The notification is out. The dates are set. And right now, somewhere across India, thousands of candidates are staring at the same question — “How much do I actually need to score to make it?”
That feeling is real. The uncertainty of not knowing what the cut-off will be can be genuinely stressful — especially when every mark counts and every section matters. So let’s talk about it honestly, clearly, and in a way that actually helps.
Here’s the truth upfront: LIC HFL has not released any official cut-off marks for this exam — and the official notification clearly states that the company reserves the right to decide the minimum cut-off commensurate with the number of vacancies. So anyone giving exact numbers is guessing. What this article will do instead is help candidates understand how cut-offs work for this specific exam, what factors will drive them up or down, and what a genuinely safe score target looks like — so they can prepare with a clear goal in mind.
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What the Official Notification Actually Says About Cut-Offs
Before anything else, it is important to understand the cut-off framework directly from the official LIC HFL notification. This is what the notification confirms:
| Cut-Off Detail | What the Official Notification Says |
|---|---|
| Cut-off stages | Two stages — (i) on individual section scores (if applicable) and (ii) on total score |
| Who decides the cut-off? | LIC HFL — “Commensurate to the number of vacancies, LIC HFL reserves the right to fix the minimum cut-off marks, section-wise as well as on total” |
| Is cut-off pre-announced? | No. Cut-offs are determined after the exam based on vacancies and candidate performance |
| Is the company’s decision final? | Yes — “Decision of the Company in this regard shall be final and binding on the candidates” |
| Score equating | If held in multiple sessions, scores are equated across sessions to account for difficulty differences |
| Score reporting | Test-wise scores and total score reported up to two decimal places |
This means cut-offs are dynamic — they shift based on how many people appeared, how the paper was, and most importantly, how many seats are available in each city. Which brings us to the most important factor of all.
The Single Biggest Cut-Off Driver: Vacancies Per State
This is something most candidates overlook — and it matters enormously. The LIC HFL 2026 recruitment has 180 vacancies total, spread across 20 states and cities. But the distribution is highly unequal. Look at this:
| State | Total Vacancies | Competition Level (Indicative) |
|---|---|---|
| Karnataka | 29 | More seats → relatively lower cut-off pressure |
| Maharashtra | 25 | More seats → relatively lower cut-off pressure |
| Telangana | 24 | More seats → relatively lower cut-off pressure |
| Tamil Nadu | 21 | Moderate |
| Madhya Pradesh | 18 | Moderate |
| Uttar Pradesh | 13 | Moderate to High |
| West Bengal | 9 | High — fewer seats, more competition |
| Bihar | 7 | High — fewer seats, more competition |
| Delhi | 3 | Very High — 3 seats only, massive applicant pool |
| Gujarat | 2 | Very High — only 2 seats |
| Punjab, Rajasthan, Sikkim, J&K, Uttarakhand | 1 each | Extremely competitive — 1 seat only |
The message here is simple — the fewer the seats in a state, the harder candidates need to push their scores. Someone applying for Delhi (3 seats) or Gujarat (2 seats) is in a very different competition than someone applying for Karnataka (29 seats). This is the most honest, data-backed way to think about cut-off expectations for this exam.
What Factors Will Influence the Cut-Off?
Since no official cut-off figure exists yet, here is an honest breakdown of every factor that will shape where the cut-off lands after the exam:
| Factor | How It Affects the Cut-Off |
|---|---|
| Number of vacancies per city | Fewer seats = higher cut-off. More seats = relatively lower cut-off. This is the biggest driver. |
| Total applicants | LIC HFL is a highly reputed brand. A large number of applications means a more competitive cut-off overall. |
| Exam difficulty level | If the paper is tough, scores are lower across the board — and cut-offs come down. If the paper is easy, more candidates score high — cut-offs go up. |
| Section-wise performance | Cut-offs can be applied at the section level too — not just on the total. A candidate who aces 4 sections but bombs one may still not clear. |
| Score equating (if multi-session) | If the exam is held in more than one session, scores are equated. A slightly harder paper in one session won’t disadvantage those candidates. |
| Interview shortlisting ratio | Only candidates ranking “sufficiently high” in merit after the online exam are called for interview. The shortlisting ratio impacts how high one needs to be on the merit list. |
So What Should the Target Score Be?
