This is a Florida multiple-choice sprint, not a full bar plan. It assumes your main course is handling the multistate baseline and you want a clear, week-by-week structure to lock in the Florida layer. The shape comes from what repeat passers actually do: learn the rules, drill single subjects, log your misses, and finish on timed mixed sets. Adapt the dates and volume to your own schedule.
Before the weekly plan, here is the daily loop that runs underneath all four weeks. A routine many passers describe is two single-subject sets a day: about thirty questions in the morning, about thirty in the afternoon. For each set:
Do multiple-choice before essay practice when you can. MCQs are objectively right or wrong, so they expose your real gaps fast, and you can aim the rest of the day's study at what they reveal.
Spend week one learning and drilling the highest-return multiple-choice-only subjects. Florida Civil Procedure and Florida Criminal Procedure are mainstays of the session and reward precise recall, so they are a natural start. Learn each subject's rules first, then drill it.
Continue through the remaining multiple-choice-only subjects, where the question bank is your only scoring path.
Now bring in the essay subjects that also appear on the multiple-choice, and start combining. Pair related subjects so your brain practices switching between them, the way the real session forces you to.
The real session is one hundred questions in an afternoon, so the final week is about speed and full-coverage mixing, not new law.
Numbers like sixty questions a day are a starting point, not a rule. Some days you will do fewer and review harder, and that is usually the better trade. No plan, including this one, can promise a result. What it can do is make sure your effort lands on the Florida-specific rules and the timed recall the session actually rewards. If the Florida-only subjects are brand new to you, start this sprint earlier than four weeks out.
Rule the Bar is a study supplement built for exactly this loop. It pairs the Florida rule statements you learn at the start of each block with an exam-realistic Florida multiple-choice bank, and every question carries an explanation, so your morning and afternoon sets, your review, and your miss log all live in one place with spaced-repetition recall handling the follow-up. Keep your main course as the spine; let the supplement run the Florida sprint.
For the Florida-specific layer, yes, if your main course has already built the multistate baseline, because the session is largely precise recall of a finite rule set. It is not enough to learn the subjects from scratch, so start earlier if the Florida-only subjects are new to you.
A workable default is around sixty a day, split into two single-subject sets of about thirty early on, then similar volume in timed mixed sets later. The review matters more than the number.
Multiple-choice first works well for many takers, because right-or-wrong questions quickly reveal the rules you do not know, which you can then target in memorization and essay practice.
Run this plan with an explained Florida MCQ bank and every rule statement, in the $149 bundle →