Official Singapore exam timetable guide • 2026

Singapore Exam Timetable 2026: PSLE, GCE N-Level, O-Level and A-Level Dates

This guide brings together the key 2026 Singapore national examination dates for PSLE, Singapore-Cambridge GCE N-Level, O-Level and A-Level. It includes oral examination windows, listening comprehension papers, written examination dates, practical shifts, planning advice, and a student-friendly preparation guide. The schedule is organised so parents, students and tutors can quickly find the exam, subject group and date they need.

PSLE written papers: 24–30 September 2026 N-Level main papers: July–13 October 2026 O-Level main papers: June–10 November 2026 A-Level main papers: June–27 November 2026

Quick Answer: Singapore 2026 Exam Windows

The 2026 Singapore national examination calendar begins with Mother Tongue Language papers in June for some O-Level and A-Level candidates, followed by listening and oral components in July, practical examinations in September and October, and the main written examination period from late September to late November depending on the qualification. PSLE is the shortest window, with oral examinations in August, listening comprehension in September and written papers from 24 to 30 September. The GCE pathways run longer because N-Level, O-Level and A-Level include a wider range of subject combinations, practical papers, oral windows, listening comprehension papers and written papers.

PSLE Oral: 12–13 Aug • LC: 15 Sep • Written: 24–30 Sep
N-Level Oral starts 13 Jul • Written and practical papers continue to 13 Oct
O-Level Early papers from 2 Jun • Main written period: 19 Oct–10 Nov
A-Level Early papers from 2 Jun • Main written period: 2–27 Nov

Important verification note: Timetables can be updated by SEAB. Students should always confirm their personal entry proof, school instructions, reporting venue and the latest official PDF before the examination day. Listening comprehension papers usually require candidates to be seated in assigned examination rooms 30 minutes before the official start time.

What These Singapore Exam Timetables Cover

Singapore’s national examination schedule is not one single calendar. It is a family of calendars, because each exam serves a different education stage. The PSLE schedule is designed for Primary 6 students and focuses on language, mathematics and science papers. The GCE N-Level schedule is for Secondary 4 Normal stream candidates and includes oral, listening, written and practical components depending on the subject. The GCE O-Level timetable covers a large range of academic and applied subjects, including English Language, Mother Tongue, Mathematics, Humanities, Sciences, Business Studies, Computing, Design and Technology, Art, Music, and other languages. The GCE A-Level timetable is broader still, with H1, H2 and H3 style subject entries, science practical shifts, language papers, General Paper, Mathematics, Economics, Literature, History, Geography, Computing, and more.

The most important thing for students is not just knowing the date. They need to understand the pattern of the timetable. Oral and listening papers often happen weeks or months before the main written paper. Practical exams may be conducted in shifts, meaning different students may report at different times. Some papers on the same date are for different subject codes, so a student should never assume that a date applies to them unless the subject name, paper number and subject code match their entry. This page therefore uses consolidated tables to make scanning easier, while keeping the official source links visible for final verification.

Parents and tutors should use this timetable as an organising tool. Start by identifying the exact exam route: PSLE, N-Level, O-Level or A-Level. Then identify the student’s subjects, including special programmes, B subjects, Foundation subjects, Higher Mother Tongue, revised science syllabuses, and practical components. After that, build a personal calendar that includes the examination date, reporting time, travel buffer, required materials, last revision session and sleep plan. A timetable is most useful when it becomes a weekly plan rather than a static list of dates.

Complete Singapore Exam Timetable 2026

Use the buttons to switch between PSLE, N-Level, O-Level and A-Level. You can also search the visible table by typing a subject, paper, date or exam mode such as “oral”, “science”, “mathematics”, “listening”, “practical” or “General Paper”.

PSLE 2026 Timetable

The PSLE timetable has three main phases: oral examinations in August, listening comprehension in September, and written papers from 24 to 30 September. The written papers are compact, so students should avoid treating PSLE as a one-subject-at-a-time exam. English, Mathematics, Mother Tongue, Science and Higher Mother Tongue papers are close together, which makes early revision and exam stamina important.

