The SBI PO section-wise preparation plan should give English Language, Quantitative Aptitude, and Reasoning Ability separate strategies because each section has an independent 20-minute time limit. According to the official SBI PO 2026 pattern, English contains 40 questions, while Quant and Reasoning contain 30 questions each. Candidates must therefore improve their speed, accuracy, and question selection independently in all three sections.
Begin your preparation by attempting a free latest-pattern SBI PO Prelims mock test. Check your section-wise score, accuracy, attempts, time spent, and missed easy questions. After identifying the weakest section, follow the preparation plan below instead of dividing your study time equally without analysing your performance.
The SBI PO Preliminary Examination contains 100 objective questions and has a total duration of one hour.
| Section | Number of Questions | Duration |
| English Language | 40 | 20 minutes |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 30 | 20 minutes |
| Reasoning Ability | 30 | 20 minutes |
| Total | 100 | 60 minutes |
The examination carries a total maximum of 100 marks. SBI has not assigned separate maximum marks to the three Prelims sections in the notification.
There is no sectional cut-off in SBI PO Prelims. Candidates are shortlisted for Mains through a category-wise merit list prepared using the aggregate Prelims score. Approximately 10 times the number of vacancies in each category may be shortlisted.
However, candidates should not interpret the absence of a sectional cut-off as permission to ignore one section. A low score in English, Quant, or Reasoning will reduce the aggregate marks used for shortlisting.
The 2026 pattern gives English Language 40 questions and Quant and Reasoning 30 questions each. Candidates who previously prepared using a 30-35-35 question distribution must modify their attempt strategy.
The separate timings also mean that:
Your preparation should therefore answer three different questions:
SBI does not prescribe a section-wise qualifying score for Prelims. Therefore, the following targets are preparation benchmarks and not official cut-offs.
| Section | Safe Practice Target | Strong Practice Target |
| English Language | 22–25 | 26–30+ |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 15–18 | 19–22+ |
| Reasoning Ability | 18–21 | 22–25+ |
| Total | 55–64 | 67–77+ |
Your target should depend on the difficulty of the mock test and your accuracy. Do not chase a fixed number of attempts when the section is unusually difficult.
Candidates studying for four hours can use this section-wise timetable:
| Preparation Activity | Suggested Time |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 70 minutes |
| Reasoning Ability | 70 minutes |
| English Language | 55 minutes |
| Sectional test or mixed quiz | 30 minutes |
| Test analysis and revision | 15 minutes |
| Total | 4 hours |
Candidates with only two hours can use:
| Preparation Activity | Suggested Time |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 35 minutes |
| Reasoning Ability | 35 minutes |
| English Language | 30 minutes |
| Sectional test | 10 minutes |
| Error-log revision | 10 minutes |
| Total | 2 hours |
Do not permanently allocate the same amount of time to every subject. Increase the study time for the section that is limiting your aggregate mock score.
The SBI PO Quantitative Aptitude section tests calculation speed, numerical understanding, data interpretation, and arithmetic application. It contains 30 questions to be attempted within 20 minutes.
Candidates often lose Quant marks for two reasons: slow calculations and poor question selection. Therefore, the Quant preparation strategy should combine concept building, calculation practice, and timed application.
Prepare the following topics systematically:
The final topic distribution can vary from one examination shift to another. Candidates should therefore develop broad coverage instead of relying on an exact predicted topic-wise question count.
| Priority | Topics | Preparation Approach |
| Priority 1 | Simplification, approximation, number series and quadratic equations | Build speed and high accuracy |
| Priority 2 | Percentage, ratio, average, profit and loss | Strengthen base concepts |
| Priority 3 | Time and work, TSD, interest and mixture | Practise standard models |
| Priority 4 | Data interpretation | Combine calculations with selection |
| Priority 5 | Advanced or weak arithmetic topics | Prepare after high-return topics |
Priority 1 and Priority 2 topics should be completed first because they support several other Quant chapters.
Spend 15–20 minutes daily practising:
For example:
| Fraction | Percentage |
| 1/2 | 50% |
| 1/3 | 33.33% |
| 1/4 | 25% |
| 1/5 | 20% |
| 1/6 | 16.67% |
| 1/8 | 12.50% |
| 1/9 | 11.11% |
| 1/10 | 10% |
| 1/12 | 8.33% |
These values reduce calculation time in arithmetic and data interpretation.
