A 6-month runway is a gift, and the main risk is spending it without structure. Here is how 26 weeks breaks down when every week has a job.
This structure is not hypothetical. It is the same four-phase model (Foundation, Building, Intensive, Final) that Pillar Prep's scheduling algorithm uses to generate real, personalized study plans for Retakers.
Phase 1: Foundation (~6.1 weeks)
The opening quarter of the plan rebuilds the base. Content review and video lessons are weighted toward your weakest sections, passage practice starts light, and the unscored AAMC Sample Test lands early as a baseline. For a Retaker this phase is shorter on relearning and heavier on diagnosis: the goal is a clear map of which content survived your first cycle and which did not.
Phase 2: Building (~7.6 weeks)
The middle of the plan is where volume lives. The AAMC Bite-Size series runs through this phase as timed mini-exams ordered weakest section first, question pack and IQB blocks provide steady official practice, and your first scored full length arrives. Daily Retaker review (error log, Concept Training, Trap Training) runs alongside everything, because practice without structured review is where first attempts usually went wrong.
Phase 3: Intensive (~11.3 weeks)
Content gives way to execution. Section Bank blocks peak here, full lengths arrive on a steady cadence with dedicated review days for each section, and strategy work shifts to timing and trap recognition. The six scored AAMC full lengths are spaced across this stretch so each one gets reviewed properly before the next.
Phase 4: Final (the last week)
The last seven days protect the work. Light review, rest, logistics, and confidence. No new content, no heroic cram sessions, and at most a final conditions rehearsal early in the week. Walking in rested beats walking in crammed.
Common questions
Is 6 months enough time to retake the MCAT?
Yes, comfortably. A 6-month window gives a Retaker room for a full Foundation phase, unhurried AAMC material, and enough spacing between full lengths to actually learn from each one. The risk at this length is drift, which is exactly what a structured phase plan prevents.
How many hours a week does an MCAT retake schedule need?
Pillar Prep plans assume a minimum of about 10 hours a week, because the system is built on active practice plus real review rather than passive rereading. More hours shorten the timeline; the structure stays the same.
What order should AAMC material go in on a retake?
In a standard plan, the unscored Sample Test comes first as a baseline, the Bite-Size series and question banks run through the Building phase, the Section Bank peaks in Intensive, and the six scored full lengths are spaced across the back half of prep, each with dedicated review days.
Make it yours
This page shows the shape of a 6-month plan. Your actual plan depends on your sections, your first score report, and your week-to-week availability. The free Retaker Calculator is a good first step, and The Retaker Course generates the full personalized version of this schedule around your exact test date.
Comparing timelines? the 4-month schedule · the 4-month schedule at 15 hrs/wk · the 3-month schedule. For how each AAMC resource fits inside these phases, see the AAMC material guides.