2026 predicted topics — GCSE & A-Level
Focus revision on likely angles for summer 2026: choose your subject and exam board, then back it up with adaptive practice on your full specification.
Try the loop on a single question via our free question, drill by topic in exam questions, or open your course from subjects for board-aligned coverage beyond predictions alone.
Full predicted papers — interactive
Exam-realistic papers with marks, timed sections, download, live marking and shareable scores. Choose a subject hub, then open the summer 2026 paper.
- GCSE Maths predicted paper 2026AQA-style · difficulty 62/100
- GCSE Biology predicted paper 2026AQA-style · difficulty 58/100
- A-Level Maths predicted paper 2026AQA-style · difficulty 71/100
Hubs: GCSE Maths · GCSE Biology · A-Level Maths
How to use predicted topics responsibly
These pages highlight angles that often carry weight in exams — from specification emphasis and past-paper patterns — but they are not a substitute for revising your full board specification. Examiners can set any valid topic; “predicted” means “high-probability focus areas,” not guarantees.
- Pair each subject page with full-topic exam practice so students still see the breadth of the course.
- Use GCSE Maths topic guides (and other subject hubs) for worked examples and common mistakes, not only prediction lists.
- For a frictionless first try, students can answer one free exam-style question before signing up.
Common mistakes when revising from predictions alone
- Treating a prediction list as a complete checklist and skipping “low-light” topics that still appear on papers.
- Neglecting exam technique: command words, show-that questions, and multi-step working — even on “likely” topics.
- Not matching practice to the right tier and board, so revision drifts away from the specification students actually sit.
For teachers, tutors & resource pages
You are welcome to link to this hub or to individual subject pages when you want students to see likely 2026 focus areas alongside board-aligned practice. StudyVector is built for UK GCSE and A-Level specifications — not generic chat — so links stay relevant for revision blogs, department handouts, and pastoral newsletters. School-wide rollout and class visibility are summarised on our schools page; parents get a plain-English overview on the parents page.