SBI PO 2026 Preparation Plan (30 Days) Prelims + Mains Complete Strategy
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To crack the SBI PO exam in just 30 days after the notification, you need a smart, high-intensity study strategy that balances both Prelims and Mains together instead of treating them separately. With limited time in hand, every hour matters—so the focus should be on speed-building, concept clarity, and consistent revision rather than trying to cover everything from scratch.

The SBI PO 2026 Notification is finally out — released on 18 June 2026 for 1500 Probationary Officer vacancies, the highest in recent years. Online registration is open from 18 June to 18 July 2026, and going by the trend SBI has followed, the Prelims exam is expected in August 2026, which leaves serious aspirants with roughly 30–45 days to get exam-ready.

This SBI PO 30-day study plan after notification is designed to help you maximize your output with a structured day-wise approach. It combines Quantitative Aptitude, Reasoning Ability, English Language, General Awareness, and Descriptive Writing in a way that builds both accuracy for Prelims and depth for Mains simultaneously. If followed with discipline, this roadmap can significantly improve your chances of clearing the cutoff and staying ahead in the competition.

Why the First 30 Days After Notification Matter So Much

Once the notification drops, a strange thing happens every year: half the aspirant pool gets busy reading the PDF, joining ten Telegram groups, and debating exam dates — instead of opening a book. The other half treats it as the starting gun it actually is.

With 1500 vacancies this year compared to just 541 in 2025, competition will be intense but the opportunity is bigger than it’s been in years. The Prelims is purely qualifying (your score doesn’t carry forward), but you cannot get to Mains — where the real merit list is built — without clearing it comfortably. That makes the next 30 days a foundation-building phase: get your Prelims subjects strong enough to clear with a safety margin, while quietly building Mains-only habits (current affairs, GA, descriptive writing) so you’re not starting from zero after Prelims.

If you haven’t checked the full eligibility, vacancy break-up, and fee details yet, read the SBI PO Notification 2026 guide first — it’s worth ten minutes before you plan your timetable.

SBI PO Exam Pattern 2026: What You’re Actually Preparing For

A study plan only works if it’s built around the real exam structure. Here’s the current pattern you need to keep in mind while following this 30-day plan.

Prelims (100 marks, 60 minutes, qualifying only):

SectionQuestionsMarksTime
English Language303020 minutes
Quantitative Aptitude353520 minutes
Reasoning Ability353520 minutes

There’s no sectional cut-off in Prelims, but there is a strict sectional time limit, so speed within each 20-minute block matters as much as accuracy.

Mains (200 marks objective + 30 marks descriptive, sectional cut-offs apply):

SectionQuestionsMarks
Reasoning & Computer Aptitude4060
Data Analysis & Interpretation3060
General/Economy/Banking Awareness6060
English Language4020
Descriptive Test (Letter + Essay)230

Negative marking of 0.25 marks applies for every wrong answer in both stages. Mains carries 75% weightage in final selection, with the Interview/Group Exercise making up the rest — Prelims marks are not counted in the merit list at all. For the complete topic-wise breakup, the SBI PO Syllabus 2026 guide is worth bookmarking alongside this plan.

Want a quick gut-check on where you stand right now? Take a free SBI PO mock test on PracticeMock before you even start Day 1 — it tells you exactly which sections need the most attention in this plan.

The 30-Day SBI PO Study Plan: Day-Wise Breakdown

This plan assumes 8-10 hours of focused daily study, split across English, Quant, and Reasoning for Prelims, with a fourth column dedicated to Mains groundwork and revision so you’re not caught off guard later. Treat the “Additional Tasks” column as non-negotiable — it’s what separates candidates who clear Prelims comfortably from those who scrape through.

