Exam in 14 days. You don't have time for content — only for review. This plan shows exactly what to cover, what to cut, and how each day looks.
14 days × 8h = 112 total hours, roughly 19% of the typical 600-hour prep window for USMLE Step 1. That math only adds up if you've already covered the material once. This page is for retakers, deferred sittings, or candidates finishing a final review pass — not for first-attempt candidates starting from zero.
Typical USMLE Step 1 prep runs ~600 hours over ~20 weeks at ~30 hours per week. This cram window gives you 112 total hours (14 days × 8 h/day). The plan below allocates ~75% to coverage and ~25% to review + at least one full mock — that ratio shifts later as the window tightens.
USMLE Step 1 has 5 topic areas. With a 14-day window we keep the highest-weight + load-bearing topics and explicitly drop the rest. The cuts below are deliberate — you only pick those topics back up if you finish higher-priority material ahead of schedule.
Every published USMLE Step 1 topic fits inside a 14-day window at this hours/day level. Tight, but no triage required. Lower-weight topics get fewer hours but stay on the schedule.
What a real 14-day USMLE Step 1 cram plan actually looks like. Heavier topics get more time. Review starts at ~55% of the window. Final stretch is mock-driven. Adjust the start date below to align with your exam.
A visual preview of how exclam.ai compresses 5 USMLE Step 1 topics into 14 days. Update the start date so the exam date aligns with your sitting.
Cover General Principles + Behavioral Health & Nervous Systems (24–33%), Pathology + Pharmacology (high-yield integration) (30–40%), Cardiovascular + Respiratory + GI + Renal (17–33%), Musculoskeletal + Skin + Endocrine + Reproductive (13–25%), Biostatistics + Social Sciences (13–20%) in this week — paired because their individual weights are light or the intensive pace requires combining adjacent syllabus sections. Read each objective, flashcard the key formulas, and run one quiz across the group before moving on.
Full-length USMLE Step 1 practice exams under timed conditions. Target one mock every 3–5 days. Same-day error review: for every question you miss, re-derive the solution from scratch. Taper in the final 3 days — light flashcards only.
Cram advice is dramatically different for first-attempt candidates and retakers. The plan above is the same; the playbook is not.
Step 1 cram from <14 days of dedicated is unrealistic regardless of M2 performance. Push the date.
UWorld first pass at 60%+ → review missed items → 2nd pass of weak topics. That's the cram core.
Add 1 NBME practice exam every 5–7 days during dedicated. Score trajectory is your readiness signal.
Save Pathoma re-watch + First Aid review for the last 5 days — recency for high-yield content.
Step 1 is pass/fail — pacing matters more than maximum score. Drill 40-question blocks under timed conditions.
Patterns that show up specifically when USMLE Step 1 candidates compress the timeline. Worth scanning before you start your week.
Step 1 is pass/fail now — but a cram failure still costs you a year. Don't treat pass/fail as license to under-prep.
UWorld percentages plateau around 70% for cram-window candidates. Get to 70%+ on cumulative timed-tutor blocks before you stop.
First Aid is a reference, not a textbook. Crammers who try to read it cover-to-cover lose days. Use it as the index for UWorld errata review.
NBME practice exam scores predict actual scores closely. If your NBME at week 2 of dedicated is below 70%, push the date.
Pathoma is high-leverage but bingeable. Watch chapters 1–3 in 2 days, then drill UWorld pathology questions against them.
Different window, different math, different cut list. Pick the duration that matches your real exam date.
Only for candidates who completed M2 with strong UWorld scores already. From a low baseline, 14 days is below the realistic floor.
Yes. UWorld is the canonical Step 1 QBank — keep using it. exclam.ai is the planner that schedules your UWorld blocks + flashcard reviews around your dedicated period.
Topic names and weight bands are paraphrased from the public NBME USMLE Step 1 Content Outline (public). Verify the current outline before your sitting.
NBME USMLE Step 1 Content Outline (public)Upload your USMLE Step 1 materials, plug in your exam date, and exclam.ai builds the compressed plan automatically. Free to start.