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📚 Chess Courses – Openings, Tactics, Middlegame, Endgames

Chess Study Plans by Rating: The Roadmap to Mastery

The biggest improvement leak is studying the wrong thing at the wrong time. A beginner doesn’t need deep opening theory, and an advanced player doesn’t need hours of basic mates. Use the roadmap below to focus your study on what gives the biggest return at your current level.

How to use this page:
  • Pick your rating band and follow it for 4 weeks (no jumping around).
  • Train short and often (consistency beats “big study days”).
  • Fix the mistake that decides your losses (usually blunders or time trouble).
  • Reassess monthly using your recent games.
🔥 Roadmap insight: Random study leads to random results. The fastest improvers build a routine that reduces blunders, improves tactical recognition, and adds strategy/endgames only when the fundamentals are stable.
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On this page:

🧠 The One Study Principle That Never Changes

Improve the skill that decides most of your losses right now. If you’re blundering, openings won’t help. If you’re collapsing in time trouble, “more puzzles” won’t solve it until time usage improves.

Use this simple “always” routine (all ratings):

🌱 Beginner (0–1000)

Main goal: stop losing material for free and build board awareness. You’ll improve fastest by combining a safety routine with a small daily tactics habit.

Priorities (in order):
  • Anti-blunder skills (every game)
  • Tactics routine (daily, short)
  • Opening principles (not memorisation)
  • Basic mates (finish winning games)

Promotion signals:

🔨 Club Player (1000–1400)

Main goal: consistency under pressure. At this level, most rating swings come from tactical oversights, weak routines, and messy conversions.

Priorities (in order):
  • Tactical pattern speed (recognise faster)
  • Blunder prevention habits (reduce autopilot)
  • Simple, reliable setups (repeatable positions)
  • King + pawn endgames (basic technique)
  • Simplification (convert advantages safely)

Promotion signals:

⚔️ Intermediate (1400–1800)

Main goal: understand plans and structures, not just moves. This is where a repertoire with plans, self-analysis, and essential endgame technique pays off.

Priorities (in order):
  • Repertoire with plans (not move lists)
  • Middlegame decision making (choose the right plan)
  • Rook endgame essentials (high-frequency technique)
  • Self-analysis (learn from your own games)
  • Time usage (spend time on critical moments)

Promotion signals:

🏆 Advanced / Expert (1800–2200)

Main goal: precision, depth, and decision quality. At this level, small inaccuracies and time decisions decide games.

Priorities (in order):
  • Candidate moves + disciplined calculation (reduce errors, save energy)
  • Visualization strength (see lines clearly without moving pieces)
  • Opening prep with understanding (plans + move orders)
  • Prophylaxis + imbalances (prevent opponent ideas; choose the right tradeoffs)
  • Time-trouble control (critical moments under pressure)

🗓 Weekly Study Templates (Copy and Use)

The best plan is the one you actually follow. These routines are short, repeatable, and level-appropriate. Follow one template for 4 weeks before changing anything.

0–1000 weekly template:
  • Daily (10–20 min): tactics routine
  • Every game: pre-move checklist habit
  • 2x per week (10 min): opening principles refresher
  • 1x per week (10–15 min): basic mates practice
1000–1400 weekly template:
  • Daily (15–25 min): tactics training plan
  • 2x per week (10–15 min): blunder-prevention habits review
  • 1x per week (20 min): king+pawn endgames
  • 1x per week (10–15 min): simplification focus
1400–1800 weekly template:
  • 3–4x per week (20–30 min): middlegame decisions + plans
  • 2x per week (20 min): rook endgames essentials
  • 1–2x per week (20 min): update opening file
  • After each game (10 min): self-analysis routine
1800–2200 weekly template:
  • 3x per week (25–35 min): candidate moves + calculation discipline
  • 2x per week (15–25 min): visualization drills (accuracy under pressure)
  • 2x per week (20–30 min): opening file refinement (plans + move orders)
  • 2x per week (15–25 min): prophylaxis + imbalance review (prevent ideas; choose tradeoffs)
  • Every game: note critical moments + time-trouble errors
Your next move:

Study the right skill for your current level: safety and tactics first, then endgames and conversion, then plans and self-analysis, and finally candidate-move discipline, visualization, prophylaxis, imbalances, and time-trouble control.

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