Your 12-Week EPSO AD5 Study Plan: A Week-by-Week Guide for 2026
A structured 12-week study plan for the EPSO AD5 2026 competition. Covers all five test types with clear weekly goals, time estimates, and the reasoning behind each phase.
Key takeaways
- 10-12 weeks at 3-4 hours per week is enough to prepare thoroughly for all five AD5 test types
- Verbal Reasoning deserves early focus — it carries the highest weight in your final score
- Short daily sessions of 30-45 minutes are more effective than long weekend cramming
- Numerical and Abstract Reasoning are pass/fail gates — reliable performance matters more than perfection
- The final two weeks should focus on full simulations and targeted review of weak areas
Twelve weeks, three to four hours a week — that is the investment
The EPSO AD5 2026 competition tests five distinct skills across five separate exams. That sounds like a lot, but with a structured approach, you can cover all of them in roughly 40 hours of focused preparation spread over 12 weeks. This plan is built around short sessions of 30-45 minutes — the kind you can fit into a lunch break or an evening routine.
Every phase in this plan has a reason. The order is not random: it follows the logic of how these skills build on each other and which ones carry the most weight in your final score.
The five tests you are preparing for
| Test | Questions | Time | Per question | Role in scoring |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verbal Reasoning (VR) | 20 | 35 min | 1:45 | Highest weight in final score |
| EU Knowledge (EK) | 30 | 40 min | 1:20 | Significant weight in final score |
| Digital Skills (DS) | 40 | 30 min | 0:45 | Significant weight in final score |
| Numerical Reasoning (NR) | 10 | 20 min | 2:00 | Pass/fail gate |
| Abstract Reasoning (AR) | 10 | 10 min | 1:00 | Pass/fail gate |
Weeks 1-2: Understand the format and set your baseline
Goal: Know exactly what each test looks like, take one practice test per type, identify your starting point.
Why this comes first: You cannot prepare efficiently if you do not know what you are preparing for. Many candidates waste weeks studying the wrong way because they never looked at the actual test format. These two weeks eliminate that risk entirely.
What to do:
- Read the official EPSO AD5 competition page and sample tests
- Take one untimed practice set for each of the five test types
- Record your scores — this is your baseline, not your final result
- Identify which areas feel comfortable and which feel unfamiliar
Time: 3-4 hours per week (30-45 minutes per session)
Weeks 3-4: Verbal Reasoning — your highest-value investment
Goal: Build a reliable method for reading passages, eliminating distractors, and answering within 1 minute 45 seconds per question.
Why VR comes first: Verbal Reasoning carries the highest weight in your final AD5 score. Improving here has the biggest impact on your ranking. It also requires a practised technique — not memorisation — which means the earlier you start building that muscle, the better.
What to do:
- Learn a structured reading method: read the question stem first, then scan the passage for relevant information
- Practice eliminating obviously wrong options before choosing between the remaining two
- Do timed sets of 5 questions, then 10, then full 20-question sets
- Focus on the difference between "true," "false," and "cannot be determined" — this distinction trips up most candidates
Time: 4 hours per week (four 60-minute sessions or six 40-minute sessions)
Weeks 5-6: EU Knowledge — structured memorisation
Goal: Cover the 13 reference documents and build a mental map of EU institutions, treaties, and procedures.
Why EK comes second: EU Knowledge requires memorisation, and memorisation needs time to consolidate. By starting in week 5, you give your brain six more weeks of passive reinforcement before exam day. Each time you review a concept during later weeks, it embeds deeper.
What to do:
- Study the key treaties (TEU, TFEU) — focus on institutional roles and decision-making procedures
- Learn the structure and function of each major institution (Parliament, Council, Commission, Court of Justice, Court of Auditors, ECB)
- Understand the ordinary legislative procedure step by step
- Use flashcards or spaced repetition for factual content (treaty articles, institutional seats, voting procedures)
- Take practice EK sets to see how EPSO frames institutional questions
Time: 3-4 hours per week
Weeks 7-8: Digital Skills — practical knowledge, fast results
Goal: Cover all five DigComp 2.2 competence areas and build speed for the fastest-paced test (45 seconds per question).
