RBI Grade B Revision Plan for 20 Days, Check Phase 2 Schedule for Success
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You have only 30 days to revise all that you have prepared for the RBI Grade B Phase 2 exam, scheduled for 6th December 2025. Your preparation is now in a critical stage. If you’ve covered the Phase 2 syllabus, now is the time to push yourself to revise fast and smartly. This is not the time to run after new topics. It’s the time to consolidate, rehearse, and improve. And that’s why this blog is crafted. This 20-day revision plan will help you revisit ESI, FM, Management, and English Descriptive with precision. It will surely activate your memory, help you correct your mistakes, and provide you with tests that will train your brain to feel confident and relaxed in real exam conditions, and give you your best performance. Start following it to achieve your goals!

RBI Grade B Phase 2 Revision Schedule for 20 Days

A good preparation strategy, packed with an effective revision schedule, can do wonders in the upcoming Phase 2 exam. All the top learning techniques and methods are wasted if you don’t have a targeted plan or schedule. Below is a schedule that tells you what to study every day, and how to practice via the best tests, and that too in a systematic way.

We have crafted this 20-day schedule focusing on the most important topics. And the rest of the time, the 10 days that you will get before 6th December, you can invest that time into polishing your exam strategy and improving upon your weaknesses.

DayFocus AreaTopics RevisedTest
6 NovESIGrowth, Development, National IncomeESI Test 1
7 NovFMRBI Functions, Financial InstitutionsF&M Test 1
8 NovManagementOB Basics, Management Fundamentals
9 NovESIPoverty, Employment, Sustainable Dev.ESI Test 2
10 NovFMBanking System, SIDBI, NABARDF&M Test 2
11 NovManagementMotivation, Personality, Perception
12 NovESISocial Schemes, Environmental IssuesESI Test 3
13 NovFMGlobal Finance, IT in BankingF&M Test 3
14 NovManagementLeadership, Emotional Intelligence
15 NovESIEconomic History, Industrial PolicyESI Test 4
16 NovFMNBFCs, Digital PaymentsF&M Test 4
17 NovManagementConflict Mgmt, Interpersonal Skills
18 NovESIMonetary & Fiscal PolicyESI Test 5
19 NovFMCapital Markets, DerivativesF&M Test 5
20 NovManagementOrg Change, OD Models
21 NovESIEconomic Survey, Union BudgetESI Test 6
22 NovFMRisk Mgmt, Financial InclusionF&M Test 6
23 NovManagementEthics, Governance
24 NovEnglishEssay, Precis, RC Practice
25 NovFull-LengthESI + FM Combined Mock

Last 10-Day Strategy

From 26th Nov to 5th Dec, you should shift your focus and avoid going for new topics. You should just evise.

And here’s how you should go about:

  • 26 to 27 Nov: Recap ESI, FM, and Management, and use your mock test mistakes as a guide.
  • 28 to 29 Nov: Polish English Descriptive. Revisit your writing templates.
  • 30 Nov to 2 Dec: Take full-length mock tests and experience the real exam conditions.
  • 3 to 4 Dec: Revise RBI-relevant current affairs. Use PIB Sutra and Visleshan.
  • 5 Dec: Do final revision, pay heed to weak areas, and craft your “Strategy Sheet for The Last Day.”

6 Tips to Maximize Your Revision Strategy

Revision is not passive reading. It is active recall, timed practice, and correction of mistakes. These six tips will help you sharpen your memory, improve your concentration, and strengthen weak areas before the exam.

1. Set Exam Conditions Every Time You Test

Revision must be realistic. A realistic revision includes sitting at a desk, setting a timer, and taking tests. So, whenever you take full-length mock tests, try to take them just as the real exam. Practice ESI topics like Poverty and Employment, FM topics like RBI Functions, and the basics of Management.

This habit will improve your stamina and train your mind to perform under pressure and reduce exam-day anxiety.

2. Review Every Mock Test Like a Case Study

Learning happens after the test, when you analyse every mistake and work on them. In ESI, you should check errors in the Budget or the Monetary Policy. In FM, revise Derivatives and Risk Management. In Management, revisit theories on Motivation. A good way of doing it is by categorizing your mistakes.

You can categorize them based on concepts (conceptual), carelessness, or time. This systematic review will make sure you never repeat the same errors or mistakes again.

3. Align Topic Revision with Mock Testing

Revision must follow a rhythm. Revise topics before attempting their mocks. For example, study Social Schemes before ESI Mock test 3, or Banking System before FM Mock test 2. This alignment improves retention. It prevents confusion and ensures every mock reinforces your preparation.

Random revision wastes effort and energy.

4. Use the Final 10 Days for Strategic Consolidation

Do not chase everything and pay attention to scoring topics like the Union Budget, the Economic Survey, and Corporate Governance. Prepare a “Priority Sheet” and in it set tasks like ‘Must Revise, Can Skip, Practice Again.’ Polish English templates for essays and precis.

Revise mistakes from earlier mock tests. This consolidation ensures clarity, confidence, and readiness for the exam.

5. Don’t Underestimate English Descriptive

English is a scoring paper, and it can become hugely beneficial if you keep practicing writing essays on Financial Inclusion, précis from RBI speeches, and RCs from editorials. You should make templates for introductions and conclusions and revise them every week, and avoid decorative language.

Pay heed to clear and organized writing, as strong English performance often decides the cutoff. It should thus be your weapon, not optional.

6. Learn from Toppers’ Last-Mile Habits

Toppers revise all those topics that are important and need time for mastery, every day, without fail. They write short answers on ESI topics like Industrial Policy, FM topics like NBFCs, and Management topics like Leadership.

You can cover your last mile by taking PIB Sutra for current affairs, testing your preparation via mock tests, and then carefully analyzing them to set an exam strategy.

These habits keep memory active, and an active memory leads to success.

Resources to Refine Your Revision

FAQs

Can I revise the entire syllabus in 20 days?

Yes, if you’ve already covered it once. This plan is for consolidation, not first-time learning.

What’s the best way to revise English Descriptive?

Practice essays, precis, and RCs. Use templates. Review weekly.

How do I use the final 10 days wisely?

Focus on clarity. Use the Priority Sheet. Revise RBI-relevant current affairs.

What are the tools that can help me revise quickly?

Yes, PIB Sutra, Vishleshan, and the RBI Phase 2 Video Course. They refine your thinking and writing.

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By Mahika Goswami

I have cleared RBI Grade B, SEBI Grade A and UPSC exams, so I know the path to success. Now I use that experience to guide students for regulatory and UPSC exams with full dedication and honest support.

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