Mechanics, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, English, History, Geography, Modern Studies, Statistics, languages, Business Management, Accounting and others. At Advanced Higher, the issue is rarely just memorisation. Students must demonstrate deeper understanding, flexible problem solving, high-level writing, precise interpretation and sustained concentration.

Advanced Higher candidates should use the timetable to protect longer blocks of thinking time. Short revision bursts can help with recall, but many Advanced Higher tasks require extended work: full essays, full problem sets, complete statistics papers, mechanics questions, translation practice or high-level science interpretation. The closer the exam is, the more your revision should resemble the exam itself. If the exam lasts three hours, you should complete at least some full timed sessions before exam day so the length does not surprise you.

Advanced Higher students should also plan around recovery. Long papers, especially in Mathematics, Statistics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology or essay subjects, can drain attention. If another exam follows soon after, avoid scheduling a huge new-topic session immediately after a major paper. A better approach is light review, sleep, food and a short reset before moving to the next subject. The timetable is not just an academic schedule; it is an energy-management plan.

Build a revision plan from the exam timetable

The simplest way to turn the timetable into a working study plan is to calculate the revision demand for each subject, then spread that demand backwards from the exam date. You do not need a complicated system. You need a system you will actually follow. A useful weekly plan should include subject blocks, timed practice, marking time, correction time and rest. Marking is part of revision; if you complete a paper but do not check the marking instructions, you have only done half the job.

Use this simple planning formula to estimate revision time. It is not an official SQA formula; it is a practical study-planning method for students and tutors:

Revision time formula

\[ R=\frac{S \times M \times W}{60} \]

Where \(R\) is total revision time in hours, \(S\) is the number of study sessions per week, \(M\) is the minutes in each session, and \(W\) is the number of weeks available before the exam. For example, if you complete \(4\) sessions per week, each lasting \(45\) minutes, across \(6\) weeks, then \(R=\frac{4 \times 45 \times 6}{60}=18\) hours.

This formula is useful because it makes the timetable feel concrete. A subject that looks far away can still require a large amount of practice. A subject that looks close may need a sharper, more selective plan. The goal is not to fill every hour. The goal is to spend the right hours on the right tasks. A high-quality 45-minute session focused on one weak skill is usually better than a three-hour session of passive highlighting.

For content-heavy subjects such as Biology, Human Biology, History, Modern Studies, Geography, Religious, Moral and Philosophical Studies, and Business Management, split revision into recall, explanation and exam response. Recall means you can bring the information to mind without looking. Explanation means you can connect ideas and explain them clearly. Exam response means you can write the answer in the style the paper expects. Many students stop at recall, but marks are usually awarded for how well knowledge is used.

For calculation-heavy subjects such as Mathematics, Applications of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Statistics, Engineering Science and Mathematics of Mechanics, split revision into method, accuracy and timing. Method means choosing the correct process. Accuracy means carrying it out without careless errors. Timing means doing it quickly enough in the exam. If you are losing marks through arithmetic, units, rounding or notation, write those mistakes down and practise them deliberately.

For language subjects such as Spanish, French, German, Italian, Gaelic, Cantonese, Mandarin and Urdu, the timetable shows that students may sit reading, writing, listening, directed writing, translation or discursive writing components. These papers require different preparation modes. Reading practice builds vocabulary and inference. Writing practice builds structure and accuracy. Listening practice requires regular exposure, not just last-minute cramming. Translation requires precision and attention to tense, agreement and meaning. Build short, frequent language practice into the weeks before the exam.

For creative, practical or performance-linked subjects such as Music, Music Technology, Art and Design, Drama, Dance, Practical Cookery, Practical Electronics, Administration and IT, Design and Manufacture, and Graphic Communication, check the exact requirements with your school. The written timetable is only one part of the assessment experience. Some courses involve practical skills, portfolios, coursework, performance or specialist rooms. If your timetable entry has an asterisk, treat it as a reminder to confirm the practical arrangement early.

Recommended four-phase plan

Phase 1: Map the exams

Write down every exam, paper and time. Add the subject level, paper type and whether the paper is morning or afternoon. Highlight any same-week clusters. This phase prevents surprises.

Phase 2: Repair weak areas

Use class tests, prelims, homework and past papers to identify weak topics. Do not revise only the subjects you enjoy. Prioritise the topics that cost the most marks.

Phase 3: Practise under time

Move from notes to timed questions. Start with sections, then full papers where appropriate. Mark carefully and keep a short list of repeated errors.

Phase 4: Final review

Use the last few days for recall, formula checks, essay plans, command words, definitions, common mistakes and sleep. Avoid trying to learn an entire topic from zero the night before.

A healthy revision plan also includes buffer time. Students often build perfect calendars that collapse the first time something unexpected happens. Add a buffer after heavy subjects and before difficult exam clusters. A simple buffer formula is:

Buffer time formula

\[ B=0.2T \]

Where \(B\) is suggested buffer time and \(T\) is planned revision time. If you plan \(10\) hours of revision in a week, a \(20\%\) buffer gives \(B=0.2 \times 10=2\) extra hours for catch-up, illness, family commitments, transport issues or difficult topics.

Exam-day guide for Scotland National Qualifications

Exam day should be boring in the best possible way. You want no surprises, no missing equipment, no confusion about rooms, no last-minute panic about timings and no uncertainty about what happens if two papers appear close together. The best way to make exam day calm is to prepare the practical details before the exam period begins.

