Here’s something most SBI PO candidates get wrong.
They think scoring higher means solving more questions. So they rush through the paper, attempt everything in sight, and end up with 20+ wrong answers eating into their score through negative marking.
The truth is different. The candidates who score highest are not the ones who attempt the most — they are the ones who attempt the right questions.
In SBI PO Prelims 2026, you have 20 minutes per section. Every second you spend on the wrong question is a second taken away from 3–4 easier ones sitting just below it.
This guide gives you the exact question selection strategy — section by section, question type by question type — so you stop wasting time and start maximising net score.
2026 update: The SBI PO Notification 2026 confirms 1,500 vacancies, Prelims in August 2026, and an attempt limit of 6 for General/EWS candidates (up from 4 in 2025). More experienced repeaters in the pool means question selection matters even more this year.
Why Question Selection Matters More Than Speed
Speed is often blamed for low scores. But in most cases, it’s not speed — it’s selection.
Here’s the math. Suppose you attempted 90 questions and got 65 right, 25 wrong:
Score = (65 × 1) − (25 × 0.25) = 65 − 6.25 = 58.75 marks
Now suppose you attempted 75 questions and got 65 right, 10 wrong:
Score = (65 × 1) − (10 × 0.25) = 65 − 2.50 = 62.50 marks
Same number of correct answers. But 3.75 marks higher — just by reducing wrong answers through better selection.
This is not theory. It’s what happens in every mock where candidates chase volume over selection.
Check the SBI PO Prelims 60-Minute Challenge for a full breakdown of how 70–80 accurate attempts consistently outperform 90+ rushed ones.
The 2026 Exam Pattern: What You’re Selecting Questions In
Before the strategy, know the structure.
| Section | Questions | Marks | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| English Language | 40 | 40 | 20 minutes |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 30 | 30 | 20 minutes |
| Reasoning Ability | 30 | 30 | 20 minutes |
| Total | 100 | 100 | 60 minutes |
Critical rules that affect selection:
- Each section locks automatically at 20 minutes. Time cannot be transferred between sections.
- Negative marking: 0.25 marks per wrong answer. Skipping costs nothing.
- No sectional cut-off — only the overall aggregate determines shortlisting for Mains.
- Prelims marks don’t count in the final merit list. The goal is to clear the cut-off and get to Mains.
For the complete topic list across all three sections, check the SBI PO Syllabus 2026.
The Core Rule of Question Selection
Before section-wise strategy, get this one rule into your head:
Attempt a question only if you can start immediately with a clear method.
That’s it. If you read a question and your method isn’t clear within 10–15 seconds — skip. Mark it. Return in Round 2 if time allows.
This rule eliminates the biggest time-killer in SBI PO: the “let me try this and see” approach. That approach costs you 3–4 minutes on a question you were never going to get right — and those 3–4 minutes had 5 easier questions hiding just below.
The Two-Round Selection Method
Use this in every mock from today. It is the most effective framework for maximising both attempts and accuracy.
Round 1 — First 12–13 minutes of each section
Scan the section and attempt only high-confidence, quick-solving questions. The moment a question doesn’t have a clear method — mark it, skip it, move on. No second-guessing.
Round 2 — Remaining 7–8 minutes of each section
Return to marked questions. Attempt the ones where you now have a method or can eliminate at least 2 of 4 options. Leave everything else unattempted.
| Round | Time | Goal |
|---|---|---|
| Round 1 | First 12–13 min | Bank all easy and medium questions fast |
| Round 2 | Last 7–8 min | Return to skipped questions with a clear head |
| Skip rule | Always | If method isn’t clear in 10–15 sec, skip immediately |
A blank costs zero marks. A wrong answer costs 0.25. Never forget that.
Section-Wise Question Selection Strategy
English Language (40 Questions, 20 Minutes)
English gives you 40 questions in 20 minutes — that’s 30 seconds per question. It is the most selection-friendly section if you know the attempt order.
The Right Selection Order:
| Priority | Question Type | Time Per Question | Why Select First? |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Fill in the Blanks | 20–30 seconds | Grammar-based, no passage to read |
| 2nd | Error Spotting | 30–40 seconds | Rule-based, quick to verify |
| 3rd | Cloze Test | 30–40 seconds | Short passage, contextual logic |
| 4th | Vocabulary Questions | 25–35 seconds | Fast if word bank is decent |
| 5th | Para-Jumbles | 60–80 seconds per set | Slightly slower, but structured |
| Last | Reading Comprehension | 6–8 minutes per passage | Most time-consuming — always last |
The RC trap: Most candidates attempt RC first because it appears early on screen. Don’t. RC passages test tone, inference, and vocabulary in context — they take time even when you’re prepared. Bank your 20–22 marks from grammar and vocabulary first. Then use whatever time remains for RC.
Selection rule for RC: Read the passage once — actively, without stopping to re-read lines. Answer direct factual questions first. Skip tone and inference questions if you’re not confident — they carry the same marks as grammar questions that take half the time.
For a full English section strategy, read the SBI PO 2026 English Preparation Strategy.
English Target: Attempt 28–32 questions at 85%+ accuracy.