A possible Quant attempt strategy is:
| Time | Task |
| First 5–6 minutes | Simplification, approximation, series or quadratic questions |
| Next 5–6 minutes | Direct arithmetic questions |
| Next 6–7 minutes | One manageable DI set |
| Final 1–2 minutes | Review marked or short remaining questions |
This is not a fixed rule. Change the sequence according to the question paper and your strengths.
Before solving a DI set, scan:
Leave a calculation-heavy DI set when a simpler alternative is available.
| Preparation Level | Daily Target |
| Beginner | 30–40 topic questions |
| Intermediate | 40–50 timed questions |
| Advanced | One sectional test plus error correction |
Accuracy should remain the priority. Solving 50 questions with frequent errors is less useful than solving 35 questions and understanding every method.
After solving each mock, identify whether your Quant errors were caused by concept gaps, calculation errors, or poor selection.
The Reasoning Ability section contains 30 questions to be attempted in 20 minutes. Its difficulty often depends on the number and complexity of puzzles and seating arrangements.
The best SBI PO Reasoning strategy is to secure direct questions first and then choose puzzle sets carefully. A candidate can know every puzzle format and still score poorly by selecting the most time-consuming set first.
| Priority | Topics | Preparation Approach |
| Priority 1 | Inequality, syllogism, direction, blood relation | Build quick and accurate attempts |
| Priority 2 | Series, coding, ranking and miscellaneous questions | Improve speed |
| Priority 3 | Basic linear and circular arrangements | Learn clear diagram formation |
| Priority 4 | Floor, box, month and scheduling puzzles | Practise case management |
| Priority 5 | Complex multi-variable puzzles | Attempt after mastering selection |
Do not begin with the most complex puzzles merely because they appear frequently. Build a strong base first.
Before committing time, examine:
Choose a puzzle when its conditions connect clearly. Postpone it when you cannot form a stable arrangement within the first two minutes.
A possible attempt plan is:
| Time | Task |
| First 5–6 minutes | Direct questions such as inequality, syllogism and series |
| Next 6–7 minutes | Easiest puzzle or seating arrangement |
| Next 6–7 minutes | Second suitable puzzle or remaining direct questions |
| Final 1 minute | Review unanswered direct questions |
The actual order should depend on the paper. Some candidates perform better by scanning all puzzle sets before attempting direct questions.
| Activity | Daily Target |
| Direct questions | 20–25 questions |
| Puzzle practice | 2–3 sets |
| Timed practice | One 10-minute mini test |
| Error analysis | Redo one previously incorrect set |
Do not check the solution immediately after getting stuck. First, identify which condition you interpreted incorrectly or where your case formation failed.
Use these steps:
Redo difficult puzzles after one or two days without looking at the solution. This checks whether you learned the process rather than memorised the arrangement.
The ability to leave a difficult puzzle is an examination skill, not a sign of weak preparation.
The official SBI PO 2026 pattern gives English Language 40 questions, making it the section with the highest number of questions in Prelims. Candidates who previously treated English as a secondary section should revise their preparation plan.
English preparation should combine reading comprehension, grammar, contextual vocabulary, and timed question practice.
The exact combination may vary across examination shifts.
| Priority | Topics | Preparation Approach |
| Priority 1 | Reading comprehension and contextual vocabulary | Improve reading and inference |
| Priority 2 | Error detection, fillers and sentence improvement | Strengthen grammar |
| Priority 3 | Cloze test and phrase replacement | Combine context and grammar |
| Priority 4 | Para jumbles and rearrangement | Learn logical connections |
| Priority 5 | New-format questions | Practise through mocks and quizzes |
Follow this 45–60 minute routine:
| Activity | Time |
| Read one editorial or explanatory article | 15 minutes |
| Solve one reading-comprehension set | 15 minutes |
| Practise grammar-based questions | 15 minutes |
| Revise vocabulary and errors | 10 minutes |
While reading, note:
The purpose of editorial reading is not only to collect vocabulary. It should improve comprehension speed and your ability to identify arguments and inferences.
Prioritise:
Do not memorise grammar rules in isolation. Solve questions immediately after revising a rule.
A possible English attempt strategy is:
| Time | Task |
| First 6–7 minutes | Direct grammar and vocabulary questions |
| Next 7–8 minutes | Reading comprehension |
| Next 4–5 minutes | Cloze test, rearrangement or remaining questions |
Candidates who are strong readers may attempt reading comprehension first. Test both sequences during sectional mocks and retain the one that produces better accuracy.
With 40 questions in the 2026 pattern, English can significantly improve or reduce the aggregate score.
