RBI Grade B 2026 Phase 1: 45‑Day General Awareness Preparation Strategy
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The RBI Grade B Notification 2026 is expected on April 28th, 2026, and once it’s out, the competitive race will begin. GA Preparation time will shrink drastically, leaving no room for delay. The General Awareness (GA) section alone carries 80 marks. It possesses the highest weightage in Phase 1 Exam, and so, it is the single most decisive factor in clearing the cut‑off. Your success depends on how well you maximize GA starting today. The clock is ticking, so read on to discover the most effective 45‑day GA plan that can help you master Phase 1.

What the GA Section Actually Tests

Before diving into the strategy, it’s important to understand why GA dominates Phase 1. With 80 marks at stake, GA alone can decide whether you clear the cut‑off. Unlike Quant or Reasoning, GA rewards consistent revision and recall.

To prepare effectively, you must know the distribution of GA questions. The exam consistently tests factual GA, static GK, schemes, reports, and RBI updates. Understanding this breakdown helps you prioritize topics and avoid wasting time on low‑yield areas.

GA PillarApprox. QuestionsPriority
Factual GA (Banking, Economy, Summits, Sports, Awards)~48Must‑Do
Static GK (Core static facts)~14Must‑Do
Govt. Schemes (Last 5 months, Budget schemes)~6High
Reports (World Bank, IMF, NITI Aayog)~5High
Budget & Economic Survey~4High
RBI Circulars & Reports~3High

The 45‑Day GA Strategy

This section breaks down your day‑by‑day plan into three phases. Each phase builds on the previous one, ensuring you move from foundation to application to final sprint. Stick to this timeline to maximize recall and exam readiness.

Phase 1: Days 1–15 (Foundation Building)

The first 15 days are about building a strong base. Focus on daily current affairs, static GK, and budget highlights. This phase ensures you cover the bulk of factual GA and static topics that form the backbone of the paper.

  • Daily Current Affairs (Last 5 months): Cover PIB, RBI circulars, government schemes, and international summits.
  • Static GK Revision: Capitals, currencies, national parks, important days, and banking terms.
  • Budget & Economic Survey: Focus on key numbers, fiscal deficit, GDP growth, and flagship schemes.
  • Mock Test Integration: Attempt 2 GA‑focused mocks per week to test recall speed.

Phase 2: Days 16–30 (Application & Practice)

Once the foundation is set, the next 15 days are about applying knowledge under exam conditions. This phase emphasizes schemes, reports, and RBI circulars, while increasing the frequency of quizzes and mocks to sharpen speed and accuracy.

  • Govt. Schemes: Revise last 5 months thoroughly. Pay special attention to Budget 2026 schemes.
  • Reports & Indices: Cover rankings from IMF, World Bank, NITI Aayog, UNDP.
  • RBI Circulars: Read last 6 months’ directions on banking, NBFCs, and monetary policy.
  • Daily GA Quizzes: Attempt 25–30 questions daily to simulate exam conditions.
  • Weekly Mock Tests: 3 mocks per week, focusing on GA + one other section.

Phase 3: Days 31–45 (Final Sprint)

The last 15 days are about revision and exam‑like practice. This is the most crucial phase, where you consolidate everything learned, focus on high‑yield topics, and attempt full‑length mocks to simulate the actual exam environment.

  • Revision Cycles: Revise GA notes thrice in this period.
  • High‑Yield Topics: Budget highlights, RBI monetary policy, flagship schemes, international summits.
  • Descriptive GA Prep: Practice writing short notes on schemes and reports — this helps Phase 2 too.
  • Full‑Length Mocks: Attempt 5 complete mocks in the last 15 days.
  • Error Log Review: Track mistakes from quizzes and mocks, revise weak areas.

Daily Routine Blueprint

A structured daily routine ensures consistency. Even 2–3 hours daily, if focused, is enough to master GA. This routine balances reading, revision, and practice, making sure you retain information and improve recall speed.

  • Morning (1 hour): Read daily current affairs (PIB, newspapers, PracticeMock GA capsules).
  • Afternoon (1 hour): Revise static GK + schemes.
  • Evening (1 hour): Attempt GA quizzes/mock tests.
  • Night (30 min): Quick revision of notes made during the day.

Smart Resources for GA Prep

Resources are the backbone of preparation. Choosing the right ones saves time and ensures accuracy. Focus on concise, exam‑oriented sources like GA capsules, PIB, RBI circulars, and budget highlights instead of scattered material.

  • GA Capsules: Concise, exam‑oriented monthly PDFs.
  • PIB & RBI Circulars: Direct source for schemes and policy updates.
  • Economic Survey & Budget Highlights: Focus on numbers and schemes.
  • Mock Tests: Simulate exam pressure and improve recall speed.

Mistakes to Avoid

Many aspirants fail not because they lack knowledge, but because they prepare inefficiently. Avoid these common mistakes to stay ahead: ignoring GA until notification, skipping revision, or neglecting RBI circulars.

  1. Ignoring GA until notification — you’ll run out of time.
  2. Over‑reading newspapers — focus only on exam‑relevant facts.
  3. Skipping revision — GA is memory‑based; without revision, recall drops.
  4. Neglecting RBI circulars — these are directly tested.
  5. Not practicing mocks — speed matters as much as knowledge.

Action Time

Preparation is not just about knowledge; it’s about mindset. GA may look vast, but with discipline, it becomes manageable. Think of GA as your safety net — once secured, you can focus calmly on other sections.

Complete Learning Plans for RBI Grade B 2026

In the next 45 days, your GA prep must be structured, resource‑driven, and mock‑tested. That’s exactly what PracticeMock’s PM Regulatory Prime offers — complete notes, current affairs, Phase 1 & 2 mocks, and descriptive tests.

Choose the plan that best suits your preparation journey and give yourself the edge every serious aspirant needs:

RBI Grade B 2026 Phase 1: 45‑Day General Awareness Preparation Strategy

Explore PM Regulatory Prime Plans Here

Conclusion

The RBI Grade B 2026 Phase 1 GA section is the deciding factor. With 80 marks at stake, a disciplined 45‑day strategy can transform your chances. Start today, follow the plan, revise consistently, and practice mocks. By the time the notification drops, you’ll already be ahead of the crowd.

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By Asad Yar Khan

Asad specializes in penning and overseeing blogs on study strategies, exam techniques, and key strategies for SSC, banking, regulatory body, engineering, and other competitive exams. During his 3+ years' stint at PracticeMock, he has helped thousands of aspirants gain the confidence to achieve top results. In his free time, he either transforms into a sleep lover, devours books, or becomes an outdoor enthusiast.

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