DateTimePaper / SubjectModeDuration / Notes
Wednesday, 12 August 20260800–1330 hEnglish Language, Foundation English Language, Chinese Language, Malay Language, Tamil LanguageOralCandidates are examined in turns within the stated session window.
Thursday, 13 August 20260800–1330 hEnglish Language; Chinese, Malay, Tamil; Foundation Chinese, Foundation Malay, Foundation Tamil; Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, Urdu; Foundation Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, UrduOralCandidates are examined in turns within the stated session window.
Tuesday, 15 September 20260900–0935 hChinese Language, Malay Language, Tamil LanguageListeningActual duration may differ slightly.
Tuesday, 15 September 20260900–0940 hFoundation Chinese Language, Foundation Malay Language, Foundation Tamil LanguageListeningActual duration may differ slightly.
Tuesday, 15 September 20260900–0930 hBengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, Urdu and Foundation versionsListeningActual duration may differ slightly.
Tuesday, 15 September 20261115–1150 hEnglish Language, Foundation English LanguageListeningActual duration may differ slightly.
Thursday, 24 September 20260815–0925 hEnglish Language Paper 1; Foundation English Language Paper 1Written1 h 10 min
Thursday, 24 September 20261030–1220 hEnglish Language Paper 2Written1 h 50 min
Thursday, 24 September 20261030–1130 hFoundation English Language Paper 2Written1 h
Friday, 25 September 20260815–0925 hMathematics Paper 1Written1 h 10 min
Friday, 25 September 20261030–1150 hMathematics Paper 2Written1 h 20 min
Friday, 25 September 20260815–0915 hFoundation Mathematics Paper 1Written1 h
Friday, 25 September 20261030–1115 hFoundation Mathematics Paper 2Written45 min
Monday, 28 September 20260815–0905 hChinese, Malay, Tamil, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, Urdu Paper 1Written50 min
Monday, 28 September 20261015–1155 hChinese, Malay, Tamil, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, Urdu Paper 2Written1 h 40 min
Monday, 28 September 20260815–0855 hFoundation Chinese, Foundation Malay, Foundation Tamil Paper 1Written40 min
Tuesday, 29 September 20260815–1000 hScience Paper 1Written1 h 45 min
Tuesday, 29 September 20260815–0930 hFoundation Science Paper 1Written1 h 15 min
Wednesday, 30 September 20260815–0905 hHigher Chinese, Higher Malay, Higher Tamil Paper 1Written50 min
Wednesday, 30 September 20261015–1135 hHigher Chinese, Higher Malay, Higher Tamil Paper 2Written1 h 20 min

Singapore-Cambridge GCE N-Level 2026 Timetable

The N-Level timetable includes oral sessions in July, listening comprehension in September, written papers, practical papers and coursework-related subjects. Some practical subjects are conducted in shifts. Students should check the official timetable and their school-issued candidate instructions to confirm the exact reporting time.

