Boost your preparation by learning puzzle types explained with example for LIC AAO
When preparing for the LIC AAO exam, the Reasoning Ability section is one of the most crucial areas to focus on. Among all reasoning topics, puzzles hold a significant weightage and can make or break your performance. Candidates who are comfortable with puzzles often find it easier to score high in the reasoning section. However, without proper practice and understanding of puzzle types, it can also become time-consuming. This blog will guide you through the major puzzle types asked in LIC AAO, explain how to approach them, and provide a solved example for better clarity.
In the LIC AAO Prelims Reasoning Section, puzzles carry a weight of around 10 to 15 marks. Since prelims have only 35 questions in reasoning, these marks can be a score booster. In the Mains exam Reasoning section, puzzles and seating arrangements together form the backbone of the paper. The examiner checks your ability to think logically, maintain accuracy, and manage time through puzzle-based questions. Thus, mastering this topic is not optional but mandatory for every aspirant.
Based on the Previous Year’s Exam questions, puzzles in the LIC AAO exam come in various forms, each testing a different logical skill. The most frequently asked types include arrangement puzzles, where candidates arrange people or objects in a row or in a circle. Other common types are floor-based puzzles, where residents live on different floors, and scheduling puzzles, where events or people are arranged across days, weeks, or months. Additionally, order and ranking-based puzzles test relative relationships like age, height, or marks. Along with these, grid matrix-based puzzles and shelf-based puzzles are asked in exams. Practicing all these variations of puzzles is essential to scoring well in the exam. Let’s discuss the major types of puzzles below.
A box-based puzzle is a logic puzzle where several boxes (or positions) each hide a unique item (or have unique attributes). You’re given a set of clues about which box contains which item (or weight, color, label, etc.). Using elimination, deduction, and chaining of clues you fill a grid (or table) to find the unique placement for every box.
Typical solving techniques: make a table (boxes vs. attributes), mark possibilities and impossibilities, use direct clues first, then use relative/conditional clues (A is before/after B, heavier/lighter than, not/only, either/or), and chain deductions until each slot is fixed.
Solved example (step-by-step)
There are four boxes labelled A, B, C and D. Each contains exactly one coin: a Penny, a Nickel, a Dime or a Quarter. From the clues below, find which coin is in each box.
Clues:
Step-by-step approach
Final Solution
| Box | Coin |
| A | Penny |
| B | Nickel |
| C | Quarter |
| D | Dime |
Floor-based puzzles are very common in LIC AAO. Candidates are given information about people living on different floors of a building, often along with other variables like professions or hobbies.
Example Question:
A building has five floors numbered 1 to 5 (ground floor is 1). Five people A, B, C, D, and E live on different floors. D lives on the top floor. B lives immediately below C. A does not live on the first floor. E lives two floors above A.
Solution Approach:
Floor puzzles require careful step-by-step elimination. In the exam, always make tables to keep track of information.
Scheduling puzzles involve people assigned to different days, months, or time slots. These questions are usually asked in the LIC AAO mains exam.
Example Question:
Seven employees attend training sessions on different days of the week starting from Monday to Sunday. R attends on Wednesday. T attends the day before R. Q attends the last day. S attends immediately after R. P attends before T but not on Monday.
Solution Approach:
Scheduling puzzles test your sequential reasoning and ability to track multiple constraints.
A grid (matrix) puzzle gives you several items that must be matched across two or more categories (for example: Person ↔ Pet ↔ City). You solve it by drawing a matrix (grid) for each pair of categories, marking possibilities and impossibilities, and using the clues to eliminate options until every item has a unique match in each category.
Quick solving techniques: set up cross-check grids, mark ✔ for confirmed pairs and X for impossible pairs, use direct clues first, then indirect/relative clues, and frequently cross-reference grids to propagate eliminations.
Solved example (step-by-step)
Four friends — Amit, Binita, Charu, and Deepak — each bought a different fruit (Apple, Banana, Cherry, Date) and live in four different cities (Agra, Bhopal, Chennai, Delhi). Use the clues to find which person bought which fruit and lives in which city.
Clues:
Step 1 — make grids
We need two 4×4 grids:
Rows/columns: Amit, Binita, Charu, Deepak | Apple, Banana, Cherry, Date | Agra, Bhopal, Chennai, Delhi.
Step 2 — apply direct clues
Step 3 — combine clues and eliminate
We know fruits are unique and cities are unique.
Since Binita bought Date, Date is taken.
Agra’s fruit is Cherry. So the person who has Cherry lives in Agra. Deepak did not buy Cherry, so Cherry belongs to one of Amit, Binita, Charu — but Binita has Date, Charu is in Bhopal, so check possibilities:
So far: Amit — Cherry — Agra; Binita — Date — (city unknown); Charu — (fruit unknown) — Bhopal; Deepak — (fruit unknown) — (city unknown).
From clue 4: Delhi → Apple. Remaining fruits are Apple and Banana for Charu and Deepak (since Amit=Cherry, Binita=Date). But Amit is Agra, Charu is Bhopal, so Delhi and Chennai remain for Binita and Deepak (cities remaining: Chennai, Delhi). Amit is not Chennai (already Agra), clue 2 also said Amit ≠ Banana (we used Cherry), so OK.