DayEnglish LanguageQuantitative AptitudeReasoning AbilityAdditional Tasks / Mains Groundwork
1Grammar basics, tenses, articlesSimplification, basic tables, number seriesBlood relations, syllogismsRead SBI PO syllabus & exam pattern thoroughly
2Reading Comprehension (RC)Averages, percentagesCoding-decoding, inequalitiesRevise key formulas; start a current affairs notebook
3Cloze testRatio & proportion, quadratic equationsOrder & ranking, linear puzzlesLearn 20 new vocabulary words
4Sentence correctionProfit & loss, simple interestCircular seating arrangementSectional quiz; revise Day 1-3 topics
5Error spottingCompound interest, time & workSyllogisms, input-outputTake your first sectional mock test
6Para jumblesTime & distance, Data Interpretation (DI)Floor-based puzzlesWeekly revision and self-analysis
7Vocabulary (synonyms/antonyms)Data sufficiency, simplificationDirection sense, codingFull mock test: identify weak areas
8Reading Comprehension (RC)DI (bar graph), mensurationBlood relations, inequalitiesDaily quiz practice; revise current affairs
9Cloze testPercentage, quadratic equationsCoding-decoding, mixed puzzlesRevise English grammar rules
10Sentence improvementProfit & loss, Data InterpretationOrder & ranking, input-outputRevise numerical shortcuts and approximation tricks
11Error spottingAverages, time & workLinear seating arrangementAnalyse Day 7 mock test threadbare
12Para jumblesRatio & proportion, time & distanceSyllogisms, logical reasoningDedicate the day to your weakest section
13Vocabulary (idioms & phrases)DI (pie chart), simplificationFloor-based puzzlesBanking awareness + current affairs catch-up
14Reading Comprehension (RC)Profit & loss, compound interestCoding-decoding, circular puzzlesWeekly revision + full mock test
15Cloze testData sufficiency, quadratic equationsBlood relations, syllogismsFull-length Prelims mock test (timed, no breaks)
16Sentence correctionTime & work, Data InterpretationLogical reasoning, input-outputReview every wrong answer from Day 15 mock
17Error spottingAverages, simplificationMixed seating arrangementSpeed-building drills for Quant
18Para jumblesPercentage, ratio & proportionMixed puzzlesReasoning shortcuts and rule revision
19Vocabulary (word usage)DI (tabular), time & distanceSyllogisms, logical reasoningTargeted quizzes on your weakest topics
20Reading Comprehension (RC)Profit & loss, quadratic equationsCoding-decoding, floor-based puzzlesWeekly revision + analysis
21Cloze testData sufficiency, simplificationBlood relations, input-outputMock test with strict time management focus
22Sentence improvementTime & work, Data InterpretationLinear seating arrangementDetailed test result analysis
23Error spottingAverages, ratio & proportionSyllogisms, logical reasoningRevise all shortcuts and elimination strategies
24Para jumblesDI (mixed graphs), mensurationMixed puzzlesFull-length mock test under timed conditions
25Vocabulary (synonyms/antonyms)Profit & loss, compound interestCoding-decoding, circular puzzlesFocus only on frequently-asked topic patterns
26Reading Comprehension (RC)Data sufficiency, quadratic equationsBlood relations, syllogismsFinal full-syllabus revision begins
27Cloze testTime & work, simplificationLogical reasoning, input-outputPure speed-and-accuracy drills, no new topics
28Error spottingDI (line graph), averagesMixed seating arrangementFinal full-length mock test
29Sentence improvementPercentage, ratio & proportionMixed reasoning topicsRevise only the topics you got wrong in mocks
30Final revision: all English topicsFinal revision: all Quant topicsFinal revision: all Reasoning topicsMock test under exam-like conditions, then rest

A simple rule for this table: don’t treat any single day in isolation. If Day 9’s cloze test felt shaky, don’t wait for the “official” English revision day — fix it on Day 10’s revision slot. The plan is a skeleton; your honest self-assessment is what gives it muscle.

Weekly Targets at a Glance

Breaking the 30 days into four weekly blocks makes the plan easier to track and adjust if you fall behind.

WeekPrimary Goal
Week 1 (Days 1-7)Build fundamentals across all three Prelims sections; begin GA notes and descriptive writing practice for Mains
Week 2 (Days 8-14)Strengthen concepts, move to higher-difficulty questions, keep daily current affairs consistent
Week 3 (Days 15-21)Increase mock test frequency, prioritise accuracy over coverage, start active revision
Week 4 (Days 22-30)Final revision, full-length mocks every 2-3 days, sharpen time management and exam temperament

Halfway through the plan and feeling the pressure already? Sign up free on PracticeMock and get your first SBI PO mock test on the house — see exactly where the 1500-seat competition stands you today.

Section-Wise Tips to Make This Plan Actually Work

English Language: Don’t treat grammar and vocabulary as separate islands from Reading Comprehension — RC passages are where vocabulary and grammar instincts get tested together. Read one editorial daily; it does double duty for both English and GA.

Quantitative Aptitude: Simplification, approximation, and number series are your speed-builders — master these first because they free up time for DI and arithmetic later in the section. Use a stopwatch from Week 1, not Week 4; speed under pressure is a trained skill, not something you switch on overnight.

Reasoning Ability: Puzzles and seating arrangements dominate this section’s marks. Practise linear, circular, and floor-based variants on a rotation rather than mastering one type and assuming it transfers — SBI mixes formats often.

Mains groundwork (don’t skip this for 30 days): Even though your Prelims-day focus is naturally heavier, 30-45 minutes daily on current affairs and one descriptive writing task every 2-3 days means you walk into Mains prep without starting cold. For a focused descriptive strategy closer to Mains, this list of important descriptive topics for SBI PO is a useful reference to return to later.

SBI PO Prelims vs Mains: Why the Strategy Shifts After Day 30

It’s worth understanding upfront how differently these two stages are evaluated, because it explains why this 30-day plan is Prelims-heavy with Mains seeded in, rather than a 50-50 split.

AspectPrelimsMains
PurposeScreening/qualifying stageFinal merit-based evaluation
SectionsEnglish, Quant, ReasoningEnglish, Reasoning & Computer Aptitude, Data Analysis & Interpretation, GA/Economy/Banking, Descriptive Test
DifficultyModerateModerate to high, with analytical and current-affairs-driven questions
Duration & Marks100 marks, 60 minutes200 marks (objective) + 30 marks (descriptive), ~3 hours
Sectional cut-offNoneApplicable
Weightage in final selectionNone (qualifying only)Counted (along with Interview/GD)

Once Prelims is behind you, the entire approach changes — you move from “clear the bar” thinking to “maximise the score” thinking, because every Mains mark genuinely counts. If you want a head start on what that transition looks like, the 90-day SBI PO preparation strategy and the SBI PO Mains 10-day revision plan are both useful once you’re past Prelims.

Common Mistakes to Avoid in This 30-Day Window

Even disciplined aspirants lose marks to avoidable errors in the final stretch. Watch out for these:

  • Skipping Mock Analysis: Taking mock challenge without reviewing mistakes is one of the biggest preparation mistakes. A mock you don’t analyze is a missed learning opportunity. Focus on understanding every wrong, skipped, and time-consuming question.
  • Repeating the Same Errors: Many aspirants continue making identical mistakes across multiple mocks because they do not maintain an error log or track weak areas.
  • Starting New Topics Too Late: Avoid overloading yourself with new topics in the final weeks before the exam. At this stage, strengthening existing concepts usually delivers better results than learning something completely new.
  • Ignoring Daily Revision: Failing to revise formulas, grammar rules, shortcuts, and current affairs regularly can lead to poor retention and reduced exam-day performance.
  • Poor Study-Rest Balance: Continuous studying without proper breaks can cause burnout and affect consistency. A sustainable routine is more effective than occasional marathon study sessions.
  • Depending on a Single Resource: Relying on only one source of questions or one mock platform may limit your exposure to different question patterns and difficulty levels.
  • Avoiding Sectional Timing Practice: SBI PO Prelims has strict sectional timing. Candidates who do not practice under timed conditions often struggle with speed and question selection in the actual exam.
  • Focusing Only on Prelims: Ignoring Mains preparation entirely can create unnecessary pressure after the Prelims result. Smart aspirants gradually build Mains-level preparation alongside their Prelims strategy.
  • Prioritizing Attempts Over Accuracy: Excessive guessing and chasing higher attempts often result in heavy negative marking. Maintaining accuracy is usually more beneficial than maximizing attempts.
  • Lack of Consistency: Irregular mock practice and an unstructured study plan can slow progress significantly. Consistent practice and regular performance tracking are essential for improvement.

Key Tips to Crack SBI PO 2026 in 30-45 Days

A few non-negotiables, regardless of which day of the plan you’re on: put in 8-10 hours of genuinely focused study daily during this phase, not just hours logged. Time every practice session — speed under simulated pressure is what the real exam demands, and it doesn’t develop by accident. Analyse every mock test in detail rather than just noting the score; the score tells you where you stand, the analysis tells you how to move up. Give GA and descriptive writing real attention from Day 1, not as an afterthought once Prelims is cleared. And protect your weekends for full mock tests, consolidated revision, and genuine rest — burnout in Week 4 costs more than an extra hour of sleep ever will.

Less than 30 days left and want a structured push? Try PracticeMock’s SBI PO Mock Test Series — sectional tests, full mocks, and previous year papers, all benchmarked against thousands of aspirants chasing the same 1500 seats.

Final Word

The SBI PO 2026 notification being out removes all the uncertainty — you now know the vacancies, the dates, and the pattern. What’s left is execution. This 30-day plan won’t feel comfortable every single day, and it shouldn’t; the comfort comes later, on exam day, when nothing about the paper surprises you because you’ve already drilled through every section, every puzzle type, and every DI format it’s likely to throw at you. Follow the table, trust the weekly checkpoints, and adjust honestly based on your own mock scores rather than the calendar alone.

Related SBI PO 2026 Blogs You Should Read Next

BlogWhat It Covers
SBI PO Notification 2026Full notification details: vacancies, eligibility, fees, application process
SBI PO Syllabus 2026: Complete GuideSection-wise Prelims & Mains syllabus with topic weightage
SBI PO Exam Date 2026Expected Prelims, Mains, and Interview schedule
Best Books & Study Plan for SBI PO 2026Recommended books section-wise plus a broader study roadmap
SBI PO 90-Day Preparation StrategyA longer-runway plan if you’re starting earlier than 30 days out
SBI PO Mains 10-Day Revision PlanWhat to do in the final days before Mains, once Prelims is cleared
SBI PO Important Descriptive TopicsLetter and essay topics likely to appear in the Mains descriptive paper
SBI PO Previous Year Question PapersYear-wise Prelims & Mains papers with solutions
SBI PO Cut Off 2026Historical and expected cut-off trends, category-wise
SBI PO Salary 2026In-hand salary, pay scale, allowances, and career growth
The Psychology of SBI PO ToppersMindset and habits that separate consistent scorers from the rest

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By Vaishnavi Dixit

Vaishnavi Dixit has 5+ years of experience in creating student-focused content for competitive exams. She aims to guide aspirants with clear concepts, practical tips, and well-researched insights that help them study smarter and perform better.

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