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The RRB NTPC Graduate Level CBT-1 exam (CEN 06/2025) was held from March 16 to 27, 2026. The official cut-off will be released by RRB along with the result. Until then, this article gives you a detailed expected cut-off analysis based on official previous year data and key factors — so you know exactly where you stand.
You’ve given the RRB NTPC CBT-1 exam. Or maybe you’re preparing for the next NTPC cycle. Either way, one question is burning in your mind right now:
“How many marks do I need to clear the cut-off?”
Totally valid question. And we’re going to answer it, properly, with real data, zone-wise analysis, and a clear picture of what the expected cut-off for RRB NTPC CBT-1 2026 looks like.
But first, one important thing you must understand:
⚠️ Important Note: The official RRB NTPC CBT-1 Cut-off for CEN 06/2025 (Graduate Level exam held March 16–27, 2026) has NOT been released yet. RRB releases the official cut-off along with the result, which is expected in the coming weeks. The figures in this article are expected/estimated cut-offs based on official previous year data and current vacancy trends. Always verify the official cut-off from your regional RRB website once released.
RRB NTPC CBT-1 (First Stage Computer Based Test) is the first step in the selection process for Railway Non-Technical Popular Categories posts. For the current cycle:
CBT-1 is a screening test. Its marks are not counted in the final merit list — only candidates who clear the CBT-1 cut-off are shortlisted for CBT-2. So the goal here is simple: score above the cut-off to move forward.
Since the exam is held across multiple shifts and days, RRB applies normalisation to ensure fair scoring across all shifts. The final cut-off is based on normalised scores, not raw marks.
Before we get to the expected cut-off, let’s be clear about one thing: there are two separate thresholds in RRB NTPC CBT-1.
As per the official RRB NTPC notification (CEN 06/2025), the minimum qualifying marks for CBT-1 are:
| Category | Minimum Qualifying Marks (out of 100) |
| UR (General) / EWS | 40% (40 marks) |
| OBC (Non-Creamy Layer) / SC | 30% (30 marks) |
| ST | 25% (25 marks) |
⚠️ These are just the minimum qualifying marks. The actual cut-off is always higher than these figures because competition is intense and vacancies are limited. Scoring exactly 40 as a UR candidate will almost certainly not be enough to make the shortlist. This is why understanding the expected cut-off is so important.
The most reliable way to estimate the 2026 expected cut-off is to study the official cut-offs from previous cycles. Here is what the official data tells us.
The CBT-1 for Graduate Level was held from June 5 to 24, 2025. The official cut-off was released by RRB on September 19, 2025 along with the result. Key highlights from the official data:
The UG CBT-1 was held from August 7 to September 9, 2025. Official cut-off was released on November 21, 2025. Key highlights:
Looking at official cut-off data across multiple cycles, the trend is clear: UR category cut-offs for Graduate CBT-1 have gradually increased over the years — from the 61–65 range in 2016 to the 78–87 range in the 2024 cycle. This upward trend reflects increasing competition year over year.
Based on the official previous year data, vacancy count for 2026, and the fact that the exam was held in multiple shifts with normalisation — here is our expected cut-off range for the Graduate Level CBT-1 2026:
| Category | Expected Cut-Off Range (out of 100) |
| UR (General) | 75 – 87 marks |
| EWS | 70 – 82 marks |
| OBC (NCL) | 65 – 78 marks |
| SC | 55 – 67 marks |
| ST | 48 – 62 marks |
Note: These are expected ranges based on previous official data. Actual cut-offs will be released by RRB on regional websites along with the result. Ranges vary by zone — high-competition zones will be at the upper end; zones like Malda will be at the lower end.
Since cut-offs vary by zone, here’s a practical guide on what score to aim for to stay comfortably above the cut-off:
| Zone Type | Safe Score — UR | Safe Score — OBC | Safe Score — SC |
| High-competition zones (Chandigarh, Patna, Kolkata, Guwahati) | 85+ | 75+ | 65+ |
| Medium-competition zones (Allahabad, Bhopal, Mumbai, Secunderabad) | 80+ | 70+ | 60+ |
| Lower-competition zones (Malda, Bilaspur, Siliguri) | 75+ | 63+ | 53+ |
Pro tip: Always target at least 10–15 marks above the expected cut-off for your category. Based on analysis of previous years, candidates who scored 15+ marks above the cut-off had a significantly higher chance of clearing comfortably — factoring in normalisation adjustments.
