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VCE Exam Timetable 2026: Key Dates + How to Build a Study Timetable

The 2026 VCE written exams run 27 October to 18 November. Here are the key dates for the major subjects, plus a 5-step method to build a study timetable that actually works.

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The 2026 VCE written exams run from Tuesday 27 October to Wednesday 18 November 2026, and English is first, on 27 October. Knowing the dates is the easy part. The students who walk in calm and prepared are the ones who built their study timetable backwards from those dates – weighted by what is actually at stake, not by which subjects they like. This guide gives you the key 2026 dates and a five-step method to build a study timetable that survives contact with real life. (Written by Haobo Zhang – 98 ATAR, University of Melbourne Biomedicine; founder of HZ Tutoring.)

Key takeaways

  • The 2026 written exams run 27 October to 18 November; the GAT was already held on 16 June.
  • Build your timetable backwards from your own exam dates – your last exam and your weakest high-stakes subject shape everything.
  • Weight your hours by marks at stake, not by which subjects feel comfortable.
  • Timed practice exams are the highest-return activity in the final months – block them in first.
  • Arrive at each exam at least 30 minutes early; the 15-minute reading time is already inside the listed times.

The 2026 VCE exam dates you need

The written examination period is Tuesday 27 October to Wednesday 18 November 2026. English and EAL go first on 27 October (every VCE student sits one of them), and there is a break for the Melbourne Cup public holiday on Tuesday 3 November. Here are the dates for the highest-enrolment subjects – always confirm the exact time and session for your subjects on the official VCAA timetable, because most days have three sessions.

Subject2026 exam date
English / EALTue 27 October
EconomicsThu 29 October
PsychologyFri 30 October
General Mathematics (Exam 1 & 2)Fri 30 Oct & Mon 2 Nov
BiologyMon 2 November
Business ManagementWed 4 November
Mathematical Methods (Exam 1 & 2)Thu 5 Nov & Fri 6 Nov
Health and Human DevelopmentThu 5 November
Legal StudiesFri 6 November
Specialist Mathematics (Exam 1 & 2)Mon 9 Nov & Wed 11 Nov
ChemistryTue 10 November
PhysicsThu 12 November

Two things to notice straight away: some subjects are back-to-back (Methods Exam 1 on 5 November, Exam 2 the very next morning), and your science and maths exams cluster in the second week. That shape – not a generic calendar – is what your timetable has to be built around. (Source: VCAA 2026 VCE examination timetable.)

Why most study timetables fail

Most timetables are colour-coded fantasies. They fail for three reasons: they ignore the order your exams actually fall in, they split time evenly instead of by what is at stake, and they are unrealistic – a 12-hour day you abandon in week one is worth less than a 4-hour day you keep. A good timetable is boring, specific to your exams, and something you will still be following in November.

How to build a study timetable that works: 5 steps

Step 1 – Start from your real exam dates

Put your exams on a calendar first, working backwards from your last one. The shape matters: a subject with a long gap after English can wait; a pair like Methods Exam 1 (5 Nov) and Exam 2 (6 Nov) has to be exam-ready a day earlier than everything else. Our free VCE exam countdown shows exactly how long you have to each one.

Step 2 – Weight your hours by marks at stake

Do not give every subject equal time. Give the most hours to the subjects that are high-weighting and where you are weakest – that is where marks are cheapest to gain. The exam is worth 50% or more of most study scores, so an hour spent lifting a weak subject from a C to a B is worth far more than polishing a subject you already ace. Comfort is not a study strategy.

Step 3 – Block in timed practice exams first

Practice exams under timed conditions, marked against the VCAA examiner reports, are the single highest-return activity in the final months – so schedule them before anything else and build revision around them. Do full papers, not just questions you like. Our subject guides show what to drill for each exam: Methods, Chemistry, Biology, English and the rest.

Step 4 – Make it a plan you will actually keep

Use 45-60 minute blocks with real breaks, plan one lighter day a week, and leave slack for the days that go sideways. A timetable with no give is a timetable you break and then abandon. Build in the rest deliberately – our guide to not burning out before exams covers how to keep the engine running for a full month.

Step 5 – Reverse-engineer exam week

Your last two weeks are logistics, not new learning. Front-load the content for clustered or back-to-back exams so you are not cramming two subjects the night before, protect your sleep (a rested brain out-scores a tired one), and use the Melbourne Cup break on 3 November as a deliberate reset, not a write-off. Walk into each exam having already done that exact paper, under time, at least once.

The most common timetable mistakes

Avoid these five. Studying the subjects you already like instead of the ones that need work; spending more time designing the timetable than following it; leaving practice exams until the final week; building a plan with no breaks or buffer days; and ignoring your back-to-back exam days until it is too late to front-load them.

None of this needs to be done alone. If you are not sure how to weight your subjects or what to drill, that is exactly what a good tutor helps with – see how the subjects compare, or work out what score you are aiming for with our free ATAR calculator.

Written by Haobo Zhang
98 ATAR · University of Melbourne Biomedicine · founder of HZ Tutoring

Before exam day: check the VCE exam rules and what you can bring so nothing catches you out.

Before exam day, read the VCE exam rules – the late-arrival, device and exit rules that catch students out.

Frequently asked questions

When do VCE exams start in 2026?

The 2026 VCE written examinations run from Tuesday 27 October to Wednesday 18 November. English and EAL are first, on 27 October. Always check the exact time and session for your subjects on the official VCAA timetable.

When was the GAT in 2026?

The General Achievement Test (GAT) was held on Tuesday 16 June 2026. It runs in the middle of the year, well before the written exams. If you are reading this after June, the GAT is behind you and the written exams in October-November are the focus.

How many hours a day should I study for VCE exams?

Quality beats quantity. For most students, four to six focused hours a day with real breaks, weighted toward the subjects that need the most work, beats a marathon you cannot sustain. A rested, consistent routine outscores burnout every time.

When should I start doing practice exams?

Start earlier than you think – weeks out, not in the final week – and ramp up the frequency as the exams approach. Timed, full-paper practice marked against the examiner reports is the highest-return revision there is, so it should anchor your timetable rather than being an afterthought.

What if I have two exams back-to-back?

Front-load them. Be exam-ready for both a day or two early so the night before is light revision, not new learning. Methods students, for example, sit Exam 1 on 5 November and Exam 2 the next morning – that pair has to peak before the rest of your subjects.

When do VCE results come out?

VCE results and ATARs are released in mid-December. See our guide on when VCE results come out for the details and how to read them.

Want a study plan built around your exams?

Our tutors will help you build a realistic timetable, weight your subjects, and drill the right practice exams for your 2026 dates. Book a free trial – $94/hour, all HZ resources included.

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