Which exam topics actually carry the marks? A free breakdown, board by board.
Not every topic on a specification carries equal weight in the exam. We reviewed the published papers for every GCSE, A-Level, IB and TMUA board we teach, logged the topic and mark allocation of every question, and aggregated the results below — so you can see exactly where the marks are concentrated before you decide where to spend your revision time.
Pick a subject and board below. This is aggregate analysis of published papers, not a prediction of any future paper — but historical mark share is one of the most reliable signals for prioritising revision.
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
Want a tutor who prioritises lessons around exactly this? Book a free intro meeting →
This is exactly the kind of insight a TMUA tutor uses to prioritise practice — but nothing beats seeing where you personally stand. Take the free TMUA readiness check →
Each figure above is a mark share: the proportion of total marks a topic accounted for across the published papers we reviewed for that board, computed from our own topic-tagging of those questions. Figures are refreshed periodically as we review further papers, so small movements over time are normal. This is analysis of publicly available past papers — not a claim to host or reproduce exam boards' own question banks.
Book a free 20-minute intro meeting. No obligation, no pressure.
Book a Free Intro Meeting