Every year, tens of thousands of Hong Kong students sit the HKDSE over roughly three weeks in spring. The revision leading up to the examinations gets extensive attention — mock papers, tutorial strategies, note consolidation, exam technique. What often gets less attention, but has a surprisingly large effect on performance, is what candidates eat and drink in the final 72 hours before each paper, and how they sleep in the days surrounding the exam period.
This is not a marginal factor. Cognitive research — including well-designed studies on exam-day glycemic response, dehydration and working memory, caffeine effects on test anxiety, and sleep deprivation and memory consolidation — consistently shows measurable differences in performance between well-rested, properly hydrated, steadily fuelled candidates and candidates who are running on three hours of sleep, a can of energy drink, and a rushed pineapple bun. On a high-stakes test where the difference between Level 4 and Level 5 can come down to one or two questions, even a 3–5% swing in concentration and working memory matters.
This guide explains, in practical terms, how to use nutrition, hydration, and sleep as performance tools in the final days before the DSE. It is written for DSE candidates, parents, and the teachers who advise them. The advice is based on general evidence-based principles of exam preparation, adapted to Hong Kong meal culture, school schedules, and the actual conditions candidates face on paper days at their assigned examination centres. It is not a substitute for individualised medical advice — candidates with diabetes, eating disorders, allergies, or chronic illness should follow their doctors’ specific guidance.
Before the practical advice, it helps to understand the three systems we are trying to support.
The adult human brain uses about 20% of the body’s energy at rest, mostly as glucose. During periods of intense cognitive effort — like a two-hour DSE paper — the front of the brain (prefrontal cortex) increases its glucose consumption. If blood glucose drops too low (hypoglycemia) or swings too much, working memory, attention, and decision-making all suffer. The goal is not to load up on sugar but to keep blood glucose in a narrow, stable range for the duration of the exam.
The strategy: slow-release carbohydrates in meals, avoid pure sugar spikes, include some protein and healthy fat to slow gastric emptying.
Even mild dehydration (1–2% of body water) has documented effects on cognitive performance, including reduced attention, slower reaction time, and worse short-term memory. Exam rooms are often warm, candidates sweat from anxiety, and most candidates drink less than usual on exam day because of nerves or concern about bathroom breaks. This creates a setup for mild dehydration precisely when peak performance is needed.
The strategy: steady water intake across the day, a modest amount right before the exam (not a large bolus), small sips during the exam if permitted.
Sleep is when the brain consolidates memory from temporary to permanent storage. The specific sleep stages matter — slow-wave sleep for declarative memory (facts), REM sleep for procedural memory (how to solve problems). A single night of poor sleep can impair next-day working memory by the equivalent of a couple of IQ points; several nights in a row compound this. Cramming all night erases the very encoding the cramming is trying to achieve.
The strategy: protect sleep quality in the final 72 hours, stop cramming earlier than you want to, accept that the last-minute facts you “learn” after midnight will likely not stick.
Most DSE papers happen mid-morning (8:30–11:30 or similar) or afternoon (1:30–4:30 or similar). The following plan assumes a morning paper; adjust timing for afternoon papers.
Nutrition. Normal, slightly cleaner meals. Reduce deep-fried food, heavy fast food, and excessive sugar. Include lean protein, vegetables, and whole grains. Start taking hydration seriously — aim for 1.5–2 litres of water spread across the day.
Sleep. Start shifting your body clock. If you have been sleeping at 2 am during revision, start sleeping at 12:30 am tonight. Aim for 7–8 hours. Dark room, cool temperature, no screens for 30 minutes before bed.
Revision. Last deep-dive revision day. Finish any topics that still feel weak. Do one full timed past paper.
Caffeine. Normal routine. Do not introduce new stimulants you are not used to.
Nutrition. Same principles. A proper breakfast, a balanced lunch, a moderate dinner. Start to taper from heavy or spicy food that might disturb digestion. Avoid buffets, new restaurants, and foods you rarely eat.
Sleep. Target 8 hours tonight. Start the wind-down ritual 60 minutes before bed. Warm (not hot) shower, dim lights, some light reading, no study past 11 pm.
Revision. Review, not learn. Walk through your notes, flashcards, and mind maps. Do one section of a past paper in the exam time slot to get your brain used to focusing at exam hours.
Hydration. Continue 1.5–2 litres.
Nutrition.
Hydration. Normal intake. Taper the last 2 hours before bed so you don’t wake at 3 am to urinate.
Sleep. This is the critical night. Target 8 hours. Stop all revision by 9:30 pm. Prepare your bag and clothing. Set two alarms 10 minutes apart. Do not read tomorrow’s notes in bed.
Revision. At most 90 minutes of review, early in the day. Do not introduce new material. Trust the preparation you have done. Many candidates cram tonight and score worse — this is well-documented.
