Weekday + Weekend Chess Training Plan – Short Weekdays, Longer Weekend Sessions
Many adult players have busy weekdays and only find real training time at the weekend.
Instead of feeling guilty for not doing “full” study every day, you can follow a realistic
Weekday + Weekend training plan that fits your life.
This guide gives you a template where you:
Keep momentum with short, focused weekday sessions
Do deeper work with longer weekend blocks
Cover tactics, openings, strategy, endgames and game review over the whole week
Plan Summary
The structure is:
Weekdays (Mon–Fri): 10–20 minutes per day (micro-sessions)
Weekend (Sat–Sun): 45–90 minutes per day (deeper sessions)
You can scale the exact minutes up or down depending on your lifestyle, while preserving the same proportions.
Weekday Sessions – Keep the Engine Running
On weekdays, your priority is to maintain tactical sharpness and connection to the game without burning out.
Suggested Weekday Micro-Structure (10–20 minutes)
5–10 minutes – Tactics & Pattern Recognition
Solve a small set of puzzles, focusing on pattern clarity and blunder reduction.
5–10 minutes – Light Study
Choose one of:
Review 10–15 moves of a model game in your opening
Glance at a simple endgame position
Replay a critical moment from a recent game
Examples of weekday activities:
Monday – Tactics + Italian Game model game snippet
Tuesday – Tactics + simple king and pawn endgame
Wednesday – Tactics + review a loss for 10 moves
Thursday – Tactics + one strategic theme (outposts, open files)
Friday – Tactics + quick review of your best attacking game of the week
If you only manage tactics some days, that is still useful – the key is to not detach from chess completely.
Weekend Sessions – Deeper Work and Practice Games
At the weekend, you finally have the time to:
Play serious games
Study model games properly
Dig into endgames and strategy topics
Suggested Saturday Session (60–90 minutes)
10–15 minutes – Tactics Warm-Up
20–30 minutes – One Serious Game
Preferably rapid (10+0, 15+10) or a turn-based move if playing correspondence.
20–30 minutes – Game Review
Identify 1–3 critical positions, analyse them, then briefly check with an engine.
10–15 minutes – Endgame or Strategy Study
Work on one key endgame type or strategic theme.
Suggested Sunday Session (45–75 minutes)
10–15 minutes – Tactics
15–25 minutes – Opening or Model Games
Study a couple of games in an opening you played on Saturday.
15–25 minutes – Strategy / Endgames
Consolidate one concept you noticed in your games.
Over the weekend, you want to connect:
what you studied → what you played → what you’ll do differently.
Aligning Weekday & Weekend Themes
You can make this plan more powerful by choosing a weekly focus theme. For example:
Week 1 – Tactics & Blunder Reduction
Weekdays: short tactics and Safety Check.
Weekend: games where you prioritise safe, solid play.
Week 2 – Italian / Scotch Structures
Weekdays: model game snippets and key positions.
Weekend: games starting from your main openings.
Week 3 – Endgames
Weekdays: basic king and pawn or rook endings.
Weekend: endgame-heavy reviews and practical endgames in your games.
You can rotate themes so that over months you deepen every major area while keeping structure.
Example Weekly Schedule (Template)
Here’s one concrete template you can copy:
Monday: 15 min – Tactics + short opening review
Tuesday: 15 min – Tactics + one endgame position
Wednesday: 15 min – Tactics + review 10 moves from a loss
Thursday: 10–20 min – Tactics + strategy note (pawn structure)
Friday: 10–20 min – Tactics only (light day)
Saturday: 60–90 min – Full weekend session with serious game & review
Sunday: 45–75 min – Follow-up study, model games & endgames
You can expand or shrink the weekend sessions depending on energy and real life.
The structure remains the same.
Using ChessWorld.net With This Plan
ChessWorld is ideal for this sort of schedule, because you can: