How to Crack IBPS PO 2026: Your Easy 4-Month Plan
So, you’ve decided to go for IBPS PO 2026. Great decision. This is one of the most respected banking exams in India, and clearing it opens the door to a genuine officer-level career in a public sector bank.
But here’s something most people don’t say out loud — the exam isn’t as scary as it looks. With the right plan, the right practice, and consistency, this is absolutely crackable. Lakhs of people have done it. You can too.
In this blog, we’re going to walk you through a clear, practical, no-fluff 4-month preparation plan for IBPS PO 2026. We’ll cover what to study, when to study it, and how to stay on track without burning yourself out.
Let’s get into it.
Before we jump into the month-by-month plan, let’s make sure you’re clear on the structure of the exam. IBPS PO has three stages:
This is the qualifying round. It has 100 questions for 100 marks in 60 minutes, divided into three sections:
You need to clear both the sectional and overall cut-off to move to Mains.
This is the real deal. It includes an objective paper (225 marks) covering Reasoning & Computer Aptitude, Data Analysis & Interpretation, General/Banking Awareness, English Language — plus a Descriptive Test of 25 marks (Essay + Letter Writing).
A 100-mark round conducted by banking officials. Your final rank is based on Mains (80%) + Interview (20%).
There’s also a negative marking of 0.25 marks per wrong answer — so attempting smartly matters as much as studying hard.
Now that you know what you’re dealing with, let’s plan your preparation month by month.
Pro Tip before you begin: Don’t try to study everything on day one. The key to success isn’t studying for 12 hours straight — it’s showing up every single day with focus.
Think of this month as laying the bricks. No fancy shortcuts. Just solid basics.
Quantitative Aptitude Start from the very basics — Number System, Percentages, Ratio & Proportion, Averages, and Simple/Compound Interest. Don’t rush. If your arithmetic isn’t strong, everything else will feel harder later.
Reasoning Ability Begin with topics like Directions, Blood Relations, Coding-Decoding, Inequalities, and Syllogism. These are relatively straightforward and will boost your confidence early on.
English Language Read every day. Pick up a newspaper or reliable editorial source and spend 20–30 minutes reading. Work on Grammar basics — subject-verb agreement, tenses, sentence structure. Practice Reading Comprehension passages daily.
Cover at least 70% of the foundational topics across all three Prelims sections. Don’t move to advanced topics until your basics feel solid.
You’ve got the basics down. Now it’s time to go deeper and start building your speed.
Quantitative Aptitude Move on to Data Interpretation (Bar Graphs, Pie Charts, Tables), Quadratic Equations, Number Series, and Profit & Loss. These topics appear heavily in both Prelims and Mains. Practice full DI sets regularly.
Reasoning Ability Now tackle the heavier topics: Puzzles (Scheduling, Linear Arrangement, Circular Arrangement), Seating Arrangements, and Input-Output. These take time to master, so give them the attention they deserve.
English Language Work on Cloze Tests, Para Jumbles, Error Detection, and Vocabulary-based questions. Your reading habit from Month 1 will start paying off here.
From Week 5 onwards, start taking timed sectional tests. Give yourself exactly 20 minutes per section (just like the real exam) and track your accuracy. The goal isn’t to score high yet — it’s to get used to working under pressure.
Complete the full Prelims syllabus. You should be able to attempt a full-length Prelims mock by the end of this month.
This is where most aspirants stumble — they prepare hard for Prelims but underestimate Mains. Don’t make that mistake.
Data Analysis & Interpretation (Mains Level) The DI in Mains is more complex — Mixed Graphs, Caselet DI, Missing Data DI. Spend dedicated time practicing these every day.
Reasoning & Computer Aptitude Advanced Puzzles, Critical Reasoning, Decision Making, and basic Computer Awareness (MS Office, Internet, Networking basics) are all in scope.
General/Banking Awareness This section can make or break your Mains score. Start reading daily current affairs, RBI announcements, Banking news, and Financial policy updates.
Review Static GK — important banking terms, headquarters, taglines of banks, government schemes.
English (Mains Level) The difficulty increases here. Practice advanced Reading Comprehension with banking/economy themes, complex Para Jumbles, and Word Usage questions. Also start practicing Descriptive Writing — essays on current topics and formal/informal letters.
From Week 9, start attempting one full Prelims mock every 2–3 days. Analyze every single mock — what went wrong, what took too long, where you lost marks.
