The PFRDA Grade A Phase 1 exam is scheduled for 6th September 2025. Today is September 4, which means only two days are left. At this stage, panic is natural. Many aspirants feel they have not done enough. Some are worried about revision, some about accuracy, and some about speed. But the truth is, these last two days can make a big difference. If you follow the right tips, you can increase your chances of clearing the exam. Small changes in approach can add a few extra marks. And in a competitive exam like PFRDA, even 2 or 3 marks matter. So, instead of panicking, focus on smart preparation.
When the exam is only two days away, you cannot start fresh topics that are part of the PFRDA Grade A Phase 1 syllabus. You cannot read everything again. But you can revise smartly. You can sharpen your speed. You can avoid silly mistakes. And you can keep your mind calm. These things matter more now than new learning.
Many aspirants make the mistake of over-studying in the last two days. They try to cover everything, and in this process, they overload their brain. The result is stress, fatigue, and confusion in the exam hall. That is why last minute tips are not about learning more. They are about revising better, focusing better, and attempting better.
Before you enter the exam, you must be clear about the structure. PFRDA Phase 1 is objective and online. It has two papers: Paper 1 and Paper 2. Paper 1 tests your English, Quant, Reasoning, and GA. Paper 2 is based on the stream you have applied for, like General, Legal, IT, Finance, or Research.
Both papers are qualifying in nature. You must clear sectional cut-offs and overall cut-offs. So, your focus should not be only on one section. You must balance accuracy and speed across all sections.
Here are the tips that you need to follow before the exam:
General Awareness plays a pivotal role in Phase 1. Many students ignore it till the last week. But in reality, GA decides the cut-off. In the last two days, do not try to read everything. Revise only the most important topics.
Focus on:
Do not go into too much detail now. Revise only headlines, important facts, and one-line summaries. This will help you attempt maximum questions correctly in less time.
At this stage, you cannot improve weak areas much. If you are weak in puzzles, you cannot master them in two days. If you are weak in high-level quant, you cannot suddenly score full marks. That is why your focus should be on strong areas.
Revise the topics where you are already confident. Practice a few questions to stay in rhythm. Build accuracy in your comfort zones. This will give you marks quickly in the exam. Once you secure those marks, you can try the moderate or difficult questions if time allows.
Mock tests are your best friend at this point. Do not take too many, but take at least one mock test daily before the exam. This will help you stay exam-ready. It will keep you in touch with time management.
After every mock, spend some time analyzing your mistakes. See which section took more time. See where you lost marks. Then, fix that in your next attempt. Even one or two mocks can improve your accuracy.
Time is the biggest enemy in competitive exams. Many students know the answers, but they cannot attempt them because time runs out. That is why you must plan your time before entering the hall.
Do not spend more than one minute on a single question. If you are stuck, leave it. Move on. Come back later if time remains. Remember, all questions carry equal marks. There is no point wasting time on one tough question while leaving three easy ones.
Anxiety is common before exams. But if you let panic control you, you will make silly mistakes. You may misread a question. You may mark the wrong option. Or you may spend too much time double-checking. That is why you must stay calm.
Take deep breaths before the exam starts. Tell yourself you are ready. Even if you do not know every answer, you can still score enough to clear the cut-off. Trust your preparation.
Here are some Dos that you must take care of:
Here are the Don’ts that you must avoid:
The last two days are not for hard work, but for smart work. Do not try to cover everything. Revise what you already know. Practice mocks for time management. Focus on GA and your strong areas. Keep your mind calm and positive. And remember, PFRDA Grade A Phase 1 is just the first step. Your goal is not to top the exam, but to clear it with a safe score and move to Phase 2.
If you follow these tips, your accuracy will rise. Your confidence will grow. And your chances of success will get stronger. Stay focused. Stay calm. And give your best on September 6.
You need at least 2 to 3 months, but in the last two days focus only on revision and practice.
Yes. GA plays a deciding role in cut-offs. Revise current affairs and important schemes.
No. Attempt only what you are sure about. Negative marking can reduce your score.
Yes. One mock test daily is enough to keep you exam-ready and reduce anxiety.
The biggest mistake is starting new topics at the last moment. It wastes time and increases stress.
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