How Long Should You Study for the RACP Paediatrics Written Examination?
The short answer
Most candidates dedicate 16–26 weeks of structured preparation to the RACP Paediatrics Written Examination, with a realistic weekly load of 12-20 hours of focused study on top of clinical work. The exact figure depends on your prior knowledge base, recent exam experience and how much protected time you can carve out each week.
What changes the timeline
The headline range assumes you are working clinically and have a typical training-stage knowledge base. Several factors will push you towards the longer or shorter end:
- How recently you sat a comparable examination (recent exam experience accelerates preparation considerably).
- Whether the RACP Paediatrics Written Examination sits in your day-to-day clinical work or in an area you rarely touch.
- Your weekly study volume, and how consistent it is week to week.
- Whether you have access to structured resources or are assembling materials yourself.
- How many practice questions and timed papers you have already completed.
A phased plan that works
Most successful preparation schedules follow a three-phase structure:
- Foundation phase (first third). Build a baseline across all curriculum domains. Read or watch core content, take structured notes and complete introductory MCQ practice. Aim for breadth over depth.
- Consolidation phase (middle third). Shift the balance towards question practice and timed answers. Use weak-area analytics to revisit content where performance is lowest. Begin practising answer structure under timed conditions.
- Exam-readiness phase (final third). Complete a full timed practice paper or simulated viva, run focused revision on remaining weak domains and reduce new content intake. Final weeks should be consolidation and rehearsal, not new learning.
Common timing mistakes
- Starting late and trying to compress 26–52 weeks of preparation into 12. Volume of repeated exposure cannot be replaced by intensity.
- Spending the final weeks reading new material instead of consolidating what you already know.
- Not sitting a full practice paper under timed conditions before exam day.
- Inconsistent weekly hours that produce a high total but no rhythm or retention.
How PRIMEX helps you stay on schedule
- Curriculum-mapped progress analytics show, at any point, which domains need more time.
- Spaced-repetition scheduling means revision lands where retention is weakest, automatically.
- Timed practice modes for SAQ, MCQ and viva let you build exam-day pacing well before the sitting.
Start your 7-day free PRIMEX trial for the RACP Paediatrics Written Examination and find out where your preparation stands right now.
Start free trialFrequently asked questions
How many weeks do most candidates spend preparing for the RACP Paediatrics Written Examination?
Most candidates spend 16–26 weeks in dedicated, structured preparation. The right number for you depends on your starting point and the consistency of your weekly study volume.
How many hours per week is realistic?
A realistic weekly commitment is 12-20 hours of focused study on top of clinical work. Consistency matters more than peak weekly hours.
Can I prepare in a shorter timeframe?
A compressed timeline is possible for candidates with strong underlying preparation, but the RACP Paediatrics Written Examination rewards repeated exposure and spaced consolidation. Most candidates who succeed in short windows have already done substantial groundwork during clinical training.
When should I sit a practice exam?
Sit a full practice paper or simulated exam roughly 8 to 12 weeks out from your sitting. The result reveals weak domains while there is still time to act.
Does PRIMEX include a study planner?
PRIMEX provides curriculum-mapped progress analytics so you can see which domains are strongest and weakest, and pace your revision accordingly.