Daily MCQ Practice for Ayurveda Entrance Exams
30 questions a day, 20 minutes, every subject covered before the exam cycle ends.
One daily paper, 60+ subjects, one exam cycle
Every day on CEET, a fresh 20-question MCQ paper goes live, set to a 20-minute sitting. Over 365 days that adds up to 121+ hours of structured practice and full rotation across all 60+ subjects on the AIAPGET, PSC, UPSC, NTET, and CEET syllabi. The daily format enforces the consistency that intensive weekend sessions cannot replicate.
QUESTIONS PER DAILY EXAM
TARGET SITTING TIME PER SESSION
AYURVEDA SUBJECT AREAS IN ROTATION
One paper, every day
A new 20-question paper is published each day without exception. Candidates build the habit of opening the app at the same time daily, which converts preparation from a sporadic activity into a fixed routine that compounds over the exam cycle.
20-minute sitting discipline
Each paper is calibrated to finish in 20 minutes at the pace AIAPGET and PSC papers require. Candidates who practise at exam speed consistently score measurably better than those who answer questions at leisure; the time constraint is a training variable, not a concession.
Breadth without overload
Each session focuses on one or two subjects, rotating across the full syllabus over the cycle. No single session overloads a candidate with 10 subjects at once; breadth accumulates session by session so no subject area is left unvisited before the exam date.
Streak and session tracking
The platform records every session completed and displays the candidate's current streak alongside their total completed sessions. Candidates who maintain a streak of 30 or more days enter the exam cycle with a measurable preparation advantage over those who start intensive revision in the final month.
Per-subject mastery scores
Accuracy is tracked separately for each subject area, so candidates can see at a glance which subjects are solid and which need more sessions. A candidate scoring 85% in Dravyaguna but 52% in Sharira Kriya has a clear, data-backed revision priority without guessing.
Live leaderboards and self-paced archive
Daily leaderboards rank every candidate who submitted on the same day, giving competitive students a direct benchmark. Candidates who prefer to study without the pressure can attempt any past paper from the My Exams archive at their own pace without affecting the live rankings.
Why Short Daily Reps Beat Sporadic Intensive Sessions
The case for daily short-session practice is built on how memory consolidates, not on motivation. A candidate who answers 20 questions today, 20 tomorrow, and 20 the day after does not simply accumulate 90 questions; each session reinforces the retrieval pathways opened in the previous one. Spaced repetition at this frequency produces retention rates that a single three-hour sitting cannot match, regardless of how many questions that sitting covers.
The arithmetic of 365 sessions
At 20 minutes per session across 365 days, the total practice time reaches 121 hours and 40 minutes. That figure is the equivalent of roughly 15 full eight-hour study days, accumulated in 20-minute increments that fit around clinical postings, internship duties, and working hours. The daily format does not compete with block revision; it runs underneath it. A candidate in a six-month AIAPGET batch simultaneously completing daily exams arrives at the mock-test phase with 60+ hours of timed MCQ practice already logged before the first full-length mock is attempted.
Subject rotation and syllabus breadth
AIAPGET and PSC papers draw questions from 60 or more distinct subject areas, including Rachana Sharira, Dravyaguna, Charaka Samhita, Roga Nidana, Panchakarma, and Swasthavritta. Candidates who spend the final two months before the exam doing only high-weightage subjects frequently lose marks in the mid-weightage subjects they neglected. The daily exam's rotation schedule is designed to prevent this: by cycling through the full subject list over the exam cycle, it builds breadth by default. Candidates do not need to separately plan their subject coverage; the daily paper does the planning for them.
Who benefits from the daily exam format
AIAPGET aspirants use the daily exam as a warm-up before batch classes, as an end-of-day revision check, or as their sole structured practice on days when a full study session is not possible. PSC and UPSC candidates preparing for Ayurveda Medical Officer posts find the subject rotation particularly useful because PSC papers frequently test subjects that AIAPGET candidates de-prioritise, such as Community Medicine and Forensic Medicine. NTET candidates preparing for naturopathy entrance tests use the Sharira and Basic Science sessions. The archive of past daily exams, accessible through the My Exams section, means that a candidate who joins mid-cycle can work back through every session already published before their registration date.