Quantitative Aptitude (30 Questions, 20 Minutes)
Quant is the tightest section — 30 questions, 20 minutes, 40 seconds per question average. DI sets are the main time risk here.
The Right Selection Order:
| Priority | Question Type | Time Per Question | Why Select First? |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Simplification / Approximation | 20–30 seconds | Fastest marks in Quant — no setup |
| 2nd | Number Series | 30–40 seconds | Pattern recognition, done fast if practiced |
| 3rd | Quadratic Equations | 40–55 seconds | Reliable once factorisation is automatic |
| Last | Data Interpretation | 7–9 min per set | Always scan all DI sets first before attempting any |
The DI Selection Rule — Follow This Every Time:
When you reach DI, don’t attempt the first set you see. Spend 30–40 seconds scanning all DI sets and pick the one that has:
- A single data format (one table or one bar chart — not mixed)
- Direct calculation questions (not percentage-of-percentage chains)
- The fewest back-calculation steps
If a DI set looks like it involves heavy multi-step calculations, skip it in Round 1. Attempting 3 questions from a simple set is better than attempting 0 from a complex one.
Selection rule for Quant: If a calculation hasn’t started producing a clear path within 45 seconds, mark and skip. Slow calculations are almost always a practice issue — fix them outside the mock with daily drills. The SBI PO mock speed-building strategy covers exactly how to build calculation speed without sacrificing accuracy.
Quant Target: Attempt 22–25 questions at 85%+ accuracy.
Reasoning Ability (30 Questions, 20 Minutes)
Reasoning has the highest risk of wasted time — one wrong puzzle choice can consume 8–10 minutes out of your 20-minute budget.
The Right Selection Order:
| Priority | Question Type | Time Per Question | Why Select First? |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Inequalities | 20–30 seconds | Fastest in entire exam if rules are clear |
| 2nd | Syllogisms (including reverse) | 30–45 seconds | Rule-based, no arrangement needed |
| 3rd | Coding-Decoding | 40–55 seconds | Pattern spotted fast once practiced |
| 4th | Blood Relations / Direction Sense | 45–80 seconds | Self-contained, no external setup |
| 5th | Input-Output | 60–80 seconds | One operation rule to identify |
| Last | Puzzles and Seating Arrangements | 6–8 min per set | Always scan all sets first |
Topics 1–5 can get you 15–18 marks in under 10 minutes. That leaves 10 full minutes for puzzle sets — which is enough if you select the right one.
The 30-Second Puzzle Scan Rule:
When you reach puzzles, don’t attempt the first set you see. Scan all puzzle sets — give yourself 20–30 seconds to read the conditions of each.
Pick the set that has:
- The fewest number of variables (2 variables beats 4 variables)
- The most “definite” clues (direct statements like “A sits next to B”)
- The least ambiguity in the opening condition
If a puzzle’s logic hasn’t clicked within 30 seconds of starting — stop. Don’t negotiate. Move on. Return only if time is left.
Why this rule saves so many marks: A stuck puzzle doesn’t just cost 6–8 minutes. It kills your mental composure for the remaining questions too. The skip is always the right call. Read more on the topics for Reasoning to maximise your SBI PO score for topic-wise weightage and which question types to prioritise.
Reasoning Target: Attempt 22–26 questions at 85%+ accuracy.
How to Identify the Right Questions in Real Time
In the exam, you have seconds to decide. Here’s the decision framework to build through mock practice:
| Signal | Action |
|---|---|
| You can write the first step within 5 seconds | Attempt in Round 1 |
| You know the method but need to set up | Attempt in Round 1 if time permits |
| You recognise the topic but aren’t sure of the method | Mark and skip — return in Round 2 |
| You don’t recognise the question type at all | Skip — don’t return |
| You’ve been on a question for 45+ seconds with no progress | Stop immediately — mark and move |
The goal is never to solve every question. The goal is to collect every available mark from questions that are within your ability. Skipping the rest is not giving up — it’s protecting the marks you’ve already earned.
How Many Questions Should You Actually Attempt?
| Category | Recommended Attempts | Accuracy Target | Expected Net Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| General / EWS | 72–80 | 85%+ | 59–66+ |
| OBC | 70–78 | 85%+ | 57–64+ |
| SC / ST | 65–72 | 82%+ | 51–57+ |
These are practice targets — not official cut-offs. Mock difficulty varies, so always use your 3-mock average, not a single test score.
For the expected qualifying scores, check the SBI PO Cut Off 2026. For a deeper breakdown of attempt targets section by section, read how many questions to attempt in SBI PO Prelims 2026.
