If you’re treating Quant, Reasoning, and English with the same time and effort, you’re already behind. The smarter approach is to know exactly which section gives you the most marks for the least effort, and build your plan around that — not around treating all three equally.
This plan goes a layer deeper than a basic topic list. We’re covering how to split your time between weak and strong subjects, what accuracy target to aim for in each section, and how to track progress so you’re not guessing your improvement.
Get the 2026 Pattern Right First
IBPS revised the marking scheme recently, and a lot of older content online still has the wrong numbers. Here’s what’s current.
| 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 |
- The big shift: Quant marks dropped from 35 to 30, and Reasoning moved up from 30 to 40 marks — meaning Reasoning is now the single highest-weightage Prelims section.
- Negative marking stays at 0.25 per wrong answer, same across all three sections.
- Prelims marks aren’t counted in final merit, but you must clear both sectional and overall cut-offs to reach Mains — so a weak section here can still eliminate you.
For the full breakdown of this pattern shift, our IBPS PO syllabus and exam pattern guide covers it section by section.
Why “Equal Time for All Sections” Doesn’t Work
- Reasoning now carries the most marks in Prelims — treating it the same as English, which carries the least, means you’re under-investing in your highest-value section.
- A section you’re naturally strong in needs far less daily time to stay sharp than a section you’re weak in needs to even become safe.
- Aspirants who split time evenly across all three usually end up “okay” everywhere and excellent nowhere — which isn’t enough with sectional cut-offs in play.
Step 1: Confirm Your Weak and Strong Sections With Data
Don’t decide this from memory. Check your last 4-5 mocks against this table.
| What to Check | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| Accuracy below 70% in a section | Likely a genuine weak area needing concept-level work |
| Accuracy above 80% but slow | Concept is solid — this needs speed drilling, not relearning |
| Sectional score close to cut-off repeatedly | High-risk section — needs priority attention regardless of how it “feels” |
| Score swinging widely mock to mock | Inconsistent preparation — needs more structured, repeated practice |
Step 2: The 50-30-20 Time Split
Once you know your weak and strong sections, use this rough time allocation for daily or weekly study hours.
| Allocation | Where It Goes |
|---|---|
| 50% | Your weakest section — this is where the biggest score gains are sitting |
| 30% | Your strongest section — enough to keep it sharp, never let it drop |
| 20% | Your moderate section — steady, consistent practice without overinvesting |
- This isn’t a rigid rule — adjust slightly based on how far behind your weak section actually is. But never let any section drop to 0% of your weekly time, even your strongest one.
- A strong section that goes untouched for two weeks can quietly slip below its sectional cut-off — that’s one of the most avoidable ways to lose marks.
Section-Wise Plan: Quantitative Aptitude
| Detail | Current 2026 Numbers |
|---|---|
| Questions / Marks | 35 questions, 30 marks |
| Time | 20 minutes (roughly 34 seconds per question) |
| Highest-Weightage Topics | Data Interpretation, Arithmetic, Number Series |
- Since Quant marks dropped while question count stayed high, each question is now worth slightly less — meaning accuracy and speed both matter more than ever to hit a good attempt count.
- Build your topic order from easiest to hardest: Simplification and Number Series first, Arithmetic next, Data Interpretation last, since DI relies on the Arithmetic foundation underneath it.
- Target: aim for 22-25 confident attempts at 85%+ accuracy rather than rushing through all 35 questions.
Section-Wise Plan: Reasoning Ability
| Detail | Current 2026 Numbers |
|---|---|
| Questions / Marks | 35 questions, 40 marks — the highest-weightage Prelims section |
| Time | 20 minutes |
| Highest-Weightage Topics | Puzzles & Seating Arrangement, Syllogism, Inequality, Coding-Decoding |
- This section deserves disproportionate attention now that it carries the most marks of the three.
- Don’t open with the toughest puzzle on screen — scan all sets first, and start with the one offering the most fixed clues and fewest variables.
- If a puzzle’s logic hasn’t clicked within 30 seconds of starting, that’s your signal to skip and return later, not push through.
- Target: 22-26 confident attempts at 85%+ accuracy, prioritising quick-win topics like Syllogism and Inequality before puzzles.
