The LIC AAO Preliminary Exam 2025 is scheduled for October 3, 2025, and with just a few days left for the exam, your preparation strategy should focus more on smart practice than new learning. At this stage, your focus should be on time management, accuracy, and question selection. Many candidates make the mistake of solving questions haphazardly, which wastes time and reduces accuracy. The right approach is to create a practice matrix, where you learn to balance between easy, medium, and difficult questions during your revision and mock practice. Think of this matrix as your guiding tool to achieve maximum marks without any pressure.
To help you evaluate your preparation, we’re offering a free LIC AAO Mock Test Challenge 2025. Click on the link below and start testing yourself now:
In the exam, not all questions will carry the same difficulty level. Some are designed to be solved quickly, while others test your patience and depth of concept. If you try to solve everything in sequence, you may run out of time. That’s where the Practice Matrix comes in, it helps you pick the right set of questions and approach them in a balanced way.
Think of it like a cricket match; you don’t go for sixes in the first over; you play safe, score singles, and then pick your shots wisely.
Before you start revising, you must know exactly where you struggle. Many students waste time trying to identify their weak areas. The best approach is to analyse your last 2–3 mock tests. Which topics cost you marks repeatedly? Is it puzzles, seating arrangement, reasoning, coding-decoding, data interpretation, or reading comprehension? Write them down.
Only by knowing your specific weak areas can you plan effectively. Don’t try to fix everything at once; focus on 2–3 areas that will make the biggest difference to your score.
Key Points:
In the last 10 days, avoid learning new tricks or shortcuts. Focus on revising the fundamentals of your weak topics. Go back to the core concepts, formulas, and methods. For reasoning, revisit the logic behind puzzles and seating arrangements. For quantitative aptitude, refresh basic formulas and practice simple calculations. For English, go over grammar rules and comprehension strategies.
Even spending just 1-2 hours revising the basics can help prevent careless mistakes. Often, candidates fail not because they lack knowledge of the subject, but because their fundamentals are weak. Strong fundamentals make your practice more effective.
Practical Tips:
Trying to do full-length practice tests repeatedly in these last 10 days can be exhausting. Instead, focus on small, manageable question sets for your weak areas. This builds confidence and allows you to track progress easily.
For example, if puzzles or data interpretation are weak, solve 2–3 small sets of 5–10 questions daily. Gradually increase difficulty only if you feel confident. This method ensures focused learning without burning out.
Tips to Follow:
Spending all your time on weak subjects can increase frustration. Balance is key. To build confidence, start your study session with a subject you have a strong grasp of. Then, spend time on a weak subject, and finally, finish with light revision.
Mixing strong and weak subjects keeps you motivated and helps your brain retain more information. Alternating between strong and weak subjects gradually reduces the performance gap.
Suggested Approach:
Weak areas often become more challenging in exams due to time pressure. During these 10 days, practice with a timer. Even 10–15 minutes per small set trains your mind to handle stress while maintaining accuracy.
Timed practice also shows which questions take longer, helping you develop a smart strategy for the actual exam.
Tips for Timed Practice:
Revisiting your past mistakes is one of the most effective ways to strengthen weak areas. Look at the questions you got wrong in previous mock tests and solve them again. Mistakes often repeat in exams, and correcting them now can earn you 5–10 extra marks easily.
Revising errors reinforces concepts and builds confidence. This is smart practice—not just solving more questions, but solving the right ones.
Key Steps:
Sometimes, a weak area is just a mental block. Many aspirants call English or reasoning a weak section, but the real issue is panic. During the exam, don’t freeze when you see a “difficult” topic. Start with easy questions, skip hard ones, and return later.
Mindset is important in these final days. A calm and focused approach can turn a previously weak section into a scoring opportunity. Confidence often matters as much as preparation.
Tips for Exam Day Mindset:
The LIC AAO Prelims consists of three sections, each with its own timing. Here’s a clear breakdown:
| Name of the Test | Number of Questions | Maximum Marks | Minimum Qualifying Marks | Duration |
| Reasoning Ability | 35 | 35 | 16 (SC/ST/PWBD), 18 (Others) | 20 Minutes |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 35 | 35 | 16 (SC/ST/PWBD), 18 (Others) | 20 Minutes |
| English Language (grammar, vocabulary, comprehension) | 30 | Qualifying only | 9 (SC/ST/PWBD), 10 (Others) | 20 Minutes |
| Total | 100 | 70 | – | 1 Hour |
Note: English is qualifying only, and marks are not counted for ranking. Sectional cut-offs are set separately, so you must score above the minimum in each section to remain eligible.
Understanding this structure helps in allocating time smartly. For example, Reasoning and Quant have equal weight, but English is only qualifying. This means you can prioritize scoring in Reasoning and Quant while still ensuring you safely clear English.
Before attempting the paper, take a moment to plan your approach. The LIC AAO Prelims is not just about knowledge; it’s about how efficiently you use the 60 minutes. Every candidate has different strengths, so your strategy should highlight your strong areas first.
Look at the sections and decide which part you want to tackle first. If Reasoning puzzles are your strength, start with those. If Quant arithmetic or simplification is your comfort zone, begin there. The goal is to secure maximum marks quickly in areas where you are confident, rather than wasting time on unfamiliar or difficult questions at the beginning.