Here’s what a well-wisher would say — not a number pulled from thin air, but a framework for setting a personal target:
The exam has 200 questions for 200 marks across 5 sections of 40 marks each. With negative marking of 0.25 per wrong answer, accuracy matters just as much as speed.
For a candidate aiming to be in a comfortable position — not just scraping through, but confidently through — here is a realistic section-wise target to aim for during preparation:
| Section | Max Marks | Comfortable Target Score | Why This Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| English Language | 40 | 28–32 | Scoring well here boosts overall confidence and total |
| Logical Reasoning | 40 | 28–33 | Practice-dependent — high scorers separate here |
| General Awareness | 40 | 25–30 | Focus on Housing Finance content — this is unique to LIC HFL |
| Numerical Ability | 40 | 27–32 | Accuracy over speed — don’t gamble on uncertain answers |
| Computer Skill | 40 | 30–35 | Most manageable section — don’t leave marks on the table here |
| Total | 200 | 138–162 | A score in this range puts a candidate in a strong position |
⚠️ Important disclaimer: These are indicative preparation targets — not official cut-off figures. The actual cut-off will be determined by LIC HFL after the exam and will vary by city/vacancy. These targets are meant to help candidates set a meaningful goal during preparation, not to predict exact qualifying marks.
💡 Here’s the real insight: The candidates who clear this exam won’t be those who knew the cut-off in advance. They’ll be the ones who practised consistently, built accuracy, and didn’t leave manageable sections like Computer Skill underscored. Start there.
The One Thing That Changes Everything: Negative Marking
This deserves its own section because it is genuinely misunderstood by many candidates. The official notification confirms a penalty of 0.25 marks for every wrong answer. Unattempted questions carry no penalty.
What this means in practice:
- Attempting 160 questions and getting 140 right is far better than attempting all 200 and getting 150 right but 50 wrong
- A wrong answer doesn’t just cost a mark — it costs 1.25 marks in effective terms (1 mark lost + 0.25 penalty)
- In a tight cut-off race, 5–6 unnecessary wrong answers can be the difference between making the merit list and missing it
The strategy is simple: attempt confidently, skip when genuinely unsure, never guess randomly. This is exactly the kind of discipline that mock tests help build — and why taking timed full-length tests before the exam is not optional, it is essential.
A Note for Candidates in Low-Vacancy States
If someone is applying for a city with just 1, 2, or 3 vacancies — like Delhi (3), Gujarat (2), Punjab (1), Rajasthan (1), Sikkim (1), J&K (1), or Uttarakhand (1) — this message is especially for them.
The competition for those seats will be intense. In these states, there’s simply no room for a section that goes badly or a few careless wrong answers. The candidates who make it to the interview in low-vacancy states will be those who treated every section equally, managed their time in the exam brilliantly, and prepared for at least 5–6 weeks with the same seriousness they’d bring to any major banking exam.
The good news? The exam is the same for everyone. A 200-mark test. 120 minutes. Five sections. The playing field is level — what isn’t level is preparation. That’s the one thing that’s still in a candidate’s hands right now.
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Key Takeaways
- LIC HFL has not released official cut-offs — anyone quoting exact figures is speculating
- Cut-offs will be applied at two levels — section-wise (if applicable) and on total score
- The biggest cut-off driver is number of vacancies per city — fewer seats means higher competition
- States like Karnataka (29 seats), Maharashtra (25), Telangana (24) will likely see moderate competition; Delhi (3), Gujarat (2), Punjab (1) will be highly competitive
- A well-rounded score of 138–162 out of 200 is a strong preparation target — but the actual qualifying mark will depend on post-exam factors
- Negative marking is real — accuracy and smart attempt strategy matter more than attempting every question
- The best preparation tool right now? A timed full-length mock test — today, not tomorrow
Disclaimer: This article is based on the official LIC Housing Finance Limited Junior Assistant Recruitment Advertisement dated April 16, 2026. No official cut-off marks have been published by LIC HFL. The target score ranges mentioned in this article are indicative preparation benchmarks only and do not represent official or predicted cut-off marks. Candidates are advised to visit www.lichousing.com for all official updates.
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