AIBE 20 assesses law graduates’ ability to practise — it’s not just about memorisation, but applying legal provisions, reading bare acts on the fly, and solving MCQs under time pressure. The exam covers 100 MCQs across multiple subjects (approx. 3 hours 30 minutes) with no negative marking.
Expert advice says the key lies in:
Prioritising high-weightage subjects like Constitutional Law, CPC, CrPC/BNSS, IPC/BNS.
Practising past papers & mock tests to build speed, accuracy and exam-readiness.
Organising and mastering your bare acts (laws) because even though it may be open-book, knowing where sections are will save you precious time.

Table of Contents
Phase-Wise Study Plan & Strategy
Phase 1 – Foundation (Weeks 1-4)
Spend the first month on core laws: Constitution of India, CrPC/BNSS, IPC/BNS, CPC & Evidence (BSA) — these five alone account for a huge chunk of questions.
Read the bare acts thoroughly — highlight key articles/sections, functional provisions, landmark cases.
Create quick-notes for each Act: section number, subject line, key aspect (e.g., Art. 14, Sec. 138 NI Act, Sec. 304 IPC).
Phase 2 – Practice & Consolidation (Weeks 5-10)
Begin resolving previous year AIBE papers and topic-wise MCQ sets. Focus particularly on your weaker subjects. Did you miss family law or labour law? Time to plug it.
Take timed mock tests (100 questions in 210 minutes) so you get used to pacing. Experts suggest 1 minute or so per question; skip tricky ones and return later.
Keep revising your quick notes, update them with new case laws or amendments (especially new criminal codes like BNSS, BNS).
Phase 3 – Final Revision & Mock Marathon (Weeks 11-14)
Intensify: daily mock tests + review, flash-cards of key sections, amended acts, and landmark judgments.
Focus on “medium-weight” and “low-weight” subjects too: labour law, ADR, IPR, Cyber Law — don’t skip them just because they carry fewer marks. It’s often the small things that differentiate.
Simulate exam conditions: practice with only the bare acts you will carry, under time pressure. Know how to quickly navigate them.
Expert Tips for High Performance
Master the Bare Acts
It’s highly recommended to choose updated bare acts (without commentary) for all 19 subjects. As one expert puts it: “Focus on reading the Bare Acts … build core knowledge.”
Tab the important sections, use sticky notes or coloured bookmarks for quick access during the exam.Prioritise High-Weight Subjects
Constitutional Law, CrPC/BNSS, CPC, IPC/BNS, Evidence/BSA: together these maybe 40-50 questions. Give them proportional time.Smart Notes & Flowcharts
Instead of volume reading, maintain concise revision notes: topical points, case laws, section summaries, flowcharts. These help you revise in last few days or in commute.Practice Past Papers & Mocks
AIBE prep isn’t complete without it. It helps you know question style, identify repeat topics and track your speed/accuracy.
Also essential: review your mocks immediately—identify weak zones and rectify them.Time Management During Exam
Beware spending too much time on one question. Allocate time, skip/flag harder ones. Experts list “lack of time management” as common mistake.Don’t Overload Materials
Too many books or commentary reading may hamper you — go lean: bare acts + 1 or 2 good guides + MCQ bank.Update Legal Developments
Amendments in criminal codes, new judgments, professional ethics changes — some questions come from recent changes. Stay current.
Practical Daily Routine (Sample)
Morning (1 hour): Read one bare act section + notes.
Midday (30 minutes): Flash card revision (case laws/sections).
Evening (1–2 hours): Topic-wise MCQs or one mock paper (depending on phase).
Night (30 minutes): Review mistakes; update notes.
Weekend: Full-length mock test + detailed review (2–3 hours).
Mistakes to Avoid
Underestimating the syllabus because you already did LL.B — many skip “minor” subjects and regret it. legallyflawless.in
Relying only on commentaries and memory rather than familiarising with bare acts.
Not practising mocks or ignoring previous year papers — exam pattern familiarity suffers.
Leaving low-weight subjects for last or skipping them altogether.
Neglecting revision and condensing all prep into last few days.
Final Takeaways
AIBE 20 may appear daunting given the broad syllabus, but with the right strategy you can approach it with confidence:
Build a study schedule that covers all subjects with incremental difficulty.
Prioritise high-weight subjects but don’t ignore the rest.
Use bare acts, short notes, and flowcharts for maximum output.
Make past papers and mock tests your daily ritual to build speed & stamina.
Prepare your exam-day mindset: time management, strategic skipping, review of flagged questions, carrying only allowed materials (bare acts, notes).
Avoid usual pitfalls — over-reading, skipping low-weight topics, poor revision, ignoring updates.
Stay consistent, focused and confident. According to experts: “Consistent practice and revision of all topics can increase your probability of exam success.”

