Four weeks of focused, consistent studying is all most applicants need to walk into their citizenship interview feeling fully confident. This plan tells you exactly what to study each week and gives you a clear daily routine to follow from start to finish.
Before You Start: Set Your Start Date
Count back four weeks from your interview appointment date β that is your Day 1. If your interview is more than four weeks away, use extra time to go through the plan twice. Repetition builds deep, lasting confidence. If your interview is in less than four weeks, extend daily study sessions to 45 minutes and double up some days. Focused preparation, even in two weeks, produces strong results.
Week 1: American Government (Questions 1β30)
- Days 1β2: Questions 1β10. Focus on the Constitution as the supreme law, the Bill of Rights, and the First Amendment freedoms. Practice saying each answer out loud.
- Days 3β4: Questions 11β20. Cover the three branches of government, the structure of Congress (how many Senators, how many Representatives), and what each branch does.
- Days 5β6: Questions 21β30. Cover presidential powers and term limits, Supreme Court composition, and the difference between federal and state government powers.
- Day 7: Review all 30 questions from this week. Quiz yourself randomly on questions 1β30 and identify any you still get wrong.
Week 2: American Government Continued (Questions 31β57)
- Days 1β2: Questions 31β40. Cover the Vice President role, how bills become laws, and the role of political parties.
- Days 3β4: Questions 41β50. Cover elections, how long officials serve, and what happens when elected officials cannot continue in office.
- Days 5β6: Questions 51β57. Cover the rights and responsibilities of citizens and the Selective Service requirement.
- Day 7: Full review of all questions covered in weeks 1 and 2 (questions 1β57). Take a practice test on this material and identify weak spots.
Week 3: American History and Integrated Civics (Questions 58β100)
- Days 1β2: Questions 58β70. Cover colonial America, the Revolutionary War, the Declaration of Independence, and the founding of the nation.
- Days 3β4: Questions 71β88. Cover the Civil War and Emancipation Proclamation, women suffrage, World Wars I and II, and the Civil Rights Movement.
- Days 5β6: Questions 89β100. Cover U.S. geography, national symbols, the national anthem, and national holidays.
- Day 7: Take a full 100-question practice test. Track your total score and identify every category where you scored below 70 percent.
Week 4: Full Practice Tests and Targeted Review
- Days 1β2: Review every question you missed in your week 3 practice test. Focus extra time on any category where you are still weak.
- Days 3β4: Take a complete 100-question practice test each day. Your goal is to answer 90 or more questions correctly on each test.
- Days 5β6: Look up all current elected officials whose names you must know: the President, Vice President, Speaker of the House, your state Governor, your two U.S. Senators, and your U.S. Representative.
- Day 7 β Night Before Interview: Light review only. Scan your five or ten weakest questions once to build last-minute confidence. Prepare your complete document packet. Get a full night of sleep. You are ready.
Daily Study Habits That Produce Results
Study at the same time each day to build a consistent habit. Keep each session focused and free of distractions β no phone, no TV. Always speak your answers out loud, never just read them silently. End every session with a 10-question random practice quiz to test how well the material is sticking. Consistent daily practice beats sporadic long sessions every time.
Free Resources to Use with This Plan
Combine this study plan with our free interactive civics practice test (all 100 questions with instant feedback and explanations), our English reading and writing practice tool, the official USCIS study materials available at uscis.gov, and our downloadable study guides for offline review when you are away from a device.