DateTimePaper / SubjectModeDuration / Notes
13 July 20261415 onwardsEnglish Language Syllabus A Oral; Chinese Oral; Basic Chinese OralOralEnglish oral 20 min; Chinese and Basic Chinese oral 15 min; candidates take turns.
14–17 July 20260815 / 1415 / 1430 sessionsEnglish Language Syllabus A Oral, English Language Syllabus T Oral, Chinese, Malay, Tamil, Basic Chinese, Basic Malay, Basic Tamil OralOral15–20 min depending on paper; candidates take turns on the day.
14 September 20260800–0950English Language Syllabus A Paper 1Written1 h 50 min
14 September 20261035–1225English Language Syllabus A Paper 2Written1 h 50 min
14 September 20260800–0920; 1035–1155English Language Syllabus T Papers 1 and 2Written1 h 20 min each
15 September 20260800 onwardsMobile Robotics, Smart Electrical Technology, Retail OperationsPracticalConducted in shifts; 30 min to 1 h 30 min depending on subject.
15 September 20261400–1445English Language Syllabus A Listening ComprehensionListening45 min; candidates seated 30 min before start.
15 September 20261600–1630Basic Chinese, Basic Malay, Basic Tamil Listening ComprehensionListening30 min; candidates seated 30 min before start.
16 September 20260800–0945Humanities: Social Studies with Geography / History / Literature in EnglishWritten1 h 45 min
16 September 20261400–1445English Language Syllabus T Listening ComprehensionListening45 min; candidates seated 30 min before start.
16 September 20261600–1630Chinese, Malay, Tamil Listening ComprehensionListening30 min; candidates seated 30 min before start.
17 September 20260800–1000Chinese, Malay, Tamil, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, Urdu Paper 1Written2 h
17 September 20261045–1215Chinese, Malay, Tamil, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, Urdu Paper 2Written1 h 30 min
17 September 20261430–1545Science Syllabus T Paper 1Written1 h 15 min
18 September 20260800–0930Computer Applications PracticalPractical1 h 30 min
21 September 20260800–0900Music Syllabus TWritten1 h
21 September 20260800–0930 / 0800–1015Art; Art RevisedWritten1 h 30 min / 2 h 15 min
21 September 20261400–1500Science Syllabus T Paper 2Written1 h
21 September 20261400–1550History Paper 1Written1 h 50 min
22 September 20260800–0830Basic Chinese, Basic Malay, Basic Tamil Paper 1Written30 min
22 September 20260915–0955Basic Chinese, Basic Malay, Basic Tamil Paper 2Written40 min
23 September 20260800 onwardsMobile Robotics, Smart Electrical Technology, Retail OperationsPracticalConducted in shifts; 15 min to 2 h depending on subject.
23 September 20261400–1550History Paper 2Written1 h 50 min
24 September 20260800–0930Computer Applications PracticalPractical1 h 30 min
5 October 20260800–1000Mathematics Syllabus A Paper 1Written2 h
5 October 20261400–1500Mobile Robotics, Smart Electrical Technology, Retail OperationsWritten1 h
5 October 20261400–1545 / 1550Humanities Paper 2 variants: SS with Geography / HistoryWritten1 h 45 min / 1 h 50 min
6 October 20260800–0915Science combinations: Physics/Chemistry and Physics/Biology componentsWritten1 h 15 min
6 October 20261400–1530Mathematics Syllabus T Paper 1Written1 h 30 min
6 October 20261400–1545Additional Mathematics Paper 1Written1 h 45 min
7 October 20260800–1000Mathematics Syllabus A Paper 2Written2 h
7 October 20261400–1500Principles of Accounts Paper 1Written1 h
7 October 20261400–1530Elements of Business SkillsWritten1 h 30 min
8 October 20260800–0915Science: Physics/Chemistry and Chemistry/Biology componentsWritten1 h 15 min
8 October 20261400–1515Computer ApplicationsWritten1 h 15 min
8 October 20261400–1530Literature in English Paper 2Written1 h 30 min
8 October 20261400–1545Geography Paper 1Written1 h 45 min
9 October 20260800–0930Mathematics Syllabus T Paper 2Written1 h 30 min
9 October 20260800–0945Additional Mathematics Paper 2Written1 h 45 min
9 October 20261430–1630Principles of Accounts Paper 2Written2 h
12 October 20260800–0915Science: Physics/Biology and Chemistry/Biology componentsWritten1 h 15 min
13 October 20260800–0900Design and Technology Syllabus TWritten1 h
13 October 20260800–0930Nutrition and Food Science; Design and TechnologyWritten1 h 30 min
13 October 20260800–0945Geography Paper 2Written1 h 45 min
13 October 20261400–1540Humanities SS/Literature in English and Literature in EnglishWritten1 h 40 min

Singapore-Cambridge GCE O-Level 2026 Timetable

The O-Level timetable is long because it includes early Mother Tongue papers, oral examinations, listening comprehension, practical science shifts, applied subjects and the main written examination period. The table below consolidates the official schedule by date and subject group. For subject-code-level verification, use the official PDF link in the source section.

