IBPS PO Prelims Score Improvement Plan: Scoring 40 in your IBPS PO mocks isn’t a knowledge problem. It’s almost always a strategy problem — and that’s actually good news, because strategy is far easier to fix than rebuilding your entire syllabus from scratch.
This guide is for one specific situation: you’re consistently landing around 35-45 in your mocks, and you want a clear, honest path to 60+. Not vague motivation — an actual plan.
Why 60+ Is the Right Target, Not Just the Cut-Off
| Year | General/EWS/OBC Prelims Cut-off (out of 100) |
|---|---|
| 2023 | 54.25 |
| 2024 | 48.50 |
| 2025 | 49.21 |
| 2026 (Expected) | 48-55 |
- The cut-off has hovered between 48 and 55 over the last three years — meaning a 40-mark score is genuinely below the line, not just “close.”
- A 60+ score isn’t about chasing a number for its own sake. It’s about building a real safety margin, since cut-offs shift based on exam difficulty and competition each year.
- Scoring exactly at the cut-off means you qualify with zero room for a tougher paper next time. 60+ gives you breathing space.
First, Get the 2026 Pattern Right
| Section | Questions | Marks | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| English Language | 30 | 30 | 20 minutes |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 35 | 30 | 20 minutes |
| Reasoning Ability | 35 | 40 | 20 minutes |
| Total | 100 | 100 | 60 minutes |
- Reasoning now carries the highest weightage at 40 marks — a recent shift from the earlier 30 marks, with Quant dropping from 35 to 30 to balance it out.
- Negative marking stays at 0.25 per wrong answer across all sections.
- You must clear both sectional and overall cut-offs — a strong overall score with one weak section can still eliminate you.
Why You’re Stuck at 40: The Real Reasons
Most aspirants assume a low score means they need to study more. Usually, that’s not it.
| What’s Actually Happening | Why It Caps Your Score at 40 |
|---|---|
| Attempting too many questions with low confidence | Wrong answers eat into correct ones through negative marking |
| No fixed attempt order — solving questions in the order they appear | Easy marks at the end of a section go untouched because time ran out |
| Getting stuck on one tough question for 2-3 minutes | That time could have answered 4-5 easier questions instead |
| Treating every section with equal effort | Reasoning now carries the most marks — equal effort under-serves your highest-value section |
| No review after mocks | The same mistakes repeat across tests without ever being noticed |
Step 1: Fix Your Accuracy Before Your Speed
- A 40-mark score usually comes from attempting 70-80 questions at around 55-60% accuracy — not from low knowledge.
- The math is brutal: attempting 80 questions at 60% accuracy gives you 48 correct and 32 wrong, costing you 8 marks to negative marking alone, landing you around 40.
- The same 80 attempts at 85% accuracy gives you 68 correct and 12 wrong, costing only 3 marks — landing you closer to 65.
- This single shift — attempting fewer questions but only the ones you’re genuinely confident about — is usually the fastest route from 40 to 60+.
Step 2: Set Section-Wise Attempt Targets
| Section | Target Attempts | Target Accuracy | Approx. Marks |
|---|---|---|---|
| English Language | 20-23 | 85%+ | 15-18 |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 20-23 | 85%+ | 16-19 |
| Reasoning Ability | 24-27 | 85%+ | 24-28 |
- These targets, taken together, land you comfortably in the 55-65 range — well above any recent cut-off.
- Notice Reasoning carries the heaviest target, since it’s now the highest-weightage section in the 2026 pattern.
- Don’t chase these numbers blindly in your very first mock — build up to them gradually as your accuracy improves.
Step 3: Build a Fixed Attempt Order
- Stop solving questions in the order they appear on screen — that’s the single biggest reason easy marks get left untouched.
- In each section, scan first, then attempt the easiest, most familiar question types before anything that looks lengthy or unfamiliar.
- In Quant, start with Simplification and Number Series before Data Interpretation.
- In Reasoning, start with Syllogism, Inequality, and Coding-Decoding before attempting puzzles.
- In English, start with grammar-based questions (Error Detection, Fillers) before Reading Comprehension.
Step 4: Use a Strict Skip Rule
- If a question hasn’t shown a clear path to the answer within 30-40 seconds, skip it. Don’t “just see a bit more.”