Cut-offs don’t appear out of thin air. Here are the exact factors that RRB considers — and why they matter for 2026:
The 2026 cycle has 5,810 Graduate Level vacancies compared to 8,113 in the previous year’s Graduate cycle. Fewer vacancies generally push the cut-off upward because more candidates are competing for fewer seats. This is one reason why the 2026 cut-off is expected to be at the higher end of the range.
RRB NTPC consistently attracts crores of applicants. With the 2026 Graduate notification drawing massive interest, competition is expected to be intense — particularly for popular posts like Goods Train Manager (3,423 vacancies) and Station Master.
The CBT-1 2026 Graduate exam was held across multiple shifts from March 16 to 27. Candidates who appeared generally reported moderate difficulty. Since normalisation is applied, individual shift difficulty is factored in when final scores are calculated.
Because the exam is conducted in multiple shifts, RRB uses the equi-percentile normalisation method to equalise scores across shifts. This means your final score may differ slightly from your raw score. The cut-off is always applied on normalised scores — not raw marks.
India has 21 RRB zones, and each zone releases its own cut-off. Zones with higher candidate density and more applicants per vacancy tend to have higher cut-offs. Always compare your score with the cut-off of the specific zone you applied to — not a national average.
Once RRB releases the official cut-off (expected along with the CBT-1 result on regional websites), here is how to check it:
Candidates scoring equal to or above the cut-off will be shortlisted for CBT-2. The number of candidates shortlisted is typically 20 times the number of vacancies for each post/category.
Clearing CBT-1 is just the beginning. Here’s the full selection process so you know what’s coming:
The final merit list is based on CBT-2 marks (70% weightage) + CBAT marks where applicable (30% weightage).
Whether you’re checking your 2026 exam performance or preparing for the next NTPC cycle, this data is your roadmap:
And here’s the most important thing: the time between CBT-1 result and CBT-2 is short. Students who start preparing for CBT-2 immediately after their CBT-1 exam — without waiting for the result — are the ones who clear with confidence.
If you’re serious about RRB NTPC, you need more than just notes and YouTube videos. You need to know how you perform under actual exam conditions — timed, pressured, and with the exact pattern that RRB uses.
That’s exactly what PracticeMock gives you:
Whether you’re preparing for CBT-2 now or building your base for the next cycle, PracticeMock has you covered.
🚂 Start your free mock test today at PracticeMock.com — take a full RRB NTPC CBT-1 or CBT-2 mock, get your score, see where you stand, and build your strategy from there.
If you’ve given the CBT-1 exam and you’re nervously waiting for the result right now — first of all, take a breath. You’ve already done the hard part of showing up and giving it your best.
Now use this waiting period wisely. Don’t just sit around refreshing the RRB website. Start your CBT-2 preparation. Brush up on General Awareness. Practice Maths and Reasoning daily. Because when the result comes out and you see your name in the shortlist, you want to be ready to go — not scrambling to start from scratch.
The railway is calling. And hard work always finds its reward.
The official cut-off for CEN 06/2025 Graduate Level CBT-1 (exam held March 16–27, 2026) will be released by RRB along with the CBT-1 result on the respective regional RRB websites. No official date has been announced yet — check your regional RRB website regularly for updates.
No. Each of the 21 RRB zones releases its own cut-off separately. Cut-offs vary based on the number of candidates in each zone, vacancies, and the difficulty of the paper for that region. Always check the cut-off for the specific zone you applied to.
No. CBT-1 is purely a screening test. Marks scored in CBT-1 are not included in the final merit list. The final merit is based on CBT-2 marks (and CBAT marks where applicable).
Since CBT-1 is held across multiple shifts with potentially different difficulty levels, RRB uses the equi-percentile normalisation method to make scores comparable across all shifts. Your normalised score may differ slightly from your raw score.
RRB typically shortlists 20 times the number of vacancies in each category/post for CBT-2. For example, if there are 100 UR vacancies for a particular post, up to 2,000 UR candidates from the zone may be shortlisted for CBT-2.
Once released, the official cut-off PDF will be available on the regional RRB websites (e.g., rrbcdg.gov.in, rrbmumbai.gov.in, rrbchennai.gov.in, etc.) and also at the centralised portal rrb.digialm.com. Always download from official sources only.
All the best! Whether you cleared CBT-1 or are gearing up for the next attempt — the railway journey continues. Keep going!
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Bookmark this page — we’ll update the expected cut-off ranges as more exam feedback becomes available and publish the official cut-off data as soon as RRB releases it.
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