DateTimePaper / SubjectModeDuration / Notes
2 June 20260800–0850; 0800–1000; 0935–1035; 1100–1230Chinese, Malay, Tamil; Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B Papers 1 and 2Written50 min to 2 h depending on subject and paper.
7 July 20261400–1430; 1600–1630Chinese, Malay, Tamil; Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B Listening ComprehensionListening30 min; candidates seated 30 min before start.
13–17 July 20260815 / 1415 / 1430 sessionsEnglish Language Oral; Chinese, Malay, Tamil Oral; Higher Chinese, Higher Malay, Higher Tamil Oral; Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B OralOral15–20 min; candidates take turns.
22–24 July 20261415 / 1430 sessionsMalay Special Programme, Chinese Special Programme, Arabic as a 3rd Language, Bahasa Indonesia as a 3rd Language OralOral15 min; candidates take turns.
31 July, 3–4 August 20260815 / 1415 / 1430 sessionsSpanish, French, German, Japanese OralOral10 min; candidates take turns.
22–25 September 20260800 onwardsMusic and Higher Music Practical, including Higher Music practical Paper 32Practical10–17 min; conducted in shifts.
23 September 20261415 onwardsMalay B, Tamil B, Chinese B OralOral15 min; candidates take turns.
30 September 20260800–0950; 1020–1210; 1240–1430; 1500–1650Chemistry Science PracticalPractical1 h 50 min; conducted in shifts.
5 October 20260800–0950; 1020–1210; 1240–1430; 1500–1650Physics Science PracticalPractical1 h 50 min; conducted in shifts.
6 October 20261300–1430Business Studies Paper 1Written1 h 30 min
7 October 20260800–1030Computing PracticalPractical2 h 30 min
8 October 20260800–0930; 1000–1130Combined Science Practical: Physics/Chemistry, Physics/Biology, Chemistry/BiologyPractical1 h 30 min; conducted in shifts.
12 October 20260800–0930; 0800–1000; 0800–1100; 1400–1700Spanish, German, Japanese, French, Arabic, Bahasa Indonesia, Burmese, Thai written papersWritten1 h 30 min to 3 h depending on paper.
13 October 20260800–0950; 1020–1210; 1240–1430; 1500–1650Biology Science PracticalPractical1 h 50 min; conducted in shifts.
14 October 20260800–0915; 0800–0930; 1015–1145; 1030–1110; 1400–1515; 1630–1705Spanish, German, Japanese, Arabic, Bahasa Indonesia, French written and listening comprehension papers; Arabic and Bahasa Indonesia as 3rd Language papersWritten / Listening1 h 15 min to 1 h 30 min for written; 30–40 min for LC.
15 October 20261400–1445; 1630–1700English Language Listening Comprehension; Malay Special Programme LC; Chinese Special Programme LC; Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B LCListening30–45 min; candidates seated 30 min before start.
16 October 20261400–1530Business Studies Paper 2Written1 h 30 min
19 October 20260800–0950; 1035–1225English Language Papers 1 and 2Written1 h 50 min each
20 October 20260800–1000; 0800–0945; afternoon sessionsComputing, Economics, Humanities Social Studies with Geography, Humanities Social Studies with HistoryWrittenVaries by subject.
21 October 20260800–1015Mathematics Paper 1Written2 h 15 min
22 October 20260800–0945; 0800–0950Geography Paper 1, History Paper 1Written1 h 45 min / 1 h 50 min
23 October 20260800–1030; 0930–1115; 1430–1645Design Studies, Biotechnology, Mathematics Paper 2Written1 h 45 min to 2 h 30 min
26 October 20260800–0945; 1400–1615Humanities Social Studies variants; Additional Mathematics Paper 1Written1 h 45 min / 2 h 15 min
27 October 20260800–0950; 1030–1200; 1400–1545Geography, History, Literature in English, Combined Science, ChemistryWritten1 h 15 min to 1 h 50 min
28 October 20260800–1015; 1400–1500Additional Mathematics Paper 2; Principles of Accounts Paper 1Written2 h 15 min / 1 h
29 October 20260800–0940; 1400–1545Literature in English; Humanities SS/Lit in English; Combined Science; PhysicsWritten1 h 15 min to 1 h 45 min
30 October 20260800–0945; 1430–1630Combined Science, Biology, Principles of Accounts Paper 2Written1 h 15 min to 2 h
2 November 20260800–1015; 1400–1600Music, Higher Music, Drama, Electronics, Exercise and Sports Science, Design and Technology, Art, Higher Art, Islamic Religious Knowledge, Nutrition and Food ScienceWritten1 h 30 min to 2 h 15 min
3 November 20260800–1045; 1100–1245Higher Chinese, Higher Malay, Higher Tamil; Chinese, Malay, Tamil; Hindi, Urdu, Gujarati, Panjabi, Bengali Papers 1 and 2Written1 h 30 min to 2 h
4 November 20260800–1035; 1400–1540Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B; Economics; Literature in Chinese, Malay, Tamil; Humanities SS/Literature variantsWritten45 min to 1 h 40 min
5 November 20260800–0945; 1030–1145; 1400–1530Islamic Religious Knowledge; Malay Special Programme; Chinese Special Programme; Literature in Chinese, Malay, TamilWritten1 h 15 min to 1 h 45 min
6 November 20260800–0900; 1430–1530Chemistry Paper 1; Physics Paper 1Written1 h each
10 November 20260800–0900; 1400–1500Combined Science Paper 1; Biology Paper 1Written1 h each

