How to Score 15+ Marks in RBI Grade B Phase 1 Quants
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For many aspirants, Quantitative Aptitude becomes the most stressful section in RBI Grade B Phase 1. Some struggle with lengthy calculations, while others fear DI sets and time pressure. Because of this, many candidates mentally give up on Quant too early. But the reality is different. In RBI Grade B, aspirants do not need extraordinary Quant performance to stay competitive. Very often, 15+ marks with good accuracy become enough to stay comfortably in the race. In this blog, we’ll discuss how to achieve that strategically.

RBI Grade B Quant Is More About Selection Than Completion

One of the biggest misconceptions aspirants carry is this: “I must solve everything to score well in Quant.” That approach usually backfires. RBI Grade B Quant is not designed for complete paper domination.
It is designed to test:

  • decision-making,
  • pressure handling,
  • question selection,
  • and calculation control.

Every year, several questions in the Quant section are intentionally time-consuming. Strong aspirants understand this quickly.

They focus on:

  • solvable questions,
  • familiar patterns,
  • and high-accuracy attempts.

This is exactly why even moderate attempts with good accuracy can produce strong sectional scores.

Arithmetic Still Dominates the RBI Grade B Quant Section

Previous-year trends clearly show that Arithmetic remains the backbone of RBI Grade B Quant preparation.

Topics repeatedly carrying visible weightage include:

  • Percentage,
  • Ratio and Proportion,
  • Profit and Loss,
  • Simple and Compound Interest,
  • Time and Work,
  • Time, Speed and Distance,
  • Partnership,
  • Average,
  • Mixture and Allegation.

Aspirants preparing these areas thoroughly usually create a strong scoring base automatically. The smarter strategy is to master repeated Arithmetic patterns instead of chasing excessively advanced shortcuts initially.

Because RBI Grade B rewards clarity more than flashy solving techniques.

Data Interpretation Can Quietly Decide Your Quant Score

Many aspirants fear DI sets unnecessarily. But in reality, DI often becomes one of the biggest scoring opportunities for well-prepared candidates. Especially:

  • Caselet DI,
  • Tabular DI,
  • Missing DI,
  • and moderate calculation-based sets

appear regularly in RBI Grade B Phase 1.

The real issue is calculation speed. Aspirants who struggle with:

  • approximation,
  • percentage conversion,
  • multiplication speed,
  • and ratio simplification

usually lose valuable time here.

That is why daily calculation practice becomes extremely important during the final months.

If you are specifically struggling with Quant speed improvement, read RBI Grade B Phase 1 Exam 2026: How to Quickly Solve Quants Questions.

That blog discusses practical speed-building approaches in detail.

Don’t Turn Quant Preparation Into Formula Memorization

This is a common mistake. Many aspirants keep collecting:

  • shortcuts,
  • formulas,
  • tricks,
  • and PDFs,

without actually strengthening application ability.

Quant in RBI Grade B rarely rewards passive memorization alone. Instead, aspirants should repeatedly practice:

  • interpretation,
  • calculation flow,
  • question selection,
  • and timed solving.

The goal is not to remember maximum formulas and solve efficiently under pressure.

Attempt Selection Matters More Than Attempt Numbers

One of the biggest differences between strong and weak Quant performers is question selection.

Weak aspirants:

  • stay stuck on difficult questions,
  • panic after one lengthy DI set,
  • and waste time emotionally.

Strong aspirants behave differently.

They quickly identify:

  • doable questions,
  • calculation-heavy traps,
  • and time-consuming patterns.

This helps maintain rhythm throughout the section.

In RBI Grade B, one difficult question is never worth destroying the entire section timing.

Mock Tests Teach Quant Temperament Better Than Theory

Quant improvement is impossible without serious mock exposure. Because the real challenge is not solving questions individually.
The real challenge is solving them:

  • under pressure,
  • within time,
  • while maintaining accuracy.

Mock tests help aspirants understand:

  • speed limitations,
  • calculation weaknesses,
  • panic triggers,
  • and sectional balancing.

But mock analysis matters even more. After every Quant mock, aspirants should observe:

  • where time was lost,
  • which topics created hesitation,
  • which questions should have been skipped,
  • and how accuracy behaved.

That analysis improves marks steadily over time.

If your overall preparation still feels unstable, read First 5 Mock Tests Challenge: Benchmark Your RBI Grade B 2026 Prep.

The Final 30 Days Should Focus on Speed Stabilization

The last month before RBI Grade B Phase 1 should not become a syllabus expansion phase.

At this stage, Quant preparation should focus mainly on:

  • revision,
  • speed improvement,
  • DI practice,
  • and mock-based execution.

Aspirants should regularly practice:

  • sectional Quant tests,
  • timer-based Arithmetic sets,
  • and mixed moderate-level question sets.

Consistency matters enormously here.

Even 90 focused minutes daily can create major improvement if practice remains disciplined.

For aspirants looking for a structured final-month Quant strategy, read RBI Grade B Phase 1 Quantitative Aptitude Preparation Strategy for Remaining 30 Days.

Calculation Speed Quietly Shapes Overall Quant Performance

This part is underestimated badly. Many aspirants know concepts properly but still perform poorly because calculations consume too much time.

Basic calculation fluency should improve in:

  • squares,
  • cubes,
  • percentage conversion,
  • fraction values,
  • multiplication,
  • and approximation.

Without this, even easy questions start feeling lengthy under pressure. Daily calculation drills may feel boring initially, but they dramatically improve overall section comfort.

Strong GA Can Reduce Pressure on Quant

This is an important strategic point. Many aspirants think they must dominate Quant aggressively. Not necessarily. RBI Grade B is a balanced paper. Aspirants who score strongly in:

  • General Awareness,
  • English,
  • and Reasoning

often need only stable Quant performance—not heroic attempts.

That is why preparation should remain strategically balanced.

If you are still unsure about how much GA matters in Phase 1 scoring, read What’s Safe Score for RBI Grade B Phase 1 2026?.

Don’t Panic Because of Difficult Mock Scores

Quant mock scores fluctuate heavily. That is normal. Some mocks intentionally increase difficulty beyond actual exam level. Aspirants should not emotionally judge preparation based on one bad mock.

Instead, focus on:

  • long-term accuracy,
  • speed consistency,
  • and question selection quality.

Improvement in Quant usually happens gradually, not dramatically overnight.

Final Thought

Scoring 15+ marks in RBI Grade B Phase 1 Quants is not about solving the toughest questions in the paper.

It is about:

  • selecting smart questions,
  • maintaining accuracy,
  • controlling calculation speed,
  • and staying calm under pressure.

Most importantly, aspirants should stop treating Quant as an impossible section.

Because in reality, controlled preparation combined with disciplined mock practice can make 15+ marks a very realistic target in RBI Grade B Phase 1 Exam 2026.

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By Asad Yar Khan

Asad specializes in penning and overseeing blogs on study strategies, exam techniques, and key strategies for SSC, banking, regulatory body, engineering, and other competitive exams. During his 3+ years' stint at PracticeMock, he has helped thousands of aspirants gain the confidence to achieve top results. In his free time, he either transforms into a sleep lover, devours books, or becomes an outdoor enthusiast.

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