Choose a Subject
Start with the subject you are writing soonest, then move through the others. Each subject page gives guidance on what the paper usually tests and how to use the available downloads.
Access past exam papers and memorandums for all Grade 10 subjects aligned with the CAPS curriculum.
This Grade 10 past papers section helps learners find available subject papers and memorandums in one place. Past papers are useful because they show how topics are combined, how marks are allocated, and how questions are worded in formal assessments. They also help learners practise exam discipline: reading instructions, showing working, writing complete answers, and checking time.
For best results, do not start by downloading every paper at once. Choose one subject, revise the topics that appear in that paper, and attempt the questions honestly before looking at the memo. When you mark, write down three things: the questions you got right, the mistakes you repeated, and the topics you need to revise again. This turns each paper into a study tool instead of a once-off test.
Revise the topic list, gather formulas or key terms, and set a realistic time limit.
Show working, answer in full sentences where needed, and avoid spending too long on one question.
Correct mistakes and return to the notes for topics where you lost marks repeatedly.
When using the Grade 10 Past Papers resources, treat each paper as a practice opportunity rather than a quick download. Read the instructions first, note the sections that appear, and decide which topics you need to revise before attempting the questions. Work without the memorandum at first so that you can see what you truly remember.
After marking, make a short correction list. Include questions where you lost marks, the reason for the mistake, and the topic you should revisit. This habit helps learners turn every paper into a targeted revision plan instead of repeating the same errors in the next assessment.
This Grade 10 past papers page is designed to help learners choose a subject, download available question papers and memorandums, and revise in a more organised way. Past papers are most useful when they are used for practice, correction, and planning instead of only being read before a test.
Start with the subject you are writing soonest, then move through the others. Each subject page gives guidance on what the paper usually tests and how to use the available downloads.
Where links are available, learners can open or download papers and memorandums. Try the paper first, then use the memo to check working, wording, layout, and mark allocation.
Use one paper for topic practice and another for timed practice. Record weak topics after marking so that your next study session has a clear goal.
Past papers show the style of questions, the level of detail expected, and how marks are distributed. This helps learners practise both knowledge and exam technique.
This index is more than a list of links. Use it as a study route for Grade 10 Past Papers so that you know what to open first, what to practise, and how to check that you understand the work before moving on.
A useful path from this page is to begin with Accounting, continue with Afrikaans FAL, and then test your understanding with Agricultural Sciences. Do not rush through the links; spend time on the examples and make sure you can explain the main idea without looking at the notes.
Use this page to build question papers, memorandums, exam technique, timing, and correction practice. Write down key terms, formulas, diagrams, or steps that appear often so that revision becomes active instead of just rereading.
Attempt the paper first, mark it with the memo, and write down the topics that cost you marks. After each lesson, close the page and try a short self-test from memory before checking your notes again.
Use past papers after studying the topic, not as a replacement for notes, so that the memo becomes a correction tool. If a topic feels too difficult, return to the previous link, revise the basics, and then try the examples again before using past papers.