Singapore-Cambridge GCE A-Level 2026 Timetable

The A-Level timetable begins with early Mother Tongue Language papers in June and continues through listening comprehension, oral examinations, practical papers and the main written examination period in November. Many A-Level subjects have multiple syllabus codes, and revised science syllabuses may appear beside existing syllabuses. Students must check their own subject code and paper number before finalising their personal calendar.

DateTimePaper / SubjectModeDuration / Notes
2 June 20260800–0850; 0800–1115; 0935–1035Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B; Chinese Language, Malay Language, Tamil Language written papersWritten50 min to 3 h; some papers include a 15 min admin break.
7 July 20261400–1430; 1600–1630Chinese, Malay, Tamil Language and Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B Listening ComprehensionListening30 min; candidates seated 30 min before start.
8–16 July 20260815 / 1415 / 1430 sessionsChinese Language, Malay Language, Tamil Language Oral; Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B OralOral15 min; candidates take turns.
13–20 July 20260800 onwardsTheatre Studies and Drama Practical Days 1–6Practical2 h; candidates take turns where applicable.
23–25 September 20261415 / 1430 sessionsFrench, German, Japanese, Spanish Oral; Malay B and Tamil B OralOral15–20 min; candidates take turns.
28–30 September 20260800 onwardsH2 Music Practical Days 1–3Practical30 min; candidates take turns.
30 September 20260800–0930; 0800–1000French, German, Japanese, Spanish written papersWritten1 h 30 min to 2 h
7 October 20260800–1100Computing PracticalPractical3 h
14 October 20260800–1030; 1115–1345; 1430–1700Chemistry and Chemistry Revised Science PracticalPractical2 h 30 min; conducted in shifts.
19 October 20260800–1030; 1115–1345; 1430–1700Physics and Physics Revised Science PracticalPractical2 h 30 min; conducted in shifts.
20 October 20261400–1545Arabic Paper 2Written1 h 45 min
22 October 20260800–1030; 1115–1345; 1430–1700Biology and Biology Revised Science PracticalPractical2 h 30 min; conducted in shifts.
23 October 20260800–0900; 1000–1100French, German, Japanese, Spanish Listening ComprehensionListening1 h; candidates seated 30 min before start.
26 October 20260800–1115Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Panjabi, Urdu; Chinese, Malay, Tamil Language written papersWritten3 h plus admin break where stated.
27 October 20261400–1530Arabic Paper 3Written1 h 30 min
2 November 20260800–0900; 0800–0930; 1400–1700German LC; General Paper Paper 1; Art, H1 Art, H2 Art, H2 Music, Islamic TheologyListening / Written1 h to 3 h depending on subject.
3 November 20260800–1100; 1400–1700Mathematics Paper 1; Knowledge & Inquiry; Theatre Studies & Drama; Translation Chinese; Islamic TheologyWritten3 h, except Knowledge & Inquiry Paper 2 is listed separately later.
4 November 20260800–0900; 0800–0930; 1400–1700French LC; General Paper Paper 2; Literature in EnglishListening / Written1 h to 3 h
5 November 20260800–0930; 1000–1145; 1030–1100; 1400–1700Chinese, Malay, Tamil Language & Literature Papers 1 and 2; Spanish written; Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B LC; EconomicsWritten / Listening30 min to 3 h depending on paper.
6 November 20260800–1100; 1430–1730Mathematics Paper 2; Knowledge & Inquiry Paper 2; Islamic Law; Translation ChineseWritten2 h to 3 h
10 November 20260800–0930; 0800–1100; 1400–1600German written; Principles of Accounting; Chemistry and Chemistry Revised Paper 2Written1 h 30 min to 3 h
11 November 20260800–1100; 1400–1700French, Japanese, Literature in English, Computing, Islamic LawWritten1 h 30 min to 3 h
12 November 20260800–1000; 1400–1450; 1535–1635Chemistry Paper 3; Chemistry Revised Paper 3; Chinese B, Malay B, Tamil B Papers 1 and 2; Chinese, Malay, Tamil Language & Literature Paper 3Written50 min to 2 h
13 November 20260800–1000; 1430–1730Physics, Physics Revised, China Studies in Chinese, China Studies in English, Management of BusinessWritten2 h to 3 h
16 November 20260800–1030; 1400–1700Economics, English Language & Linguistics, Further MathematicsWritten2 h 30 min to 3 h
17 November 20260800–1100; 1400–1600History; Physics Paper 3 and Physics Revised Paper 3Written2 h to 3 h
18 November 20260800–1000; 1400–1700Biology, Biology Revised, English Language & Linguistics, Further MathematicsWritten2 h to 3 h
19 November 20260800–1100; 1000–1145; 1400–1630Chinese, Malay, Tamil Language & Literature; History; BiologyWritten1 h 45 min to 3 h
20 November 20260800–1100; 1430–1630China Studies, Management of Business, Biology and Biology RevisedWritten2 h to 3 h
23 November 20260800–1100; 1400–1500Geography; Chemistry Paper 1 and Chemistry Revised Paper 1Written1 h to 3 h
24 November 20260800–1100; 1400–1700Principles of Accounting; MathematicsWritten3 h
25 November 20260800–1100; 1400–1700Physics; GeographyWritten3 h
26 November 20260800–1115; 1400–1500Chemistry, Economics, Biology and Biology RevisedWritten1 h to 3 h 15 min
27 November 20260800–0900Physics Paper 1 and Physics Revised Paper 1Written1 h