- A guess with no elimination is a losing bet under 0.25 negative marking — skipping costs you nothing, a wrong guess costs you real marks.
- If you can confidently eliminate 2 of 4 options, that’s worth a calculated attempt. Anything less certain, leave it and move on.
Step 5: Review Every Mock Like It’s Data, Not a Verdict
- A score is just an outcome. The reason behind it is what actually helps you improve.
- After every mock, log: which questions you got wrong, why (concept gap, calculation slip, time pressure, or guess), and what you’ll do differently.
- Review this log weekly. If the same topic or mistake type keeps showing up across 4-5 mocks, that becomes your top priority — not a random new topic.
A 4-Week Plan to Move From 40 to 60+
| Week | Focus |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Section-wise sectional mocks only — build the fixed attempt order and skip-rule habit |
| Week 2 | Full-length mocks, 3-4 per week, with strict post-mock review and error logging |
| Week 3 | Target weak topics flagged by your error log, alongside continued mock practice |
| Week 4 | Full-length mocks daily or alternate-day, focused purely on hitting the section-wise attempt targets at 85%+ accuracy |
- Most aspirants following this structure see a real shift within 3-4 weeks, not months — because the fix is mostly about decision-making, not relearning the syllabus from scratch.
Common Mistakes That Keep Aspirants Stuck at 40
- Attempting more questions after a bad mock instead of attempting fewer, more confident ones.
- Spending the same amount of time on every section regardless of the new, heavier Reasoning weightage.
- Skipping the post-mock review and moving straight to the next mock.
- Treating a single bad mock as proof of a knowledge gap, instead of checking the trend across several mocks first.
- Ignoring sectional cut-offs while chasing a high overall score — a single weak section can undo strong performance everywhere else.
If you want a deeper breakdown of how to structure your weekly study time once your attempt strategy is solid, our IBPS PO section-wise preparation plan covers the weak-strong subject split in detail.
The Bottom Line
- A 40-mark score is almost always a strategy problem, not a knowledge gap — fix the strategy first.
- Attempt fewer questions, but only the ones you’re genuinely confident about. Accuracy above 85% changes your score more than raw attempt count ever will.
- Build a fixed attempt order, use a strict skip rule, and review every mock with an error log.
- 60+ isn’t an arbitrary number — it’s a real safety margin above recent cut-offs of 48-55, giving you room even if the next paper is tougher.
Attempt a Free IBPS PO Mock Test on PracticeMock and start applying this 40-to-60 plan in your very next test.
FAQs
Q. Is a score of 40 in IBPS PO Prelims mocks really that far from clearing the cut-off?
Recent General/EWS/OBC cut-offs have ranged between 48.50 and 54.25 over the last three years. A 40-mark score is genuinely below this range, but the gap is closeable — most of it comes down to accuracy, not knowledge.
Q. Should I attempt more questions to increase my score from 40?
No. Attempting more questions without confidence usually adds more wrong answers, and negative marking eats into your correct ones. Aim for fewer, more confident attempts at 85%+ accuracy instead.
Q. How long does it typically take to move from 40 to 60+ marks?
With a focused attempt-order and accuracy-first approach, most aspirants see a meaningful shift within 3-4 weeks of consistent mock practice and review — faster than most expect, since the fix is largely strategic.
Q. Which section should I focus on most if I’m stuck at 40?
Reasoning Ability now carries the highest weightage at 40 marks in the 2026 pattern, so improving accuracy there has the biggest impact on your overall score — but don’t neglect Quant or English, since sectional cut-offs apply to all three.
Q. Is 60+ marks considered a safe score for IBPS PO Prelims 2026?
Based on recent cut-off trends of 48-55, a score of 60+ gives a healthy safety margin. It’s not a guaranteed clear, but it puts you well above the typical qualifying range even in a tougher paper.
Related PracticeMock Blogs
| Topic | Link |
|---|---|
| IBPS PO Section-Wise Preparation Plan for Quant, Reasoning and English | Read here |
| IBPS PO Prelims 2026: Section-Wise Strategy for Success | Read here |
| IBPS PO Syllabus 2026 PDF Download | Read here |
| IBPS PO Topic Wise Weightage 2026 | Read here |
| IBPS PO 2026: Complete Strategy for Prelims & Mains | Read here |
| How to Crack IBPS PO 2026: 4-Month Study Plan | Read here |
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