Section-Wise Plan: English Language
| Detail | Current 2026 Numbers |
|---|---|
| Questions / Marks | 30 questions, 30 marks |
| Time | 20 minutes (the most generous per-question time of the three sections) |
| Highest-Weightage Topics | Reading Comprehension, Cloze Test, Error Detection, Para Jumbles |
- This section has the lowest weightage of the three but the most time per question — use that advantage instead of rushing.
- Grammar-based questions (Error Detection, Sentence Improvement) are usually faster and more reliable marks than RC, so attempt those first.
- Target: 22-25 confident attempts at 85%+ accuracy — don’t chase every RC question if comprehension is genuinely slow for you; bank the grammar-based marks first.
Build an Error Log to Track Section-Wise Progress
A study plan without tracking is just a guess. After every mock:
- Log every wrong answer with the section, topic, and reason — concept gap, calculation slip, time pressure, or guess.
- Review the log weekly, not after every single mock — patterns are clearer across several tests than after just one.
- If the same topic keeps showing up across 4-5 mocks, that becomes your next priority, ahead of anything in your original plan.
This same method works whether you’re following IBPS PO’s 3-month study plan or a tighter 4-month preparation plan — the tracking habit matters more than which calendar you’re on.
A Simple Weekly Structure
| Day | Focus |
|---|---|
| Monday | Weak section sectional test + review |
| Tuesday | Strong section sectional test + review |
| Wednesday | Weak section topic-wise practice |
| Thursday | Moderate section sectional test + review |
| Friday | Weak section sectional test (retry, no solutions first) |
| Saturday | Full-length mock, all sections together |
| Sunday | Weekly error log review across all three sections |
Common Mistakes in Section-Wise Preparation
- Spending equal time on all three sections despite the new marking scheme clearly favouring Reasoning.
- Ignoring English because it carries the lowest marks — but a sectional cut-off failure here still eliminates you regardless of how well Quant or Reasoning went.
- Jumping into Data Interpretation before Arithmetic basics are solid.
- Not tracking which topics repeat as mistakes across mocks, so the same errors keep showing up untouched.
- Letting a strong section slide because all the visible focus is going to the weak one.
The Bottom Line
- Confirm your weak and strong sections with real mock data, not assumption.
- Use the 50-30-20 split — most time to your weakest section, but never zero time to your strongest.
- Remember Reasoning now carries the highest weightage in Prelims — let your time allocation reflect that.
- Track every mistake in an error log and let the pattern, not your gut feeling, decide next week’s focus.
Attempt a Free IBPS PO Mock Test on PracticeMock and start applying this section-wise plan today.
FAQs
Q. Has the IBPS PO Prelims marking scheme really changed for 2026?
Yes. Quantitative Aptitude marks were reduced from 35 to 30, while Reasoning Ability marks increased from 30 to 40. English Language remains at 30 marks. The total stays at 100 marks across 100 questions.
Q. Which section should I prioritise the most in Prelims preparation?
Reasoning now carries the highest weightage at 40 marks, so it deserves proportionally more preparation time — but never at the cost of neglecting Quant or English, since both have independent sectional cut-offs.
Q. How do I know if a section is genuinely weak or just feels difficult?
Check your accuracy across your last 4-5 mocks, not just one. Accuracy consistently below 70% points to a real concept gap; high accuracy with slow speed usually just needs more timed drilling.
Q. Should I give up on my weakest section if it’s not improving?
No. Since sectional cut-offs apply, you can’t skip a section entirely. Instead, aim to bring it to a “safe” level rather than trying to make it your strongest — the goal is balance, not mastery in every subject.
Q. How often should I review my section-wise error log?
Do a quick review within 24 hours of every mock, and a deeper pattern review once a week across all mocks from that week. Patterns become clearer with more data points.
Related PracticeMock Blogs
| Topic | Link |
|---|---|
| IBPS PO Prelims 2026: Section-Wise Strategy for Success | Read here |
| IBPS PO 2026: Complete Strategy for Prelims & Mains | Read here |
| IBPS PO Syllabus 2026 PDF Download | Read here |
| IBPS PO Topic Wise Weightage 2026 | Read here |
| IBPS PO 2026: 3 Months Study Plan | Read here |
| How to Crack IBPS PO 2026: 4-Month Study Plan | Read here |
| IBPS Calendar 2026 | Read here |
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