How to Use This Singapore Exam Timetable Correctly

A timetable is only useful if it is turned into a personal plan. Many students look at a national exam calendar and assume that every date matters equally. That is not true. Some dates are only for a particular subject code, language route, revised syllabus or practical shift. The correct method is to move from the official national calendar to the student’s personal subject list, then to a weekly revision schedule, then to an exam-day checklist.

  1. Identify the exam route. Confirm whether the student is taking PSLE, GCE N-Level, O-Level or A-Level. Do not mix calendars.
  2. Write down the exact subjects. Include Foundation, Higher, B subject, revised syllabus, special programme and practical components where relevant.
  3. Match the subject to the correct date and paper. Check subject name, paper number and mode. For GCE exams, subject codes matter.
  4. Separate oral, listening, practical and written papers. These often occur in different months. Oral and listening papers can arrive much earlier than the written paper.
  5. Add reporting time. For listening comprehension, candidates are commonly required to be seated 30 minutes before the start time. For practicals, schools may assign specific shifts.
  6. Create a revision countdown. Count backward from each paper and place heavy revision before the final week.
  7. Confirm with the latest official source. Before the exam day, re-check SEAB updates and school instructions.

Simple Revision Countdown Formula

Use this formula to plan how many days remain before an exam:

\[ D = E - T \]

Where \(D\) is the number of days left, \(E\) is the exam date, and \(T\) is today’s date. For example, if today is 1 September and the paper is on 24 September, then \(D = 24 - 1 = 23\) days. This is not a scoring formula; it is a planning formula that helps students convert a large timetable into manageable daily action.

Weekly Study Hours Formula

If a student wants to complete a fixed amount of revision before a paper, distribute the workload with:

\[ H_{weekly} = \frac{H_{total}}{W} \]

Here, \(H_{weekly}\) means the number of hours to study each week, \(H_{total}\) means total planned revision hours for that subject, and \(W\) means the number of weeks remaining. If a student needs \(30\) hours of Mathematics revision and has \(5\) weeks left, then \(H_{weekly}=\frac{30}{5}=6\) hours per week.

Practice Score Percentage Formula

For mock papers and practice tests, students can track percentage using:

\[ P = \frac{M}{T}\times 100 \]

Where \(P\) is the percentage, \(M\) is marks obtained, and \(T\) is total marks. If a student scores \(72\) out of \(90\), then \(P=\frac{72}{90}\times100=80\%\). Use this only for practice tracking; official grading depends on the exam and marking standard.

