Coming Soon

Predicted Papers

Fresh, exam-style papers for the topics and trends most likely to come up, written to Edexcel, AQA and OCR specifications. The extra layer of practice for once you've worked through the past papers.

Maths Science Edexcel AQA OCR GCSE A-Level

The Final Step Before Exam Day

Past papers are finite, and once you've worked through every one available for your board, you still need fresh, exam-standard practice. Predicted papers fill that gap.

1

Past Papers

You build a strong foundation working through every official past paper available for your board.

2

Predicted Papers

Once past papers run out, predicted papers give you fresh, exam-style practice based on the current specification and topic trends.

3

Exam Day

You walk in fully prepared, having practised under exam conditions right up until the final stretch.

Built Like the Real Exam

Predicted papers are written to match the structure and standard of your board's actual exam, not generic practice questions.

Exam-Style Format

The same paper structure, command words and timing as your board's real exam, so there are no surprises on the day.

Full Mark Scheme

Every predicted paper comes with a complete, examiner-style mark scheme so you know exactly how marks are awarded.

Spec-Weighted Topics

Questions are weighted to match how often each topic actually comes up, based on the current specification and recent trends.

Download or Work Online

Take it as a PDF for timed conditions, or work through it on the page with the same interactive features as our worksheets.

What's Being Built

Predicted papers are in production now for the following subjects, levels and boards.

Maths

GCSE & A-Level

Science

GCSE & A-Level

Edexcel

Exam Board

AQA

Exam Board

OCR

Exam Board

In the Meantime, Make Your Past Papers Last Longer

Predicted papers take time to build properly. Here's a free strategy you can use right now to get more out of the past papers that already exist.

Use other exam boards' past papers while you still can

If you're in Year 10, you don't need to save every past paper for Year 11. Past papers from boards other than your own are written to a very similar specification, so they make excellent extra practice, and you won't run out of material for your own board later on.

Your Board: AQA Practise on: Edexcel Papers

For example, if you sit AQA, do most of your early past paper practice on Edexcel papers. Mix in a handful of AQA papers to stay aligned with your own board's style and wording, but treat the Edexcel set as your main supply while it's still untouched.

By the time Year 11 arrives, you'll have worked through far more papers than students who stuck to a single board, and you'll still have a full, untouched set of your own board's papers left for the run-up to your exams. Once predicted papers are live, they'll be the final layer on top of that.

Frequently Asked Questions

Predicted Paper FAQs

Answers to the questions we get asked most about how predicted papers will work.

A predicted paper is a fresh, exam-style paper written to your board's current specification, designed to mirror the style, timing and likely topic focus of your upcoming exam. It's used once you've worked through the past papers available for your board and want further exam-standard practice.

Past papers are real exams that have already been sat, so the questions are already familiar from revision guides and mark schemes everywhere. Predicted papers are new questions, written specifically to match the current specification and recent exam trends, so you get genuinely fresh practice.

Predicted papers are being built for Maths and Science at GCSE and A-Level, written to Edexcel, AQA and OCR specifications, in the same structure as the real exam papers for each board.

They're designed to be used after you've worked through the past papers available for your board, as a final layer of exam-standard practice in the lead-up to your exams.

Yes. Every predicted paper will come with a full, examiner-style mark scheme so you can check your answers and see exactly how marks are awarded.