SSC CHSL 2025 Tier 1 exam is scheduled to be conducted from 12th November 2025. How is your preparation going? Hope you are doing well. More important than preparation, practice, or revision is how you attempt your exam. It is a game of 60 minutes that decides your success in the next stage of the exam. If you don’t plan these 60 minutes systematically, then all your hard work could go to waste. In this blog, you will learn how to manage time during SSC CHSL 2025 Tier 1 exam. So if you are appearing in the exam, then read this blog carefully and follow the tips provided in this blog.
Firstly, Decide Your Time Allocation Among Sections
The first and most important step is to allocate a fixed time to each of the four sections before you even start the exam. This prevents you from getting stuck on one tough question and losing time for the easier ones.
| Section | Number of Questions | Recommended Time (Max) | Nature of Questions |
| General Awareness (GA) | 25 | 7-8 Minutes | Knowledge-based (Either you know it or you don’t) |
| English Language | 25 | 10-12 Minutes | Reading & Quick Checks |
| General Intelligence & Reasoning | 25 | 15-17 Minutes | Medium-to-High Calculation/Thinking |
| Quantitative Aptitude (Maths) | 25 | 20-22 Minutes | Highest Calculation/Time-Consuming |
| Total | 100 | 52-59 Minutes | The Remaining Time is Your Buffer! |
Note: You know the best part is that there is no sectional timing in the exam. So you can attempt any section in any order. We suggest you start with general awareness and try to finish it in 7-8 minutes. It will not only help you finish a section but also boost your confidence that you have finished a section. Go through the time allocation among the sections provided above.
Follow the Three-Round Strategy on Exam Day
To use your 60 minutes effectively, we have divided it into 3 rounds. These 3 rounds will focus on maximizing attempts and minimizing panic. This is where most top scorers manage to attempt 80+ questions effectively.
Round 1: Focusing on Most Attempt (Target: 30-35 Minutes)
Your goal here is to attempt all the easy and direct questions.
- Start with your strongest section. If you are great at Reasoning or General Awareness, start there. But remember the time limits!
- Focus only on easy and direct questions. If you see a question and instantly know the answer or the method to solve it in under 30 seconds, solve it immediately.
- Use the ‘Mark for Review’ feature: If you see a lengthy question, but you know you can solve it so mark that question as Mark for review.
- Do not get stuck. If a question seems tough or lengthy, or you can’t figure it out in 30 seconds, skip it immediately. Remember the negative marking, and your time is better spent finding an easy question somewhere else.
Round 2: The ‘Problem Solver’ (Target: 15-20 Minutes)
Now you have spent 30-35 minutes (in round 1). Now target your 15-20 minutes in problem-solving and “Marked for Review” questions.
- Revisit the ‘Marked for Review’ questions. Prioritize those questions that are lengthy, but you are certain you can solve correctly.
- Focus on high-value, medium-difficulty questions. These will mainly be the longer calculation questions from Quantitative Aptitude (like DI, Geometry) or complex arrangements in Reasoning.
- Use the process of elimination. For multiple-choice questions, if you are confused, try to eliminate at least two wrong options. The elimination process can increase your probability of getting the right answer if you decide to take a calculated guess.
Round 3: The ‘Final Check’ (Target: 5-10 Minutes)
After following rounds 1 and 2, you will have at least 5-10 minutes remaining for the exam. This is your final buffer time.
- Review your entire paper. There will be a question palette on the screen to see how many questions are left unanswered or still Marked for Review.
- Go for the final few attempts. Look for the unanswered questions and solve any question you feel you can crack quickly, even if it’s a difficult one.
- The “No-Guess” Rule: At this point, if you have not answered the question, then most probably it will be a tough one. So avoid guesswork here. Only attempt a question in this round if you are at least 80% sure. Unnecessary guessing can lead to negative marks and harm your final score.
Take a Free Mock Test and Try to Follow Our Three-Round Strategy
What Should You Do Now?
Now you have gone through the three-round strategy to attempt the exam. However, without practicing it, you cannot fully reap the benefits. Knowing the plan is one thing, but actually executing it on exam day is another. Time management isn’t some magic trick you learn the night before; it is all about habits that you acquire by regular practice.
1. Mock Tests are Your Best Practice Tool
- Practice with a Timer, Always: Don’t just solve the paper—take a test. Sit down, put your phone away, and pretend it’s the real 60-minute exam. Take at least 15-20 full-length mocks. The more you train under pressure, the less the actual exam feels like a surprise.
- Analyze the Mock Tests Carefully: After every mock, make sure you are carefully analyzing it. Go back and see where you spent too much time. Did that one Data Interpretation (DI) question steal 3 minutes of your life? That’s a huge lesson! Your goal is to ruthlessly cut down the time spent on tricky questions in the next mock.
- Find Your Best Order: We gave you a sectional time plan, but it’s just a suggestion. Use the mocks to find your personal flow. Maybe you’re a morning person, and your brain is sharpest for Maths—so try starting with Quantitative Aptitude! Find the order that makes you feel most confident and efficient.
2. Get a Mental Math Edge (The Shortcut Power)
The Quantitative Aptitude section (Maths) is where most candidates waste their time. If you use pen and paper for every small calculation, then you might be mistaken. Stay, keep in mind that the clock is running out its time. You need a Mental Math Edge.
- Know Your Tables and Figures: This is non-negotiable. Memorize squares up to 30 and cubes up to 20. Also, know the common percentage-to-fraction conversions (like knowing 1/8 is 12.5% instantly). This saves you writing time.
- Learn the Tricks: Practice shortcuts like Vedic Maths methods. These little tricks can save you 5-10 precious seconds per question. Those seconds add up to minutes, and those minutes can be the difference between clearing the cutoff and missing it!
3. Stay Calm, Don’t Panic
- A Tough Section is Tough for Everyone: If you feel the Maths section is impossible, take a deep breath. It means the paper is difficult, and the cutoff will be lower! Don’t panic and make silly errors. Stick to your plan and secure the easy marks in the other sections.
- Don’t Stick to One Question: This is the most important thing that you should take care of. If you spend 1 or 2 minutes on a question, you are advised to leave it. It’s just 2 marks. Those 1 or 2 minutes could have been used to solve 3 easy General Awareness questions, giving you 6 marks! Learning to move on is your most powerful winning strategy.
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FAQs: How to Manage Time During SSC CHSL 2025 Tier 1 Exam?
The SSC CHSL Tier 1 exam has a total duration of 60 minutes for 100 questions across four sections.
No, there is no sectional timing. You can attempt the sections in any order as per your comfort and strength.
Start with your strongest section, like General Awareness or English, to build confidence and save time for tougher sections.
Try to attempt 80–85 questions with good accuracy instead of attempting all 100 with random guessing.
Always attempt easy and direct questions first. Mark the tough ones for review and return to them later.
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