Cover 80%+ of the Mains syllabus, attempt at least 8–10 Prelims mocks, and begin writing 2–3 descriptive pieces per week.
The final stretch. This is not the time to start new topics. This is the time to consolidate everything you’ve learned.
Aggressive Mock Practice Aim for a full-length mock every alternate day. After each mock:
Revision of Weak Areas By now, you know your weak spots. Spend 40% of your study time fixing them.
Banking Awareness Revision Create a quick-reference sheet of: RBI policies, Important Banking Acts, Financial Institutions, Recent Economic News, Budget Highlights. Revise this daily.
Descriptive Writing Practice Practice 1 essay + 1 letter every 2 days. Focus on structure, clarity, and staying within word limits. Topics related to digital banking, financial inclusion, and current economic issues are commonly asked.
Interview Preparation Yes, start early. Prepare your introduction, know your academic background well, read about the banking sector, and practice speaking confidently. Most people leave interview prep too late.
Attempt at least 20 full-length mocks total (Prelims + Mains combined), revise all important topics, and feel genuinely prepared — not just busy.
Here’s the truth: The syllabus is the same for everyone. The books are accessible to everyone. The difference is almost always mock test strategy.
Toppers don’t just take mocks — they study their mocks. After every test:
This feedback loop is what actually improves your score. Mocks without analysis are just wasted time.
At PracticeMock, our test series is built with detailed performance analytics, so you can track your weak areas and improve faster. Every mock comes with explanations, section-wise reports, and peer comparisons so you know exactly where you stand.
Cracking IBPS PO 2026 is not about being the smartest person in the room. It’s about being the most consistent one.
Every day you show up and study — even for just 2 hours — you’re ahead of the person who didn’t. Every mock you take and analyze honestly is building the muscle memory you’ll need on exam day.
You don’t need to be perfect. You just need to be prepared.
And we’re here to help you with that.
Yes, absolutely. Four months is a solid preparation window if you stay consistent and follow a structured plan. Many successful candidates have cleared IBPS PO in 3–4 months of dedicated preparation. The key is daily practice and regular mock testing.
Aim for 3–5 hours of focused study daily. Quality beats quantity here. Three hours of distraction-free, structured study is far more effective than 8 hours of unfocused reading.
This varies from person to person, but most aspirants find Data Analysis & Interpretation in Mains and advanced Puzzles in Reasoning the most challenging. The key is to not avoid these — face them head-on with consistent practice.
A good target is 20–30 full-length mocks over your preparation period. But remember, the number matters less than your post-mock analysis. Taking 30 mocks without analyzing them is less useful than taking 15 mocks and learning from every mistake.
Not if you practice. The Descriptive Test (Essay + Letter Writing) is 25 marks and is very much scorable. Topics are usually current affairs, banking, and social issues. Practice writing structured pieces regularly from Month 3 onwards.
Extremely important for Mains. The General/Banking Awareness section carries 50 marks in Mains. Start building this knowledge from Month 3 — daily 15–20 minutes of current affairs + weekly banking updates will be enough.
Coaching can help if you need structure or struggle with specific topics. But with good study materials, a quality test series, and a solid plan, self-study is absolutely sufficient. Many toppers have cleared IBPS PO through self-preparation alone.
Yes. 0.25 marks are deducted for every wrong answer in both Prelims and Mains. So don’t attempt questions you’re completely unsure about. Smart selection of questions matters as much as your knowledge.
For Quantitative Aptitude: R.S. Aggarwal or Arun Sharma. For Reasoning: M.K. Pandey or R.S. Aggarwal. For English: Wren & Martin for grammar basics. For Banking Awareness: Arihant’s Banking Awareness guide + daily news reading. That said, practice from quality mock tests and previous year papers is equally important.
PracticeMock offers full-length IBPS PO mock tests that mirror the actual exam pattern, section-wise tests, detailed performance analytics, and current affairs coverage. Our test series helps you identify your weak areas, track improvement, and build the speed and accuracy you need to crack the exam.
Good luck with your IBPS PO 2026 preparation. Believe in your plan, trust the process, and keep going. You’re one consistent month away from making real progress.
About PracticeMock: PracticeMock is a leading online exam preparation platform for Banking, SSC, Railways, and Regulatory exams. We offer mock tests, test series, PDFs, and current affairs to help aspirants prepare smarter and faster. Sign up for free today →
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