7-Day SBI Clerk Numerical Ability Revision Strategy
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SBI Clerk Prelims 2025 is starting from 20th September, and only a week is left. Till now, we hope you have given your 100% effort, and now the main focus should be on maintaining this flow. At this time, it’s not about learning new topics but about smart revision and practice. You should shift your complete attention towards solving questions, taking mocks, and analyzing mistakes. Avoid wasting time on unnecessary gatherings or scrolling social media because this exam is about your career. Once you become an SBI Clerk, all distractions will look small in front of the opportunities you get. So, stay disciplined, stay motivated, and give your best in this last week. In this blog, we will share with you a 7-day SBI Clerk Numerical Ability Revision Strategy that will help you sharpen your speed, accuracy, and confidence before the exam.

SBI Clerk Prelims 2025 Exam Pattern

The SBI Clerk Prelims Exam 2025 has three sections – English Language, Reasoning Ability, and Numerical Ability. In total, 100 questions are asked for 100 marks, with a time limit of 60 minutes. There is sectional time of 20 minutes for each section.

For Numerical Ability, you will face 35 questions carrying 35 marks, and you get 20 minutes to attempt them. This means you have less than 35 seconds for each question. Hence, speed and accuracy are both very important.You should focus on high-scoring topics like Simplification, Approximation, Quadratic Equations, Number Series, and Data Interpretation. Also, revise the Arithmetic chapters such as Percentage, Profit & Loss, Ratio, Average, and Time & Work. There is a negative marking of 0.25 marks for every wrong answer. So, avoid random guessing and boost your attempts with accuracy. Practicing sectional mocks will help you manage time smartly.

Best Study Resources For SBI Clerk Prelims 2025

All the necessary study materials are available here in one place so that you can prepare better and increase your chances of clearing the exam.

SBI Clerk Free Mock TestSBI Clerk Sectional Tests
Quant Topic TestMock Test 1
Reasoning Topic TestMock Test 2
English Topic TestMock Test3
SBI Clerk Free Mini Mock TestMock Test 4
Previous Year PaperMock Test 5

High-Scoring Topics for SBI Clerk Numerical Ability

TopicQuestions Asked (Approx.)
Simplification10–15
Approximation10-12
Number Series5
Quadratic Equations5
Data Interpretation (DI)5–10
Arithmetic (SI-CI, Profit & Loss, Time-Speed-Distance, etc.)8–10

7-Day SBI Clerk Numerical Ability Revision Plan

SBI Clerk exam is almost here, and you have just one week left. At this point, you don’t need to run behind new chapters or start something fresh. What you need is a smart revision strategy that helps you build confidence, improve speed, and avoid silly mistakes in the exam hall. Numerical Ability is one section where most students either panic because of time pressure or waste too much time on one question. If you plan these 7 days properly, you can make this section your strength.

Day 1 – Reality Check with a Sectional Test

You should start your revision journey by taking a Quant sectional test on a desktop (not on your phone). This will give you a clear idea of your current level. Don’t get demotivated if your score is low. Note down which topics are still weak and which are strong. For example, if you’re slow in Simplification but quick in Averages, you’ll know what to revise more. This first step will guide your entire 7-day plan.

Day 2 – Speed Maths for Confidence

The best way to build exam flow is to start with Speed Maths topics – Simplification, Approximation, Number Series, and Quadratic Equations. These are scoring areas and usually come as a set of 5 questions each. Revise your basic calculation tricks like squares, cubes, and tables. Solve at least 50–60 questions from these topics. In the exam, you should attempt these first because they take less time and boost your confidence.

Day 3 – Arithmetic Basics (Core Revision)

Arithmetic carries a good weightage but can be time-consuming. On this day, revise the basic formulas and concepts of key chapters like Percentages, Profit & Loss, Simple & Compound Interest, Ratio & Proportion, Averages, Time & Work, and Time & Distance. Don’t try to practice hundreds of questions just revise formulas and solve a few examples from each chapter. The goal here is quick recall so that you can solve these questions faster in the exam.

Day 4 – Data Interpretation (DI) Day

Now that you’ve brushed up your basics, focus on DI sets (tables, bar graphs, line graphs, caselets, and pie charts). Pick 2–3 sets and practice under time pressure. DI looks lengthy but most of the time the calculations are simple. Learn to quickly skip a set if it looks too complicated because you don’t need to solve every single question. In the exam, choosing the right DI is the what matters.

Day 5 – Mixed Mini Mock

By Day 5, it’s time to combine everything. Attempt 20–25 mixed questions (Speed Maths + Arithmetic + DI) in one sitting. This will give you a feel of the real exam flow. Analyze carefully which questions took you longer, where did you make silly mistakes, and which ones you skipped. The focus here is to train your brain for switching between topics quickly, just like in the actual paper.

Day 6 – Accuracy & Weak Areas

This day is for correction and polishing. Go back to your weak areas from Day 1 and practice 20–30 questions on those topics. Also, pay attention to accuracy. Many students lose marks because of silly calculation errors. Revise your shortcuts and check whether you are making small mistakes like copying numbers wrongly or missing signs. This is the day to fix all that.

Day 7 – Light Revision

The last day before the exam should be completely stress-free. Don’t try to learn new topics or overload yourself with tough practice. Instead, just revise your formula sheet, shortcuts, and quick notes you’ve prepared over the week. Sleep well, eat light, and avoid stress or panic. Remember, a fresh and calm mind on the exam day will help you perform much better than a tired one.The exam is not about attempting all 35 questions; it’s about attempting the right 25–28 questions with accuracy

Conclusion

The last 7 days before the SBI Clerk exam are not for learning something new. If you stick to this plan, you’ll cover every important area of Numerical Ability from Speed Maths to DI to Arithmetic. The exam is about choosing the right questions and solving them with accuracy. Even if you can attempt 25–28 questions with full confidence, your chances of clearing the cut-off are very high. Stay calm, avoid distractions, trust your preparation, and keep practicing daily. With focus, you can definitely make Numerical Ability your scoring section and move one step closer to becoming an SBI Clerk.

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FAQs

Q1. Should I learn new topics in the last 7 days?

No, focus only on revision and practice of already studied topics.

Q2. How many mocks should I give daily?

1 full-length mock or 2 sectional tests are enough with proper analysis.

Q3. Is speed or accuracy more important in the last week?

Both matter; you should maintain a balance between Speed and accuracy.

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By Akansha Garg

Hi, I’m Akansha, a post-graduate in Economics with a passion for helping banking aspirants succeed. Having personally cleared multiple banking exams, both Prelims and Mains. I understand what it takes to crack them. Through my blog, I share updated exam information, smart strategies, and practical tips to help you prepare better and achieve your goals.

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