When to Start Preparing for an MBA? An Ideal Timeline
Sandhya RaghavanMBAMay 19, 2026
When to start preparing for MBA? Ideally, you should begin 18 to 24 months before your target intake. Top B-school applicants often start building their profiles two years ahead. They usually take the GMAT or GRE about a year before applying and submit their applications in Round 1 (September-October) or Round 2 (January). For example, if you want to start in Fall 2027, you should begin preparing by mid-2025. Here’s how to get started.
Getting into top B-schools like Harvard, Wharton, Stanford, INSEAD, and ISB takes careful planning. These schools attract many highly qualified applicants from all over the world, so they are very selective. They consider your work experience, extracurriculars, leadership, test scores, recommendations, and essays. If you rush your application, you might not show your full potential, which can lead to rejection.
Round 1 applications face the least competition and get the most scholarship offers. Round 3 applicants compete for fewer than 10% of the remaining seats. The more time you have, the better your options, scholarships and admission chances.
How to Prepare for an MBA
Review Your Profile and Build Your Foundation (24 to 18 Months Before Intake)
Before you begin preparing for your MBA, take some time to review your profile.
Look over your academics, work experience, leadership roles, and extracurricular activities.
Identify any gaps. Do you need more community involvement? Is your GPA lower than you’d like?
Take on challenging projects at work, such as managing a budget, leading a team, or launching a new product.
Take up causes that you care about. Offer your skills pro bono to organisations that support something you believe in.
If this process feels overwhelming, consider working with a study abroad consultant like Onwardo.
They can guide you through every step, including building a strong profile. Onwardo’s combined synergy has helped students secure admission to some of the most competitive business schools in the world. 65+ admits in 2 years in top 20 management schools.
During this stage, focus on building experiences and achievements that you can later use in your essays and interviews.
2. Prepare for GMAT or GRE (18 to 12 Months Before Intake)
Next, start preparing for the GMAT or GRE, depending on what your target schools require.
The GMAT Focus Edition is now the standard test, which lasts 2 hours and 15 minutes across three sections: Quantitative Reasoning, Verbal Reasoning, and Data Insights, with a maximum score of 805.
Most successful test-takers spend 100 to 120 hours studying over 2 to 4 months. If you are working, you might spread this out over 4 to 6 months.
How to Prepare for GMAT
Take a diagnostic test to establish your baseline score.
Plan for 10 to 15 hours of weekly study.
Schedule your first official attempt 12 to 14 months before your intake — leaving room for a retake without derailing applications.
Target the median score of your dream school plus 10 to 20 points.
GMAT scores remain valid for five years, so an early high score is a long-term asset. The GRE is accepted by nearly every top program and is an equally valid alternative for those who prefer it.
2. School Research & Networking (12 to 9 Months Before Intake)
Once the test is out of your way, you should shift your focus to B-school research and networking. Start by finalising all the schools you want to attend, a list of 6-8 that aligns with your goals. Here is how you can start:
Attend virtual info sessions, MBA fairs, and admissions events.
Connect with current students and alumni on LinkedIn.
Visit campuses where feasible
Identify your two or three recommenders and brief them informally.
In this phase, you prepare to answer the “Why this school” angle that admissions committees scrutinise most heavily.
4. Essays, Recommendations, Resume (9 to 6 Months Before Intake)
You cannot build strong essays overnight. It takes several months of drafting, editing and revising. Your Statement of Purpose (SOP) is your best representation. Do not make it sloppy. Similarly, your Letters of Recommendation (LORs) is your strongest endorsement. Take it from someone who knows your academic and professional background inside out.
Strong essays require multiple drafts over several months, not weekends.
Begin essay brainstorming around June if targeting Round 1 (September deadlines)
Re-engineer your one-page MBA resume to emphasise impact, scope, and leadership.
Brief recommendations formally with talking points, your career goals, and clear deadlines
Write 4 to 6 essay drafts per school and seek external feedback from mentors or admissions consultants.
5. Submit, Interview, Decide ( 6 to 0 Months Before Intake)
The MBA application cycle happens at the same time every year. Round 1 deadlines are in September and October, Round 2 is in January, and Round 3 is in March or April. Round 1 usually has the most seats and best scholarships. Round 2 is the most popular and still very competitive. Only apply in Round 3 if your profile is outstanding or you have a strong reason related to location.
After you submit your application, you’ll usually get interview invitations within 3 to 6 weeks. Final decisions come soon after that.
Special Scenarios: When Your Timeline Looks Different
If you’re in your final year of college, look into deferred MBA programs like Harvard 2+2, Wharton Advance Access, MIT Sloan Early Admission, Chicago Booth Scholars, and Yale Silver Scholars. These programs let you apply in your last year of college and then defer enrollment for 2 to 5 years while you gain work experience.
If you have 3 to 5 years of work experience, you’re in the ideal range for most full-time MBA programs. You should follow the standard 18 to 24 month preparation timeline. If you’re changing careers, add 6 months to your timeline. This gives you time for extra certifications, side projects, or networking to help you move into your new field. f you have more than 8 years of experience and are applying for an Executive MBA, you can shorten your preparation to 9 to 12 months. EMBA programs focus more on your professional achievements than on test scores.s
Don’t Make These MBA Mistakes
Starting the GMAT too late — leaving only one attempt before the deadline
Treating essays as a 30-day project — top essays evolve through 8 to 12 drafts
Picking recommenders at the last minute — strong recommenders need 6 to 8 weeks of lead time
Underestimating Round 1 — the data consistently favors early applicants
Skipping the profile audit — leading to generic, undifferentiated applications
The best time to start preparing for an MBA is 24 months before your target intake, with the GMAT completed by month 12 and applications submitted in Round 1. If your target intake is closer than 18 months out, the answer is simple: start today, accelerate the GMAT, and aim for Round 2 of the current cycle.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I start preparing for an MBA?
You should start preparing for an MBA at least 18 months to 2 years before your targeted intake.
Is MBA harder than CA?
CA or Chartered Accountancy is considered much harder than MBA.
Is MBA still worth in 2026?
An MBA is highly worth it in 2026, but students must pursue it at a premium institution with a focus on emerging fields.
Can I get 100% job after an MBA?
An MBA provides you access to high-value networks and roles, but securing a 100% job depends on your college tier, past work experience and interview performance.
What MBA did Sundar Pichai do?
Sundar Pichai did his MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
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