Why DS comes here: Digital skills content is highly learnable in a short time. Unlike VR technique or EK memorisation, most candidates already have everyday familiarity with these topics. Two focused weeks is enough to fill the gaps and build confidence.
What to do:
- Read the DigComp 2.2 framework summary — understand the five competence areas
- Focus on high-frequency topics: GDPR basics, cybersecurity fundamentals, Creative Commons licensing
- Study cloud computing concepts, collaboration tools, and digital problem-solving scenarios
- Practice under time pressure — 45 seconds per question requires quick recognition, not deep analysis
- Review the areas covered in the DigComp fields guide for structured coverage
Time: 3 hours per week
Weeks 9-10: Numerical and Abstract Reasoning — clear the gates
Goal: Build reliable techniques for NR and AR that get you past the pass/fail threshold consistently.
Why NR and AR come later: These tests are pass/fail gates — you need to meet a minimum threshold, but scoring higher does not improve your ranking. The strategy is reliability, not excellence. By placing them here, you have already secured your highest-value preparation (VR, EK, DS) and can focus on consistent gate-clearing technique.
What to do for Numerical Reasoning:
- Master the core operations: percentages, ratios, rates of change, reading tables and graphs
- Practice extracting the right data from complex tables before calculating
- Build a 2-minute-per-question rhythm: 10 seconds to read headers, 10 seconds to identify what is asked, 90 seconds to calculate, 10 seconds to verify
What to do for Abstract Reasoning:
- Learn the common pattern types: rotation, reflection, addition/subtraction of elements, colour alternation
- Practice identifying the pattern within 15 seconds, then verifying on two frames
- Do timed 10-question sets — the 1-minute-per-question pace is strict
Time: 3-4 hours per week
Week 11: Full simulation under exam conditions
Goal: Complete all five tests in a single session, timed, with no breaks between tests.
Why a full simulation: The real exam tests endurance as much as knowledge. Decision fatigue accumulates across tests. A full simulation reveals whether your techniques hold up under sustained pressure — and it builds the mental stamina you need for exam day.
What to do:
- Set aside a 3-hour block on a quiet day
- Complete all five test types in sequence, using official time limits
- Do not pause between tests — the real exam does not let you
- Score yourself honestly and note which questions you guessed on
- Identify your two weakest areas for the final week
Time: 3-4 hours (one long session plus review)
Week 12: Targeted review and mental preparation
Goal: Strengthen your two weakest areas and build confidence for exam day.
Why review last: The final week is not for learning new material — it is for reinforcing what you already know and smoothing out rough edges. Cramming new content now would undermine the confidence you have built over 11 weeks.
What to do:
- Spend 70% of your time on your two weakest areas from the simulation
- Spend 30% doing light review of your strongest areas to maintain confidence
- Review your most common error patterns — are you misreading VR stems? Miscalculating percentages? Missing AR rotation patterns?
- The day before the exam: light review only, early bedtime, no new material
Time: 3 hours total
What if you only have 6 weeks?
You can compress this plan without sacrificing the core logic:
| Compressed week | Focus | Original weeks |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Format orientation + baseline test | Weeks 1-2 |
| Week 2-3 | Verbal Reasoning + start EU Knowledge | Weeks 3-6 |
| Week 4 | Digital Skills + continue EU Knowledge review | Weeks 7-8 |
| Week 5 | Numerical + Abstract Reasoning | Weeks 9-10 |
| Week 6 | Full simulation + targeted review | Weeks 11-12 |
Increase to 5-6 hours per week and lean on adaptive practice tools to identify your weak areas faster — that way you spend every minute on what actually needs work.
The structure is what makes the difference
Preparing for five different test types can feel overwhelming, but it does not have to be. Three to four hours a week, broken into short focused sessions, distributed across a logical sequence — that is all it takes. You are not trying to become an expert in EU law or a maths prodigy. You are building reliable exam technique across five areas, and 12 weeks gives you plenty of time to do exactly that.
Start with what matters most, build outward, simulate under pressure, and refine. That is the entire strategy. You have the time, and you have the plan. Now it is about showing up consistently, one session at a time.
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