IMG Study Plan: How to Prepare for USMLE Step 2 CK in 3 Months

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Three months of dedicated full-time study is the standard intensive preparation period. This plan assumes 8-10 productive hours daily and a solid clinical medicine foundation.

Month 1: Foundation

Systematic organ system review — work through each major discipline: internal medicine, surgery, OB/GYN, paediatrics, psychiatry, neurology, emergency medicine. Do 40-60 questions daily from your primary Q-bank (UWorld). Focus on understanding explanations thoroughly, not just accumulating question volume. Identify your weakest topics — these become Month 2 priorities. Daily schedule: 4 hours Q-bank (2 blocks of 40 questions + thorough review) + 3 hours topic review using UpToDate or clinical references + 1 hour iatroX adaptive drills targeting weak areas identified that day.

Month 2: Application

Increase to 80-100 questions daily. Shift from systematic coverage to targeted weak-area work — your Month 1 performance data tells you exactly where to focus. Second pass through UWorld focusing on previously incorrect questions. Run iatroX adaptive mode for 30-45 minutes daily — it automatically targets the topics your primary Q-bank performance reveals as weakest. Take your first NBME self-assessment at the end of Month 2 — this is your baseline calibration. If the score is 15+ points below your target, reassess your approach.

Month 3: Performance

Timed blocks (44 questions, 60 minutes) simulating actual exam conditions — train your pacing. Two full-length practice exams (NBME forms). Intensive weak-area drilling on whatever your NBMEs reveal as persistent gaps. Final week: light review of high-yield topics (screening guidelines, immunisations, biostats), no new content, rest, and exam day preparation.

When to Postpone

If your NBME score at end of Month 2 is more than 20 points below your target with no upward trajectory, consider extending by 2-4 weeks. A premature attempt with a below-target score permanently marks your record — especially consequential for IMGs.

Start your adaptive weak-area drills today →

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