Mental preparation. Visualize the exam in concrete terms: walking into the hall, finding your seat, writing your name, reading the first question. Calm nervous energy with 10 minutes of slow breathing (4-second inhale, 6-second exhale).
Wake-up. 90–120 minutes before you need to leave home. Not less — you need time to eat, use the bathroom, and travel without rushing.
Breakfast (the most important meal of the exam day). The ideal DSE exam breakfast contains three things:
Example options:
Avoid:
Water. 300–400 ml of water with breakfast. Another 150–200 ml 30 minutes before leaving home.
Snack pack for pre-exam. Pack a banana, a small packet of nuts (if not allergic), and an energy bar (not a sugar bomb) in your bag. You may not be able to eat in the exam hall but you can eat during the wait outside.
Some DSE papers have morning and afternoon sessions on the same day. Managing this is harder.
For a typical Hong Kong teenager, 1.8–2.5 litres of fluid per day is a reasonable target, adjusted for body size, temperature, and activity. Most of this should be plain water. Tea, milk, soup, and juicy fruits all count toward fluid total, but sweetened drinks should be minimized.
HKEAA rules generally allow a clear, unlabelled plastic water bottle. Bring a 500 ml bottle filled to 300–400 ml (not full — don’t force bathroom breaks). Sip as needed. Do not bring a sports drink — the label is against rules.
Studies of exam performance consistently show that a student who sleeps 7–8 hours the night before a test outperforms a student who crams until 3 am, even when the crammer has slightly more “hours studied.” The brain uses sleep to convert what you learned during the day into stable memory. Skip the sleep, skip the encoding.
It happens. Nerves, caffeine mistake, excitement, noise. Strategies:
The DSE spans several weeks. You will have some papers on consecutive days, some with gaps. Sleep strategy across the period:
Health authorities generally consider up to 400 mg of caffeine per day safe for healthy adults, but teenagers should stay lower — 100 mg or so, depending on body weight and sensitivity. For reference:
If you are a regular user, have your normal amount. Removing caffeine on exam day will give you a withdrawal headache in the worst possible 3-hour window.
If you are not a regular user, do not introduce caffeine on exam day. The stimulation can cause jitters, increased heart rate, test anxiety, and bathroom urgency — the opposite of what you want.
Energy drinks and shots — avoid. They combine high caffeine with sugar and sometimes with supplements whose effects on teenagers are not well studied.
Mistake 1: The “night-before feast” dinner. Parents want to reward their child with a special meal — hotpot, seafood, barbecue. This is well-intentioned but risky. Heavy, unfamiliar, or spicy food can cause overnight indigestion and a bad morning.
Mistake 2: Skipping breakfast out of nerves. Appetite loss is normal under exam stress, but going in on empty is a guaranteed mid-exam crash. Eat something, even if it’s smaller than usual.
Mistake 3: A huge “brain food” smoothie. Packing three bananas, peanut butter, oats, honey, protein powder, and berries into a massive smoothie may feel like performance nutrition but is usually too much for nervous stomachs and causes heaviness.
Mistake 4: First-time energy drinks. Trying a Red Bull for the first time on exam day is a common disaster. Anxiety, palpitations, bathroom urgency, and mental distraction.
Mistake 5: Last-minute all-nighter. “One more chapter” sleeplessness is negatively correlated with exam performance.
Mistake 6: Staying up late the night before a gap day. Candidates “treat themselves” to a late night after a paper, then are still shifted the wrong way for the next one.
Mistake 7: Drinking too much water before the exam. Going to the bathroom 40 minutes into the paper is disruptive and anxiety-provoking. Moderate intake is the rule.
Mistake 8: Forgetting medication. Candidates with asthma, allergies, or chronic conditions should bring their regular medication to the exam hall and, if needed, notify invigilators of a medical condition.
Mistake 9: Too much sugar as “brain fuel.” The classic “eat chocolate for the exam” advice makes the problem worse — a sugar spike is followed by a crash. Small amounts are fine; large amounts are not.
Mistake 10: Taking supplements you have never taken before. Gingko, ginseng, caffeine pills, “memory enhancers” from online shops. None are safe to introduce in the final week, and some are actively harmful.
Parents can make or break a candidate’s exam-week wellbeing. A few practical things to do and not do:
Do:
Do not:
Say:
Q1. Is it bad to eat instant noodles the night before a paper? Once in a while is fine, but high sodium and low nutrient density make it a poor habit. The real concern is that some candidates rely on instant noodles as a regular dinner during exam season, which is suboptimal. A better alternative: noodle soup with added egg, vegetables, and a small protein source.