Use this preparation framework:
| Preparation Stage | Recommended Frequency |
| Concepts are weak | One sectional test per subject each week |
| Basic concepts are complete | Two sectional tests per subject each week |
| Exam is approaching | One or two sectional tests daily in rotation |
| Score is stable | Combine sectional tests with full mocks |
Do not take several sectional tests without analysing them. Every test should reveal:
If a full mock takes 60 minutes, spend approximately 60 minutes analysing it. For a 20-minute sectional test, spend at least 20 minutes reviewing the questions.
Classify every question as:
| Category | Meaning | Action |
| Correct and fast | Strong performance | Maintain through revision |
| Correct but slow | Method needs improvement | Find a shorter approach |
| Incorrect | Concept or judgement problem | Record and correct |
| Unattempted but solvable | Selection problem | Practise scanning |
| Unattempted and difficult | Correct decision to skip | Review later |
The “unattempted but solvable” category is particularly important. These questions show where your score can improve without learning an entirely new topic.
Maintain three separate error logs.
| Date | Section | Topic | Error Type | Reason | Corrective Action |
| Quant | Calculation/concept/selection | ||||
| Reasoning | Diagram/case/selection | ||||
| English | Grammar/context/inference |
Review the error log every three to four days. Highlight mistakes that appear repeatedly because they require immediate correction.
Beginners should prioritise concepts and topic-wise questions before taking frequent mocks.
Use this sequence:
Beginners should not compare their initial attempts with candidates who have prepared for several months.
Working professionals can use shorter weekday sessions and longer weekend tests.
Consistency is more important than studying for long, irregular sessions.
Yes. The official tentative schedule places Prelims in August 2026 and Mains in September 2026. Candidates may not receive enough time to begin Mains preparation from zero after the Prelims result.
Include 30–60 minutes of Mains preparation on most days:
Prelims should remain the immediate priority, but selected Mains topics should continue in parallel.
| Metric | Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 |
| English sectional score | |||
| Quant sectional score | |||
| Reasoning sectional score | |||
| English accuracy | |||
| Quant accuracy | |||
| Reasoning accuracy | |||
| Full mock score | |||
| Incorrect answers | |||
| Easy questions missed | |||
| Questions taking over two minutes |
Compare average performance rather than judging preparation through one test.
The right SBI PO section-wise preparation plan treats English, Quant, and Reasoning as three independent timed tests. English requires reading, grammar, and contextual accuracy. Quant requires concept clarity, calculation speed, and DI selection. Reasoning requires quick direct attempts, clean diagrams, and careful puzzle selection.
Follow the revised 2026 pattern while practising. Build a separate attempt order for every section, take regular sectional tests, and analyse every incorrect, slow, and missed question. Since SBI applies negative marking, do not increase attempts until your accuracy becomes stable.
Most importantly, do not use equal preparation time merely for balance. Use your mock-test data to identify which section offers the greatest score improvement. A targeted strategy will produce better results than repeatedly studying every topic without measuring performance.
Take a Free SBI PO Prelims Mock Test and Get a Complete Quant, Reasoning and English Analysis
Prepare separate study and attempt strategies for English, Quant, and Reasoning. Practise concepts first, take timed topic tests, move to sectional tests, and analyse your speed, accuracy, and question selection.
English Language contains 40 questions, while Quantitative Aptitude and Reasoning Ability contain 30 questions each. Candidates receive 20 minutes for every section.
English Language has the most questions, with 40 questions in the official 2026 pattern. Quantitative Aptitude and Reasoning Ability contain 30 questions each.
No. SBI has stated that there will be no sectional cut-off in the Preliminary Examination. Shortlisting for Mains will be based on aggregate marks and category-wise merit.
The sections have separate timings, and the examination system controls the section sequence. Within each section, attempt direct and high-confidence questions before lengthy or uncertain questions.
Improve calculation speed, strengthen percentage and ratio-based concepts, practise arithmetic regularly, and learn to select manageable DI sets. Use sectional tests to identify slow topics.
Secure direct questions first, scan puzzle sets before selecting one, create clean diagrams, and leave a set when its conditions do not connect within a reasonable time.
Read daily, practise one comprehension set, revise grammar rules, learn vocabulary contextually, and analyse why incorrect options are wrong.
Begin with one sectional test per subject each week. After completing the basic syllabus, increase this to two or more tests per section while continuing detailed analysis.
Yes. One-fourth of the marks assigned to a question is deducted for an incorrect objective answer. No penalty applies when a question is left unanswered.
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