How Long to Revise for A-Level Biology – A Realistic Guide
How many hours to revise A-Level Biology – during term, before exams, and for each target grade – from a former examiner. Quality over quantity, all boards.
Last updated: February 2026
How Long Should You Really Revise for A-Level Biology?
It’s the question every student asks, and the honest answer is: there is no single magic number. How long you need depends on your target grade, how secure your understanding already is, and – most importantly – how you revise, not just how many hours you log. A student doing two focused hours of active recall will out-perform one who spends five hours re-reading notes.
That said, “it depends” isn’t very helpful on its own, so this guide gives you realistic, examiner-informed figures for how much to do during term, in the run-up to exams, and how to plan it – for whichever board you’re on (AQA, OCR, Edexcel, WJEC or Eduqas).
During Term Time
Revision shouldn’t start in the exam term – the students who do best treat it as something that runs all year, alongside their lessons.
In the Run-Up to Exams
As the exams approach (the final 6–8 weeks), revision becomes the main event and the hours go up – but the same quality-over-quantity rule applies.
The Early-Start Advantage
If there is one thing that reduces the total number of hours you need, it’s starting early. Students who begin consolidating from September spread the load and never face the impossible task of learning two years of content in two months.
How Much for Each Target Grade?
There are no guarantees, but as a rough planning guide for the run-up to exams:
| Target | Rough revision intensity (exam term) | The key factor |
|---|---|---|
| Pass / C | Consistent weekly revision; solid grasp of core content | Cover the whole specification – don’t leave gaps |
| B / A | Daily focused revision + regular past papers | Application: practising AO2/AO3 questions, not just recall |
| A* | As above, plus deliberate work on exam technique and the hardest synoptic links | Precision and exam technique – turning knowledge into marks |
Not Sure If You’re Doing Enough – or the Right Things?
If you’re putting in the hours but not seeing the grades, the problem is usually what you’re doing, not how long. I’ll help you build a realistic, targeted revision plan around your specification and the time you actually have – so every hour counts.
Tyrone John • CBiol MRSB • Former WJEC/Eduqas & Edexcel Examiner • 25+ Years Teaching A-Level Biology
Book a Free ConsultationFrequently Asked Questions
How many hours a week should I revise A-Level Biology?
During normal term time, around 1.5 to 3 hours of focused Biology revision per week (on top of homework) is a realistic guideline – enough to consolidate each week’s new content. In the final 6 to 8 weeks before the exams this rises, with many students doing 1 to 2 hours most days, more during the holidays and study leave. But quality matters more than the exact number: two hours of active recall and past-paper practice beats a whole evening of passive reading.
When should I start revising for A-Level Biology?
The best students start consolidating from the very beginning of the course, revisiting each topic shortly after it is taught rather than waiting for the exam term. Starting early spreads the workload and means you arrive at the exams already knowing most of the content, needing only to practise and polish. Leaving it until Easter forces you to learn, practise and fix weaknesses all at once, under far more pressure – and usually for a lower grade.
Is it better to revise for longer or to revise more often?
More often. Several short, spaced sessions across the week are far more effective than one long marathon session, because spaced practice strengthens long-term memory and avoids the steep drop in concentration that comes after about an hour. Build in short breaks (the Pomodoro pattern of roughly 25 to 50 minutes of work followed by a break works well), and revisit topics repeatedly over time rather than cramming each one once.
How much revision do I need for an A or A* in Biology?
There is no fixed number, but for an A or A* the key is not just more hours – it is the right kind. Top grades come from covering the whole specification, then doing regular timed past papers and deliberately practising application and analysis questions (AO2 and AO3), plus sharp exam technique. If you are scoring consistently well on timed past papers across the entire specification, you have done enough, whatever the hours add up to.
I’m putting in lots of hours but my grades aren’t improving. Why?
This is one of the most common problems, and it is almost always about method, not effort. Long hours of passive revision – re-reading notes, highlighting, copying things out – create a feeling of familiarity without building real memory. Switching to active strategies (testing yourself from memory, doing past papers without notes, explaining ideas out loud) feels harder but produces far better results. The fix is changing what you do, not simply doing more of the same.