Always begin with questions you can solve quickly. For Reasoning, these are usually coding-decoding, inequalities, and syllogisms. In Quant, simplification, number series, and basic arithmetic are good starting points.
Do not waste time on tough puzzles or lengthy DI sets at the beginning. Follow the “2–3 minute rule”: if a question takes longer than this, skip it and return later. With no negative marking, there’s no risk in attempting all questions eventually.
Once you have solved the questions you are confident about, move to the moderate ones. Remember, since there is no negative marking, you can attempt the remaining questions even if you are unsure. Use logical guessing to improve your chances. For instance, if in a puzzle set you are confident that option A is correct in one question, you can apply a pattern or logic to select option A for the remaining related questions. Statistically, this approach can help you get at least 4–5 questions correct out of 10 uncertain ones.
The key is to maximise your score by leveraging your strengths first and then applying smart logic to the remaining questions, rather than randomly attempting questions and losing precious time.
After completing easy questions, move to moderate-level problems. For Reasoning, this includes seating arrangements or complex puzzles. In Quant, attempt DI sets, caselets, or quadratic equations efficiently.
Even if you are unsure, attempt questions because no negative marking, which allows you to make educated guesses. Spend 3-4 minutes on DI sets or puzzles and mark any remaining tough questions to return if time permits.
English is qualifying, so aim to clear it without wasting too much time:
Aiming for 15–18 correct attempts ensures you safely clear qualifying marks
Practice is the key to mastering time management. Take timed mock tests to simulate the real exam scenario. After each test:
When it comes to LIC AAO Prelims 2025, relying only on a few scoring topics can be a risky strategy. Many aspirants feel comfortable focusing only on Puzzles in Reasoning and Data Interpretation (DI) in Quant, since these areas carry the highest weightage. While it is true that these topics can fetch a large chunk of marks, the exam pattern over the past few years has clearly shown that examiners do not stick to the same type of questions every year.
If you look at the trend in other competitive exams like SBI Clerk, IBPS Clerk, and even NIACL AO, you will notice that the Prelims exam pattern has undergone unexpected changes:
This means that even though 70–80% of the paper remains predictable, the remaining 20–30% often comes with twists. These small changes are enough to unsettle candidates who rely only on their strong areas while neglecting other topics.
For LIC AAO 2025 Prelims, there is at least a 90% chance that some new variations will appear — it could be a new format of puzzle, a Caselet DI, or even coded syllogism/inequality. The examiner’s intention is simple: they want to test whether you are preparing in a balanced way or just selectively focusing on high-weightage areas.
In the exam, the first few minutes should be used to quickly score easy marks. These are short and straightforward questions that don’t require much calculation or deep thinking. Practicing them daily will help you quickly identify them in the paper and boost your confidence.
After achieving easy marks, you should move on to medium-level questions. These take more time than easy questions, but they also carry more weight because they usually come in sets. With the right strategy, these questions can score 4-5 marks together.
Difficult questions are designed to test patience and deep understanding. However, they also take a lot of time, which can harm your overall performance if you’re not careful. The key is to practice them, but avoid spending too much time on them in the actual exam.
In your final few days of practice, it’s essential to strike a balance between easy, medium, and difficult questions. The 40-40-20 rule helps you dedicate time to all types of questions without neglecting any. This balance will prepare you for all difficulty levels in the exam.
Each subject in LIC AAO Prelims has its own mix of easy, moderate, and tough questions. Practicing them separately with this matrix approach ensures you don’t miss marks in any section.
Mock tests are the best way to implement a practice matrix under exam pressure. By dividing your time between easy, medium, and difficult questions, you learn how to avoid wasting time and maximise your effort.
In the last few days, don’t try to learn new topics. Instead, focus on revising basic formulas, grammar rules, and reasoning shortcuts. This will help you solve easy and moderate questions faster, leaving more time for other sets.
Mocks are the foundation of your final training before the exam. But solving mocks alone isn’t enough—you need to analyze your mistakes and refine your strategy every day. This will help you improve your accuracy and time management before October 3rd.
In simple way– don’t try to solve everything. Your target should be to solve the right set of questions with accuracy. The Practice Matrix will help you identify which questions to attempt first, which to handle with patience, and which to skip. If you stay calm and follow this structured approach, you will walk into the exam hall with confidence and walk out with a strong attempt.
Join our exclusive Telegram group where our experts are ready to answer all your queries, guide you in banking exam preparation, and give personalised tips to boost your success. Get access to real-time solutions, expert advice, and valuable resources to improve your study journey.
Preparing for the SSC MTS 2026 exam? Read our simple section-wise preparation tips for Maths,…
Preparing for SSC and Railway exams? Read our simple guide on the latest Government Schemes…
RBI’s 1-hour UPI buffer rule is a major banking update for 2026 exams. Understand friction-by-design,…
Practical exam‑smart strategy for SBI Clerk English 2026. Section‑wise tips, time management, and a 30‑day…
Struggling with Banking Awareness? Follow this proven 8-step strategy to score 30+ marks in IBPS/SBI…
RBI’s corporate sector study highlights services growth, debt moderation & rising capital formation—critical for RBI…