Detailed Guide for Students, Parents and Tutors

The biggest mistake students make with a national exam timetable is treating it like a final-week checklist. The timetable should be used much earlier. Once the dates are known, the student can divide the year into preparation phases: content completion, skill-building, timed practice, error correction and final exam readiness. Each phase has a different purpose. Content completion is about learning the syllabus. Skill-building is about mastering question types. Timed practice is about speed, accuracy and stamina. Error correction is about fixing repeated weaknesses. Final readiness is about confidence, sleep, logistics and mental calm.

For PSLE students, the timetable is compressed. English and Mathematics come first, followed closely by Mother Tongue, Science and Higher Mother Tongue where applicable. A Primary 6 student should not wait until September to begin timed practice. By the time oral and listening comprehension arrive, core writing, problem-solving and science explanation skills should already be stable. The last weeks should focus on execution: reading questions carefully, planning answers, showing working, checking units, managing careless mistakes and using time wisely.

For N-Level students, the timetable has a wider spread. This can feel easier because papers are distributed across more days, but it also creates a risk: students may relax after one paper and lose momentum before the next. N-Level preparation should be organised by subject type. Language papers need regular reading, vocabulary and composition practice. Mathematics needs repeated problem sets and correction of weak topics. Humanities need structured writing, examples and source interpretation. Science subjects need concept clarity, formula confidence and data-handling practice. Practical or applied subjects need school-specific instructions and hands-on familiarity.

For O-Level students, the calendar can feel intense because many major written papers cluster in late October and early November. Students taking combinations such as English, Mathematics, Additional Mathematics, Pure Sciences, Combined Humanities and Mother Tongue may have several heavy weeks. The key strategy is to complete content revision before the main written period begins. Once the papers start, most revision should be light, focused and paper-specific. A student should not be trying to learn an entire topic the night before. The evening before a paper should be used for formula review, common mistakes, essay frameworks, key definitions, worked examples and rest.

For A-Level students, the timetable demands long-range planning. A-Level subjects require deeper conceptual understanding, and many papers are three hours long. The November period can contain demanding subjects close together, such as General Paper, Mathematics, Economics, Chemistry, Physics, Biology, Literature, History, Geography or other specialist subjects. Students should build stamina through full timed papers well before November. For science students, practical papers in October require a separate preparation routine. Practical readiness is not only about knowing theory; it includes measurement, observation, recording, graphing, uncertainty, safety and concise explanation.

Phase 1 Finish the syllabus and build accurate notes. Do not start timed-paper pressure too early if the student still has major content gaps.
Phase 2 Practise by topic and question type. Every wrong answer should become a correction note or mini-drill.
Phase 3 Move to timed papers, exam stamina, checking routines and final memory consolidation.

How to Build a Personal Exam Calendar

Start with one page or spreadsheet. Create columns for exam name, subject, paper number, mode, date, time, duration, venue, reporting time and final revision task. Colour-code oral, listening, practical and written papers. Put high-risk subjects in a separate priority list. A high-risk subject is not always the hardest subject; it is the subject where the student’s current performance is furthest from the target grade. For one student, this may be Additional Mathematics. For another, it may be English Paper 1 writing or Humanities structured response.

After writing the dates, add two preparation deadlines for each subject. The first deadline is the content deadline: the date by which all topics should be revised once. The second is the exam-practice deadline: the date by which the student should have completed at least several timed papers or full sections. These deadlines should fall before the actual paper. If a student places all revision immediately before the official date, the timetable becomes stressful rather than helpful.

Subject-Specific Timetable Advice

  • Languages: Do oral and listening practice early. Reading aloud, summarising passages, vocabulary building and listening drills should not be left until the week of the exam.
  • Mathematics: Keep a formula and mistake notebook. Focus on algebra accuracy, graph interpretation, problem-solving steps and time management.
  • Science: Separate theory revision from practical preparation. For practicals, train observation, precision, tables, graphing and explanation.
  • Humanities: Build essay frameworks and evidence banks. Practise source-based questions, comparison, reliability, inference and explanation structure.
  • Accounting, Economics and Business subjects: Practise definitions, application, calculation accuracy and structured responses. Do not rely only on memorisation.
  • Art, Music, Drama and practical subjects: Follow school instructions closely. These papers often involve special reporting, preparation, shifts or portfolio-related expectations.