Check your candidate information, venue, seat, start time and required equipment. For Mathematics and science papers, confirm calculator rules with your teacher. For non-calculator papers, do not assume you can use a calculator just because the subject normally involves calculation. For English and essay subjects, practise writing by hand under time if you usually type notes. For language listening papers, ask your school where you need to be and how the listening component will be managed.

Arrive early enough to solve small problems without panic. Travel delays, forgotten pens, room changes and nerves are easier to handle when you are not rushing. Bring more than one pen. Bring approved equipment only. Keep water simple and avoid anything that might spill over your paper. Eat something steady before the exam, especially for long papers or days with multiple components.

After an exam, do not spend hours replaying every answer if you have another paper soon. A quick reflection can be useful, but obsessive post-exam analysis often damages preparation for the next subject. If a mistake comes to mind and it is relevant to another paper, write it down briefly, then move on. Your goal during the exam diet is not emotional perfection. Your goal is steady execution across all papers.

If you think you have an exam clash, speak to your school, college or training provider as early as possible. Do not try to solve it yourself by choosing one exam or assuming the arrangement will be obvious. The official timetable acknowledges that clashes can happen because of the wide range of subject combinations across Scotland. Schools and centres are responsible for advising learners on the arrangements that can be put in place.

Subject-by-subject planning notes

English: National 5 English appears on Thursday 30 April, Higher English on Friday 1 May, and Advanced Higher English on Thursday 30 April. Because English often involves reading, analysis and critical response, revision should include timed reading practice, quotation recall, essay planning and careful work on how to explain evidence. Students should practise moving from point to evidence to analysis without writing vague commentary.

Mathematics: Higher Mathematics and Advanced Higher Mathematics are scheduled on Thursday 7 May, while National 5 Mathematics is on Friday 8 May. Maths revision should be active. Reading solutions is not enough. Students should complete questions, check answers, correct methods and revisit the same topic a few days later. Non-calculator papers need mental arithmetic, algebraic fluency and clean working. Calculator papers still require method, interpretation and sensible checking.

Sciences: Biology and Human Biology Higher papers appear on Tuesday 28 April, Chemistry Higher and Advanced Higher on Tuesday 12 May, and Physics Higher and Advanced Higher on Thursday 21 May. Science students should practise command words, data handling, definitions, calculations and explanation questions. A strong science answer is usually precise rather than long. Learn the marking style, not just the topic list.

Social subjects: Geography, History, Modern Studies, Classical Studies, Politics, Economics, Philosophy and Religious, Moral and Philosophical Studies appear across the timetable. These subjects reward knowledge, structure and relevance. Students should practise introductions, paragraph structure, source handling where relevant, and timing. For essay subjects, a plan that takes two minutes can save many marks by preventing unfocused writing.

Languages: Spanish opens the timetable on Wednesday 22 April. French appears on Wednesday 6 May, German on Monday 18 May, Gaelic (Learners) on Wednesday 20 May, Cantonese and Mandarin on Wednesday 27 May, Italian on Thursday 28 May, and Urdu on Monday 1 June. Language revision benefits from regularity. Ten to twenty minutes of vocabulary, listening or translation practice every day is usually more effective than one long session at the end of the week.

Practical and creative subjects: Music, Music Technology, Art and Design, Drama, Dance, Practical Cookery, Practical Electronics, Administration and IT, Design and Manufacture, Graphic Communication, Fashion and Textile Technology, and Engineering Science all require careful attention to instructions. Check whether your assessment involves a written paper, practical component, portfolio, specialist room or equipment. The public timetable is helpful, but your centre’s instructions are essential.

Frequently asked questions about the Scotland SQA 2026 exam timetable

When do the Scotland SQA 2026 exams start and finish?

The 2026 National Qualifications exam period starts on Wednesday 22 April 2026 and finishes on Tuesday 2 June 2026. Tuesday 2 June is listed as a contingency day with no scheduled exams.

When is SQA results day in 2026?

Results day for the 2026 Scotland National Qualifications exam diet is Tuesday 4 August 2026. Students should check the official learner information from Qualifications Scotland and their school or college for results arrangements.

What levels are included in this timetable?

This page covers National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher exams. It includes the date, session, subject, level, paper name and time for the entries listed in the 2026 National Qualifications timetable.

What does an asterisk after an exam time mean?

An asterisk after the time means candidates usually need to be accommodated separately from candidates in other examinations, normally in a practical room or another suitably equipped room. Ask your school or college for the exact arrangement.

What should I do if two of my exams clash?

If two exams appear to clash, speak to your school, college or training provider immediately. Do not assume you should miss one paper. Your centre can explain what arrangements can be put in place.

Why are some papers marked as approximate?

Some listening or practical-style components include approximate finishing times. The exact running time may depend on how the component is administered. Follow your centre’s instructions on the day.

Should I revise by date order or by subject difficulty?

Use both. Date order tells you what is urgent, while subject difficulty tells you what needs more time. The best plan gives earlier attention to hard subjects and final review time to the papers that come first.

Can I use this timetable as my personal exam timetable?

You can use it as a planning guide, but your official personal timetable should come from your school, college or training provider. Personal arrangements may include rooms, seat numbers, extra time, clashes or practical instructions.

Official source and verification note

This guide is based on the official Qualifications Scotland/SQA 2026 exam timetable and learner timetable page. Because exam arrangements can change, students should always verify dates with their school, college or training provider before making final plans.

Official timetable page: Qualifications Scotland exam timetable and learner apps

Official PDF: National Qualifications 2026 Exam Timetable PDF