Free tools, no signup
Every tool here runs locally in your browser. No account, no tracking, no upload of your scores. Two are useful to anyone preparing for any exam. Three are calibrated to specific study patterns. Three more are built for the in-the-moment psychological work that anxiety-driven study patterns require.
Enter your exam date. Get a cycle-paced form sequence (Step 1, CBSE, or MCAT), a per-day breakdown of what each cycle day looks like, a last-48-hours plan, and a readiness check on your recent practice scores. Calendar export included.
Open the tool →Eight short questions about today. The tool reads where you actually are, picks one of three triage levels, and gives back a structured plan for the next 24 hours. Built for the days when nothing is sticking and you need somebody to tell you what to do next.
Open the tool →Answer six questions about your timeline, your current question bank progress, and how you learn. The tool picks one resource stack and tells you to abandon the others. Includes a seven-day starter plan.
Open the tool →Sixty USMLE-relevant lookalike pairs (HOCM vs aortic stenosis, TTP vs HUS, Wilson vs hemochromatosis, and so on). Each pair surfaces the single discriminating feature. Includes a test mode where the discriminator is hidden until you type yours.
Open the tool →Pick a system. Get a topic. Type everything you know in 60 seconds. Then compare against the model answer side by side. Forty-five topics across fourteen systems. Self-grade, session wrap-up, and cross-day topic resurfacing.
Open the tool →Sixty-second mid-block panic protocol. Box breathing, a foothold fact, return to the question. Open it while you are spiraling. The post-block debrief identifies your specific triggers over time.
Open the tool →Ten-minute structured wind-down for the nights when nothing turns off. Brain dump, today's catch, tomorrow's first action, body scan. Sleep is the highest-leverage intervention for everything else.
Open the tool →Five questions that put real data against the catastrophic thought in your head. Names the thought, reads the last NBME, checks the runway, picks the next twenty minutes. Reframes anxiety as evidence to examine.
Open the tool →The triage flow picks for you.
Three minutes. It asks how studying actually feels right now, identifies one of five patterns, and surfaces the two or three tools above that are calibrated to that pattern. The other tools stay accessible, nothing is hidden, but you get a starting point instead of a menu.
Open the triage flow →