Common Question Selection Mistakes
| Mistake | Why It Hurts | The Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Attempting questions in screen order | Easy questions appear later and go unattempted | Scan section first, select by confidence not position |
| Spending 3+ minutes on one question | Burns Round 1 time for 4–5 easier questions | Hard 45-second exit rule — no exceptions |
| Attempting DI without scanning all sets first | Pick a hard set, lose 9 minutes, score 0 | Always scan all DI sets before touching any |
| Starting puzzles before quick-win topics | 8 minutes on a puzzle = 0 marks on Inequalities and Syllogisms | Bank quick topics first — always |
| Guessing when unsure | 4 wrong guesses = 1 right answer wiped out | Only attempt if you can eliminate 2 of 4 options |
| Attempting RC before grammar in English | Eats 8 minutes before banking the fast marks | Grammar and vocabulary always come before RC |
How to Train Question Selection Through Mocks
Reading a strategy is one thing. Building the instinct to execute it in 20-minute pressure is another. Here’s how to train it.
In every mock: Before starting each section, spend the first 20–30 seconds scanning the full section. Mentally tag questions as “attempt now” or “skip.” Don’t start writing until you’ve done this scan.
After every mock: Check which easy questions you left unattempted. These are the marks your selection strategy missed — not your knowledge. Note the topic type and position. This pattern tells you where your scanning needs improvement.
Between mocks: Use the SBI PO sectional tests on PracticeMock for 20-minute focused practice. Sectional tests isolate your selection habits in each section without the cognitive load of a full 60-minute paper. They’re the fastest way to drill the skip-or-attempt decision into muscle memory.
Also check the SBI PO 2026 Readiness Test to see how your current question selection holds up against the actual exam standard.
Quick Reference: Question Selection Cheat Sheet
English Language Fill in the Blanks → Error Spotting → Cloze Test → Vocabulary → Para-Jumbles → RC (always last)
Quantitative Aptitude Simplification/Approximation → Number Series → Quadratic Equations → DI (scan all sets first, pick simplest)
Reasoning Ability Inequalities → Syllogisms → Coding-Decoding → Blood Relations/Direction Sense → Input-Output → Puzzles (scan all sets, pick easiest)
Universal rules:
- Skip if method isn’t clear in 10–15 seconds
- Exit any question after 45 seconds without progress
- Never guess — only attempt if you can eliminate 2 of 4 options
- Scan DI and puzzle sets before touching any
FAQs
Q. What is the best question to attempt first in SBI PO Prelims?
In English: Fill in the Blanks. In Quant: Simplification or Approximation. In Reasoning: Inequalities. These are the fastest-scoring question types in each section and should always be attempted before moving to time-heavy topics like RC, DI, or puzzles.
Q. Should I attempt all 100 questions?
No. The safe and effective attempt range for General category candidates is 72–80 questions at 85%+ accuracy. Attempting all 100 at lower accuracy will reduce your score through negative marking. Quality selection beats maximum attempts every time.
Q. How do I decide whether to skip a question or attempt it?
Apply the 10-15 second rule: if your method isn’t clear within 10–15 seconds of reading the question, skip and move on. Only return in Round 2 if time allows. A skipped question costs nothing. A wrong attempt costs 0.25 marks.
Q. What if I skip too many questions and run out of things to attempt?
This means your attempt confidence is too low — not your selection strategy. Use sectional tests to practise attempting questions at a steady pace. The goal is 22–26 questions per section at 85% accuracy. If you’re attempting fewer than 20 per section, the issue is over-caution, not good selection.
Q. Is it okay to guess in the last 2 minutes if time is running out?
Only if you can eliminate at least 2 of the 4 options. Random guessing in the final minutes is one of the top ways candidates lose 3–5 marks right at the end of a mock. A blank is always safer than a random guess.
Q. How do I practise question selection in my mocks?
Scan the entire section in the first 20–30 seconds before writing anything. Tag questions as “attempt now” or “skip.” After the mock, check how many easy questions you left unattempted. That number is your selection improvement target. Use the SBI PO mock accuracy strategy to track and reduce this number mock by mock.
Q. Does the 2026 exam pattern change how I should select questions?
The section order — English first, then Quant, then Reasoning — remains fixed. But note that English now has 40 questions (not 30), giving you slightly more time per question in that section. Adjust your attempt targets accordingly. Full pattern details: SBI PO Section-Wise Preparation Plan 2026.
Related Blogs
Other Related Blogs on SBI PO 2026
| SBI PO Exam Pattern | SBI PO Previous Year Question Paper |
| SBI PO Salary | Budget 2026 Banking Exam Strategy |
| Puzzle Solving Tricks Used by Toppers at Mains Level | Top 50 Banking Awareness Q&A for 2026 |
For a full picture of upcoming recruitment timelines alongside other major exams this cycle, refer to the SBI PO Exam Date 2026 guide.
Final Word
Question selection is not a shortcut. It’s a skill — and like every skill, it’s built through deliberate practice.
In every mock from today, scan before you attempt. Skip fast, skip without guilt, and trust that Round 2 gives you a second chance at the questions worth returning to.
The marks are there. You just need to find them in the right order.
Start your next mock on PracticeMock’s SBI PO Test Series with this strategy active. Then spend 90 minutes after the test checking how many easy questions your selection left on the table.
That number is your target for the next mock. Reduce it to zero — and your score takes care of itself.
Disclaimer: Exam dates, pattern details, and cut-off figures are based on the official SBI PO 2026 notification and data available at the time of writing. Always verify the latest updates on the official SBI website: www.sbi.bank.in
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