Consider Deepak: Deepak ≠ Cherry (clue 6) — already handled. Could Deepak be Apple? If Deepak bought Apple, he’d live in Delhi (clue 4). Then binita would have Chennai (only city left). Is that consistent with Amit’s constraints? Yes (Amit is Agra, not Chennai). Any contradictions? Check Amit: clue 2 says Amit does not live in Chennai (good). So two possible assignments appear: Deepak → Apple/Delhi and Binita → Date/Chennai OR Deepak → Banana/Delhi and Binita → Date/Chennai? Wait fruit-city links must match.
Let’s deduce carefully: Remaining fruits: Apple, Banana. Remaining cities: Chennai, Delhi — for Binita and Deepak.
Clue 2: Amit did not buy Banana, we already gave Amit Cherry. No more restriction.
But clue 4 forces whoever is in Delhi to have Apple. So if Deepak were in Delhi he must have Apple. Alternatively, if Binita were in Delhi she must have Apple — but Binita’s fruit is Date, so Binita cannot be in Delhi. Therefore Binita ≠ Delhi. So Binita must be in Chennai.
So remaining city Delhi must be Deepak’s city. From clue 4, Delhi → Apple, so Deepak → Apple.
Then remaining fruit for Charu is Banana (only fruit left), and remaining city for Binita we set Chennai already. Check Amit: Amit we set Agra and Cherry earlier.
Let’s list final matches:
Check all clues:
Final grid
| Person | Fruit | City |
| Amit | Cherry | Agra |
| Binita | Date | Chennai |
| Charu | Banana | Bhopal |
| Deepak | Apple | Delhi |
A shelves puzzle is a type of logical reasoning problem (commonly asked in LIC AAO and other bank/insurance exams) where a certain number of books or objects are arranged on different shelves, usually one above another. The challenge is to determine the exact order of placement using given clues.
Clues are generally based on positions like above, below, immediately above, exactly between, not on the top/bottom shelf, etc.
Solved Example
There are 5 shelves in a rack (numbered 1 to 5 from bottom to top). Five different books – English, Maths, Science, History, and Geography – are placed one on each shelf. Use the clues below to find out which book is on which shelf.
Clues:
Step 1 – Apply direct clues
Step 2 – Test placements for Science & English
Possible Science-English pairs:
Step 3 – Use other conditions
Step 4 – Elimination
Case 1: Science 2 → English 3
Case 2: Science 3 → English 4
Case 3: Science 4 → English 5
But check clue 4: “Geography not on top shelf” – satisfied in both.
Step 5 – Which case is correct?
We must pick the arrangement that doesn’t violate any clue. Both case 2 and case 3 look valid, but let’s recheck:
Thus only Case 3 is correct.
Final Arrangement (Bottom → Top)
| Shelf No. | Book |
| 5 (Top) | English |
| 4 | Science |
| 3 | Geography |
| 2 | Maths |
| 1 (Bottom) | History |
Disclaimer: The puzzle question types and examples are provided exclusively for educational and exam preparation purposes to assist candidates preparing for the LIC AAO examination. These materials are illustrative in nature and do not represent the official question papers of the Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC). While care has been taken to ensure accuracy, the content may not fully align with the actual examination pattern or difficulty level. Candidates are strongly advised to consult official LIC notifications, guidelines, and authentic study resources for comprehensive preparation. Neither the publisher nor contributors shall be held responsible for any discrepancies, errors, or outcomes arising from reliance on this material.
Start with direct clues and use them as anchors. Draw diagrams or tables instead of solving mentally. Avoid guesswork, as puzzles have only one correct solution. Practice variations with two variables (like circular + profession). Focus on accuracy first in practice sessions, then increase speed. Take topic-wise tests regularly. Make a habit of reviewing your notes on a regular basis. Attempt PracticeMock’s Live Mock Tests for speed practice. By following these tips, you can learn to solve reasoning puzzles with speed and accuracy in LIC AAO exam.
Puzzles in LIC AAO are not just about reasoning but also about smart time management. Candidates should aim to practice all types of puzzles like seating arrangement, box, floor, scheduling, grid matrix and shelves puzzle to build confidence. In prelims, focus on solving the easier puzzles first, while in mains, expect layered puzzles with multiple variables in the exam. Regular practice with mocks, rank boosters, and previous year paper tests will give you an edge over others. With accuracy and patience, puzzles can become your scoring area in LIC AAO 2025.
Also read other related blogs:
| LIC AAO Syllabus and Exam Pattern | LIC AAO Previous Year Cut-offs |
| LIC AAO Eligibility Criteria | LIC AAO Salary |
| LIC AAO Study Plan | LIC AAO Previous Year Papers |
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In prelims, you will mostly find Seating Arrangements and Floor-Based Puzzles, sometimes mixed with extra parameters. These are time-consuming but highly rewarding if practiced.
Yes, Box-Based Puzzles are quite common, especially in Mains. They test your ability to arrange objects with multiple conditions, often involving colour, number, or item attributes.
Ideally, not more than 15 minutes. Pick 2 puzzles you find easy (usually seating or simple floor-based). If stuck, skip and attempt other reasoning questions like syllogism, inequalities, or coding.
To prepare puzzles for LIC AAO, start with a single variable puzzle, practice daily, and revise common patterns through mock tests.
Most asked puzzle types in LIC AAO include box-based and floor-based puzzle, scheduling puzzle, blood relation-based puzzle, and multiple variable puzzles.
LIC AAO is a very competitive and challenging exam, but with regular preparation with mock tests, you can crack this exam with a good score.
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