SBI PO Mock Decision-Making Strategy: When to Skip, Attempt or Return to a QuestionEvery SBI PO aspirant loses marks the same way — not from not knowing the answer, but from not knowing whether to attempt it at all. That one decision, repeated 100 times in an hour, decides your score more than your knowledge does.
This guide gives you a simple framework for that decision: when to attempt right away, when to skip, and when to come back.
First, Get the 2026 Numbers Right
Your decision-making changes depending on the exact marks and timing in play. Here’s what’s current for 2026.
| Section | Questions | Marks | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| English Language (Prelims) | 40 | 40 | 20 min |
| Quantitative Aptitude (Prelims) | 30 | 30 | 20 min |
| Reasoning Ability (Prelims) | 30 | 30 | 20 min |
| Negative Marking | — | 0.25 per wrong answer | Same in Prelims & Mains |
- English Language now carries 40 questions instead of the earlier 30 — that’s a real shift in how much this section is worth and how you should pace it.
- There is no sectional cut-off in Prelims — only the overall score matters. This single fact should guide every skip-or-attempt call you make.
- In Mains, sectional cut-offs do apply, so your decision-making needs to be more cautious section by section there.
Also Read: SBI PO Salary 2026
The Three Decisions You’re Always Making
- Attempt now — you know it, you’re confident, it won’t eat your time.
- Skip entirely — you don’t know it, or it’s taking too long with no clear progress.
- Mark and return — you have a method but it’s slow, or you’re unsure but could solve it with a second look.
Every question in a mock falls into one of these three. The skill isn’t knowledge — it’s making this call fast, in the first few seconds of reading the question.
When to Attempt Right Away
| Signal | What It Means |
|---|---|
| You know the method within 3-5 seconds of reading it | High confidence — attempt now |
| It’s a topic you’ve drilled repeatedly (Syllogism, Simplification, Fill in the Blanks) | Familiar pattern — attempt now |
| You can solve it without writing on rough paper | Quick, low-risk — attempt now |
- These are your safe marks. Bank them first, every single time.
- Don’t double-check a question you’re fully confident about — that habit alone wastes minutes across a section.
When to Skip Without Looking Back
| Signal | What It Means |
|---|---|
| You don’t recognise the concept at all | Skip — there’s no fast path to the answer |
| You’ve spent more than 30-40 seconds with no progress | Skip — the question is costing more than it’s worth |
| You’d need to guess between 3-4 options with no elimination | Skip — pure guessing isn’t worth the 0.25 penalty |
- A skip costs you zero marks. A wrong guess costs you 0.25 marks — and it costs you something else too: composure for the next question.
- Don’t feel bad about skipping. Skipping a question you can’t solve is not failure — it’s protecting marks you’ve already earned elsewhere.
When to Mark and Return
| Signal | What It Means |
|---|---|
| You know the method but it’s calculation-heavy | Worth returning to if time allows later |
| You can eliminate 2 of 4 options confidently | Worth a calculated attempt on return, not a blind guess |
| It’s a puzzle or DI set that’s “almost solved” | Mark it — coming back fresh often unlocks the last step |
- This is the middle ground, and it’s where most marks are won or lost.
- Mark these clearly as you go so you’re not re-reading every question from scratch in your second pass.
A Simple Decision Table You Can Practice With
| Confidence Level | Time Already Spent | Decision |
|---|---|---|
| High | Any | Attempt now |
| Medium, can eliminate options | Under 30 seconds | Mark and return |
| Medium, no elimination possible | Over 30 seconds | Skip |
| Low | Any | Skip |
- Practice this table in every sectional and full mock until it’s automatic, not something you’re consciously thinking through under pressure.
Why This Decision Matters More in Prelims Than You Think
- Since Prelims has no sectional cut-off, an extra 2-3 confident attempts in English can comfortably make up for a slower Reasoning section.
- This means your skip-or-attempt call in a strong section should lean slightly more aggressive — bank everything you reasonably can.
- In your weaker section, lean more cautious — protect against negative marking rather than chasing every attempt.
If you want the full breakdown of which topics to prioritise inside each section before this decision even comes up, our SBI PO question selection strategy guide covers that groundwork in detail. And if you’re unsure which section to tackle first within your fixed attempt order, the SBI PO attempt order strategy guide walks through that separately.
Common Mistakes in This Decision
- Spending 90 seconds “just to see” on a question you should have skipped at the 30-second mark.
- Guessing blindly on a question with no elimination, just to “not leave it blank.”
- Marking too many questions for return and running out of time to revisit any of them.
- Re-checking questions you were already confident about, instead of moving to the next one.
- Treating every section the same way, ignoring that Prelims and Mains have different cut-off rules.
The Bottom Line
- Decide fast — attempt, skip, or mark and return — within the first few seconds of reading each question.
- A blank costs nothing. A wrong guess costs 0.25 marks and your composure.
- Practice this decision in every mock until it stops feeling like a choice and starts feeling automatic.
📊 Attempt a Free SBI PO Mock Test on PracticeMock and put this decision framework to the test today.
FAQs
Q. Should I attempt a question if I’m only 50% sure of the answer? Only if you can eliminate at least 2 of the 4 options first. Without elimination, a 50% guess is close to a coin toss, and the 0.25 negative marking makes that a losing bet over a full section.
Q. Is it better to attempt more questions or stay safe with fewer, accurate ones? Accuracy matters more. A high attempt count with low accuracy usually scores worse than a slightly lower attempt count at 85%+ accuracy, because every wrong answer pulls down a correct one.
Q. How much time should I give a question before deciding to skip it? As a rule of thumb, 30-40 seconds with no real progress is your signal to skip. Holding on longer rarely helps and usually costs you two or three other questions you could have solved instead.
Q. Does the skip-or-attempt decision change between Prelims and Mains? Yes. Prelims has no sectional cut-off, so you can lean slightly more aggressive in your strong sections. Mains has sectional cut-offs, so you need a safer, more even approach across every section.
Related PracticeMock Blogs
| Topic | Link |
|---|---|
| SBI PO Mock Test Attempt Order Strategy 2026 | Read here |
| SBI PO Mock Question Selection Strategy 2026 | Read here |
| SBI PO Syllabus 2026 | Read here |
| SBI PO 2026 English Preparation Strategy | Read here |
| How Many Questions to Attempt in SBI PO Prelims 2026 | Read here |
| Is Your SBI PO Score Stuck? Take This Free Test | Read here |
| SBI PO Selection Process 2026 | Read here |
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