Exam-Day Logistics Checklist

Use this checklist at least two days before each paper. Confirm the paper date and time, required materials, calculator approval where applicable, identity documents, entry proof, stationery, travel route and backup transport plan. Set an alarm and a second alarm. Pack the bag the night before. Avoid last-minute printing, borrowing or searching for materials on the morning of the paper. For listening comprehension, practical and oral papers, check whether there are special reporting instructions because the start time may not represent the time the student must arrive.

Safety note for planning: This page helps organise the official timetable into a student-friendly guide. It does not replace the official SEAB timetable, the candidate’s entry proof, or school-issued instructions. Always follow official instructions first.

Exam-by-Exam Preparation Notes

PSLE preparation focus For PSLE, students should build confidence before September because the written papers are close together. Oral and listening components should be practised separately from written papers. Parents should keep routines calm and predictable.
N-Level preparation focus N-Level students should organise revision by subject type. Applied and practical subjects require attention to shifts, reporting instructions and school-specific arrangements.
O-Level preparation focus O-Level students should complete content revision before the main late-October written period. The final weeks should prioritise timed papers, corrections and targeted review.
A-Level preparation focus A-Level students need deeper conceptual preparation and long-paper stamina. Science practicals in October should be prepared as a separate exam skill, not as ordinary theory revision.

A strong preparation plan does not treat all subjects equally. It gives more time to the subjects with the highest score impact, the weakest current performance and the closest exam date. A student who is already strong in a subject should still maintain it through quick practice, but the largest gains usually come from correcting repeated errors in weaker subjects. The timetable allows students to see where these decisions must be made.

Another useful method is to use “exam blocks”. A block is a group of papers that sit close together. For example, if Mathematics Paper 1 and Paper 2 are close, the student should prepare both before the first paper, not only after it. If a science practical comes before the written paper, practical skills should be revised earlier. If a language oral comes months before the written paper, oral practice cannot wait until the main written exam season. Looking at the timetable by blocks reduces surprise and helps families plan tuition, mock exams, school consultations and rest days.

Official Source Links

The timetable details above are consolidated from official Singapore examination timetable PDFs. Use these links to verify the latest version before publishing updates, printing student copies or making final exam-day decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

When are the PSLE 2026 written exams?

The PSLE 2026 written examinations run from Thursday, 24 September to Wednesday, 30 September 2026. English is on 24 September, Mathematics is on 25 September, Mother Tongue papers are on 28 September, Science is on 29 September, and Higher Mother Tongue papers are on 30 September.

When do Singapore GCE N-Level 2026 exams start?

The N-Level 2026 timetable starts with oral examinations in July. The major written and practical papers begin in September and continue until 13 October 2026, depending on the candidate’s subjects.

When is the main O-Level 2026 written examination period?

Some O-Level papers begin earlier, including Mother Tongue papers in June and oral or listening papers in July. The main O-Level written examination period is concentrated from 19 October to 10 November 2026.

When is the main A-Level 2026 written examination period?

A-Level early papers begin in June for some language subjects. The main written examination period is mostly from 2 November to 27 November 2026, with practical examinations and selected language components taking place earlier.

Do listening comprehension candidates need to arrive before the start time?

Yes. For many GCE listening comprehension papers, candidates must be seated in their assigned examination rooms 30 minutes before the start time. Students should follow their school’s reporting instructions and not arrive only at the listed paper start time.

Why are practical papers listed as shifts?

Practical papers may be conducted in shifts because laboratories, equipment and assessment conditions need to be managed carefully. The official timetable gives shift windows, but the school or examination centre may provide the exact shift allocation for each candidate.

Is this page a replacement for the official SEAB timetable?

No. This page is a student-friendly guide that consolidates the official timetable information. For final confirmation, use the official SEAB timetable PDF, candidate entry proof and school-issued instructions.

Final Advice Before the Exam Season

The official exam timetable gives dates, but success comes from how those dates are used. Students should not simply count down to exams; they should count backward from each paper and assign concrete tasks to each week. A useful plan includes content revision, timed practice, correction of mistakes, formula review, oral rehearsal, listening practice, practical preparation and rest. The closer the exam gets, the more specific the plan should become.

Parents and tutors can help by reducing chaos. Keep one shared calendar, avoid last-minute schedule changes, and make sure the student’s sleep pattern is stable before the exam week. The goal is not to create fear around the timetable. The goal is to make the timetable predictable, visible and manageable. When students know what is coming, they can focus on performance rather than uncertainty.