How the Daily Exam System Fits Your Preparation Plan
The daily exam is not a replacement for batch coaching, mock tests, or subject-specific revision. It occupies the 20-minute slot that would otherwise be unstructured: the first 20 minutes after waking, the commute, the gap between two scheduled sessions. Because each paper takes 20 minutes to complete and another 10 minutes to review the explanations, the total daily investment is 30 minutes. That fits into every preparation schedule regardless of how intensive the surrounding study plan is.
Using the leaderboard strategically
The live leaderboard updates throughout the day as candidates submit. Candidates in the top 10 percentile on a given day have answered accurately at exam speed, which is a more reliable preparation signal than a high score on an untimed practice set. Candidates who track their leaderboard position weekly get a real-time read on whether their preparation is accelerating or plateauing. A score that sat at the 60th percentile in month one and climbs to the 80th by month three represents 20 percentile points of verifiable improvement, not a subjective assessment of readiness.
Connecting daily practice to the broader CEET platform
Each daily exam paper is tagged to the subjects it covers, so a candidate who scores poorly on a Sharira-focused paper can immediately open the relevant subject-wise strategy guide or the corresponding video lecture from their batch. The per-subject mastery dashboard shows accuracy trends over time rather than single-session results, so a bad day in Dravyaguna does not distort the overall mastery score. Candidates sitting AIAPGET typically find that their per-subject mastery scores from the daily exam correlate closely with their subject-wise performance on full-length mock tests taken four to six weeks later.
Building the habit before the pressure arrives
The candidates who score highest in AIAPGET consistently report starting structured MCQ practice earlier than their peers, not longer per session. A candidate who completes 200 daily sessions before the mock-test phase has answered 6,000 questions under timed conditions before the first mock. The daily exam creates this foundation without requiring a daily decision about what to study; the system decides, the candidate answers, and the mastery data accumulates.
Frequently Asked Questions
What time does the daily exam go live each day?
A new paper is published each day. Candidates can attempt it at any point during that day. The live leaderboard for a given day closes when the next paper goes live; after that, the paper moves to the archive and can be attempted without affecting the leaderboard.
Can I attempt a daily exam paper I missed on a previous day?
Yes. Every past daily exam is stored in the My Exams archive. Candidates who miss a session can attempt it at their own pace from the archive at any time. Archive attempts are not scored on the live leaderboard but do count toward the per-subject mastery scores on the candidate's profile.
Does the daily exam cover AIAPGET, PSC, UPSC, and NTET in every paper?
Each daily paper focuses on one or two subject areas drawn from the Ayurveda syllabus. The subjects tested are common to AIAPGET, PSC, UPSC, and NTET because all four exams draw from the same BAMS curriculum. The question difficulty and pattern are calibrated primarily to the AIAPGET standard, which is the highest-stakes exam on the platform; candidates preparing for PSC or UPSC will find the difficulty appropriate or slightly above what their target exam requires.
How are subjects chosen for each daily exam?
The daily exam rotation is planned by the CEET academic team to ensure full syllabus coverage within the exam cycle. High-weightage subjects like Dravyaguna, Charaka Samhita, Sharira, and Roga Nidana appear more frequently than low-weightage subjects, in proportion to their share of the AIAPGET marks distribution.
Is the daily exam included in all subscription plans?
Daily exam access is included in all active CEET subscriptions. Candidates with an active batch subscription or a standalone MCQ bank access plan can attempt every daily paper and access the full archive without any additional purchase.
What happens to my streak if I miss a day?
A missed day resets the current streak counter. The total completed sessions count is unaffected by missed days. Candidates whose streak resets can begin a new streak from the next session; the mastery data accumulated before the break is preserved in full.
Start your first daily exam now
Register for free, open today's paper, and answer your first 20 questions in 20 minutes. Your mastery scores and streak begin from the first session you complete.