The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) has released its Grade A (Assistant Manager) recruitment notification for 2025. Candidates now have exactly two months to prepare strategically as PFRDA Grade A Phase I scheduled on 6 September and Phase II on 6 October. Whether you’re from the General, IT, Legal, Finance, or Research stream, this blog will guide you through an easy and smart 2-month plan tailored for both phases of the exam. Let’s break it down step-by-step.
Phase 1 is your first challenge. It consists of two papers—one tests your general aptitude, and the other tests your professional knowledge. Since both papers are equally important (combined 200 marks), you need to maintain a balance between general subjects and your stream-specific preparation. The goal in these two months should be to gain conceptual clarity and build speed with accuracy.
You don’t need to study 10 hours a day. What matters is daily consistency and proper time allocation to each section. With focused study, mock tests, and topic-wise planning, you can easily cover the entire syllabus and still have time for revision.
Your first month should focus on building a strong foundation. You should aim to cover each topic at least once and solve practice questions regularly. Understanding concepts now will help you save time during revisions later.
These two weeks should be spent brushing up on grammar, comprehension, and vocabulary in English. In Quant, prioritize topics like simplification, percentages, and arithmetic.
Practice 1 RC and 5 grammar questions daily. In Quant, solve 10 questions from one topic per day. Track your accuracy and time.
Reasoning demands logic and quick thinking. Meanwhile, General Awareness is a scoring section if prepared well. Focus on puzzles, seating, coding-decoding in reasoning. For GA, cover static + current affairs.
Use short notes for GA revision. Subscribe to a monthly current affairs PDF or app. Don’t skip pension-related schemes—they’re often asked in PFRDA exams.
Now is the time to gradually introduce your stream subject. Read basic theory and make short notes for revision. Focus more on understanding than memorizing.
Use authentic sources like NCERTs, RBI reports, or NISM materials depending on your stream. A slow start now will make Phase 2 easier later.
With basics covered, now shift to mock tests, revision, and time-bound practice. Mocks help simulate real-exam pressure and uncover weak areas.
Take 3 full-length tests per week. Start with sectional mocks, then move to complete tests. Analyze mistakes carefully.
Don’t ignore stream knowledge in Paper 2. Revise stream subjects twice during these 2 weeks. Use your short notes for quick review.
Avoid new topics now. Focus only on revision and relaxation. Stick to 2–3 mocks max in this final week.
Get enough sleep and avoid burnout. Use the last 3 days to refresh your strongest topics and boost confidence.
ALSO READ: PFRDA Grade A Syllabus 2025, Phase 1 & 2 Exam Pattern
If you clear Phase 1, congratulations! Phase 2 is your golden opportunity to shine. It focuses on descriptive English and advanced knowledge of your selected stream. These 30 days are critical—your performance here heavily impacts final selection.
Time management becomes even more important during Phase 2. You need to balance writing practice, mock MCQs, and subject revision—all within 4 weeks. Let’s plan it wisely to maximize results without stress.
Start with your stream’s core syllabus. Refer to the topics listed in the official notification and follow standard sources. For English, begin light writing practice.
This period sets the foundation for scoring high in Paper 2. Cover topics thoroughly now so you can revise quickly later.
Focus on accounting standards, company acts, costing, economics, and pension sector. Make short notes on formulas, acts, and definitions.
Read NPS-related material from the PFRDA website. Understand pension models and economic theories instead of memorizing them.
Prioritize SQL, databases, networking, cybersecurity, and Python/R basics. Solve coding snippets and write small scripts.
Watch short videos or tutorials for complex topics. Practice hands-on using online compilers and mock coding platforms.
Understand concepts like IS-LM, inflation, fiscal policy, and trade. Master statistical tools like regression, correlation, and sampling.
Refer to RBI bulletins, economic surveys, and authentic sources for updated stats and graphs.
Study important acts like PFRDA Act, SEBI, IRDAI, Companies Act, IBC, CrPC, CPC, Indian Penal Code. Make charts for sections and case laws.
Revise legal maxims and definitions. Practice writing short case analyses or legal opinions.
Go deep into financial statements, ratio analysis, cost accounting, taxation, and financial markets.
Use ICAI or commerce textbooks. Solve numerical problems and revise charts, graphs, and recent tax amendments.
Translate 5–6 terms and 1 passage daily. Learn domain-specific vocab (banking, pension, finance).
Regular translation boosts writing speed and accuracy. Read Hindi editorials to improve sentence structure.
Now mix revision with application. Practice English essays and letters every alternate day. Also, solve one mock for Paper 2 twice a week.
Review essays using checklists: structure, grammar, clarity. For MCQs, time your tests and improve speed.
Limit yourself to light practice and revision now. Re-read notes, attempt 1 full mock every 3 days.
Practice 2 essays and 2 letters this week. Keep answers concise and clear—quality over quantity.
Cracking the PFRDA Grade A exam in 2 months is possible with the right strategy, time discipline, and a calm mind. Phase 1 is about balance; Phase 2 is about depth and clarity. Don’t just read—practice. Don’t just revise—analyze. Consistency beats cramming. Stay motivated and trust the process.
Two months is not too short if you stay focused, avoid distractions, and follow this plan. Remember, this is not just an exam—it’s a career opportunity that can change your life.
A: Yes, with a proper plan and daily discipline, you can clear both phases confidently.
A: Aim for at least 8–10 full mocks, plus sectional tests for weak areas.
A: Write essays/letters regularly. Focus on clarity, grammar, and logical flow.
A: Depends on stream—e.g., pension sector for General, SQL for IT, and Acts for Law.
A: Dedicate 30 minutes daily to GA and 1–2 hours to stream-specific subjects.
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