Q2. Can I drink bubble tea during the DSE period? A modest amount (small cup, less sugar) occasionally is fine. Daily large cups with full sugar and boba create big glucose swings and aren’t helpful for sustained focus. Save the celebratory drink for after the last paper.
Q3. My parents want me to take “Brain Gold” or ginkgo supplements. Should I? No. None of these have strong evidence for exam performance in healthy students. The ones that do have evidence (caffeine, mostly) are already available as tea or coffee. Introducing a new supplement in the final weeks risks side effects without benefit.
Q4. I cannot eat when I’m anxious. What can I force down? Liquid calories are often tolerated when solid food is not. A smoothie with banana + milk/soy milk + oats + peanut butter + honey provides 400–600 calories with protein, carbs, and fat. Or a small bowl of congee with egg. Something is much better than nothing.
Q5. I have hayfever during the DSE period. Is it okay to take antihistamines? If you normally take a non-drowsy antihistamine (cetirizine, loratadine, fexofenadine), continue. If you’re new to them, a non-drowsy option in the morning is usually fine. Avoid sedating first-generation antihistamines (chlorpheniramine, diphenhydramine) before an exam — they will slow your thinking.
Q6. I’m fasting during Ramadan and have a DSE paper. What should I do? Speak with your family, imam, and school. Many Islamic scholars permit exemption from fasting for students on high-stakes exam days. If you choose to fast, plan your suhoor (pre-dawn meal) for maximum sustained energy: oats, eggs, fruit, plenty of water. Avoid heavy fried suhoor that will make you thirsty mid-morning.
Q7. I have a cold. Should I take cough syrup before the exam? Use non-sedating options. Avoid products that cause drowsiness. Paracetamol for fever, lozenges for throat, decongestant if needed (check for no sedation). Do not experiment with new cough medicines on exam morning.
Q8. My period is coming on exam day. What should I do? Period pain should not be heroically endured during a DSE paper. Take your usual pain relief (paracetamol or, if you tolerate it, ibuprofen) with breakfast. Bring supplies. Eat extra iron-rich food in the day before. Period pain should not determine your score.
Q9. Can I drink iced milk tea with my breakfast? Milk tea has caffeine and sugar. If you are a regular user and tolerate it, a small cup is fine. If it upsets your stomach, stick to water.
Q10. I’m vegetarian. What’s a good exam breakfast for me? Oats with soy milk + peanut butter + banana + boiled egg (if ovo-vegetarian) or tofu scramble. Chickpea flour pancakes. Whole-grain toast with avocado and seeds. Same principles: slow carbs + protein + a little fruit + water.
Q11. What about sushi or sashimi the day before an exam? Raw fish carries a small but real food poisoning risk. The night before a high-stakes exam is not the time. Cooked Japanese food is fine.
Q12. How do I handle multiple papers on the same day? Treat them as two separate events. Small meal between, steady hydration, brief walk, mental reset. Do not mentally “carry over” the morning performance into the afternoon — they are independent.
Q13. I have diabetes. How should I manage exam day? Work with your doctor for a specific plan. General principles: steady blood glucose, test before the exam, keep a glucose source accessible (a specific allowance may be needed from HKEAA — contact them well in advance), alert invigilators of your condition, do not change insulin or oral medication without medical guidance.
Q14. I have test anxiety so severe I feel sick. Any ideas? Talk to a counsellor or doctor well before the exam — this is treatable. Short-term strategies include slow breathing, grounding exercises, and low-dose beta-blockers prescribed for some cases of exam anxiety. Nutrition and sleep strategies still matter but they’re part of a larger plan.
Q15. Is it okay to take a short nap the afternoon before an afternoon paper? A 20-minute power nap the morning or late-morning of an afternoon-paper day can help if you were short on sleep. Longer naps (over 30 minutes) risk sleep inertia and disrupt night sleep.
The DSE is a marathon, and the last 72 hours before each paper are the final metres. Protect your sleep. Eat steady, familiar meals with slow carbohydrates, protein, and a little fruit. Drink enough water throughout the day without flooding yourself just before the exam. Keep caffeine at your usual level, not at a new level. Avoid supplements and energy drinks you have not used before. Give yourself the same treatment a serious athlete gives themselves before a major competition — because that is what you are doing.
None of this matters more than your preparation over the past two years. But when preparation and biology line up, your best performance is possible. When they don’t, even a well-prepared candidate can underperform. The advice here is cheap, available, and lets you get full value from the work you have already done.
Good luck. Sleep well. Eat breakfast. Drink your water. Walk into the exam hall tomorrow the way you walked into today’s preparation — with everything you need.
This guide is general educational information and does not replace individualized medical advice. Candidates with medical conditions, allergies, or dietary restrictions should follow their doctors’ and dietitians’ specific recommendations. In emergencies during the exam period, contact a physician or seek urgent care as appropriate.