A-Level Maths

A-Level Maths Revision Guide 2026: Edexcel, AQA & CIE

March 2026 · MathHub UK
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Contents

  1. Exam Structure by Board
  2. Pure Maths: Highest-Yield Topics
  3. Statistics & Mechanics
  4. Exam Technique
  5. Common Mistakes
  6. 12-Week Revision Plan

Exam Structure by Board

A-Level Mathematics is examined across two or three papers depending on the board. All boards include Pure Mathematics, Statistics, and Mechanics.

BoardPapersFormatDuration
Edexcel3 papers (Pure 1, Pure 2, Stats/Mechanics)Mixed calculator/no-calc2h each
AQA3 papers (Pure, Stats/Mechanics, Pure)Paper 1 no-calc; 2 & 3 calc allowed2h each
CIE (A2)4 papers (Pure 1, Pure 2, Pure 3 + applied)All calc allowed1h 50min each
OCR A3 papers (Pure & Stats, Pure & Mechanics, Mixed)Paper 1 no-calc2h each
2026 A-Level exams run May–June 2026. Edexcel and AQA publish exact timetables in February. CIE May/June papers start in late April. Check your exam board's website for your specific paper dates.

Pure Maths: Highest-Yield Topics

Pure Mathematics makes up approximately 67% of all A-Level Maths marks. These are the topics that appear on virtually every paper:

TopicAll BoardsMarks Impact
Differentiation (incl. chain, product, quotient rules)Very High
Integration (definite, by parts, by substitution)Very High
Algebra & functions (factor theorem, partial fractions)High
Trigonometry (identities, addition formulae, radians)High
Proof (by contradiction, by induction)High
Sequences & series (binomial, geometric, arithmetic)High
Exponentials & logarithmsMedium-High
Coordinate geometry (circles, parametric)Medium-High
Numerical methods (Newton-Raphson, iteration)Medium
Vectors (3D, dot product)Medium

The Integration Imperative

Integration is consistently the highest-mark topic across all exam boards. Students who master all integration techniques — including integration by parts, substitution, and partial fractions — typically gain 20–30 marks across a three-paper set. Prioritise this above all other Pure topics.

Statistics & Mechanics

Applied topics (Statistics and Mechanics) make up approximately 33% of the total marks, split roughly equally between the two.

Statistics — Key Topics

Mechanics — Key Topics

Exam Technique

Common Mistakes

Frequent errors:
  1. Differentiating when the question asks you to integrate (or vice versa)
  2. Forgetting +C on indefinite integrals
  3. Using degrees when the question requires radians (especially in integration and differentiation of trig)
  4. Not checking whether to use the one-tailed or two-tailed critical region in hypothesis tests
  5. Using g = 9.8 when the question specifies g = 10 (or vice versa) in Mechanics

12-Week Revision Plan

WeeksFocus
1–3Pure: Differentiation, Integration (all techniques), Trigonometry identities
4–5Pure: Proof, Sequences & Series, Logarithms & Exponentials
6–7Stats: Normal distribution, Binomial, Hypothesis testing, Regression
8–9Mechanics: Kinematics, Newton's laws, Projectiles, Moments
10–11Past paper practice (full timed papers)
12Weak areas only + formula sheet review
Textbook resource: Work through our A-Level Maths chapter library — pure maths, statistics, and mechanics are all covered with worked examples and exam-style questions.

A-Level Maths Tutoring

Struggling with integration by parts or hypothesis testing? Our A-Level tutors cover every topic from the Edexcel, AQA, and CIE specifications. Book a free first session.

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