The official SEBI Grade A 2025 notification confirms that Phase 1 will be conducted on 10th January 2026 and Phase 2 on 21st February 2026. That means, by 10th January 2025, you’ll have to cover the syllabus. But there are many candidates who may have just started their preparation. Many aspirants, or perhaps you too, may have also appeared in the banking exams, or may be from a banking background. So they want to know how tough the sections of the SEBI Grade A exam are when compared to banking exams. And the first question they ask is: ‘Which exam is tougher in Quant, English, and Reasoning?’ This blog will talk about the differences, not in vague terms, but in detail, section by section. Because, simply, once you know the level of difficulty, you know how to prepare. Read on to get the clarity you want.
SEBI Grade A Quantitative Reasoning appears only in Phase 1, Paper 1. Twenty questions, 25 marks, part of a 100‑mark paper with 80 questions in total. Duration: 60 minutes. No sectional cut‑off. No sectional timing. Negative marking of 0.25 per wrong answer.
The topics are straightforward: Simplification, Approximation, Number Series, Quadratic Equations, and basic DI. Arithmetic questions are present but not heavy. The level is conceptual, not calculation‑intensive. If you have clarity on basics, you can score.
Banking Exams Quantitative Reasoning is a different story. It appears in both prelims and mains. Prelims demand speed—100 questions in 60 minutes. Cut‑offs are high. DI ranges from moderate to tough. Arithmetic, Simplification, Approximation, and Number Series dominate prelims. Mains take DI to another level—long sets, heavy calculations, and puzzles embedded in data.
Comparison: SEBI QR is easier than banking mains and roughly equal to banking prelims. The absence of sectional timing makes SEBI more forgiving. Banking demands speed and accuracy under pressure. SEBI demands accuracy with moderate speed.
SEBI Grade A Reasoning is moderate. Twenty questions, 25 marks. The types are familiar: Syllogism, Direction, Blood Relation, Inequality, simple puzzles, and seating arrangements. The difficulty is closer to banking prelims but easier in execution.
Banking Exams Reasoning is notorious. Prelims already push candidates with puzzles, arrangements, coding‑decoding, and input‑output. Mains raise the bar further—machine input‑output, layered puzzles, and logical reasoning questions that consume minutes.
Comparison: SEBI reasoning is manageable. Banking reasoning, especially mains, is a grind. If you can solve banking mains puzzles, SEBI reasoning will feel lighter.
SEBI Grade A English is simple. Twenty questions, 25 marks. RC passages are shorter. Grammar questions are direct. Vocabulary is moderate. Error detection, fillers, and sentence rearrangement appear regularly.
Banking Exams English is moderate to high. Prelims RC passages are longer, often finance or economy‑based. Error spotting, fillers, para‑jumbles, and vocabulary questions are standard. Mains English is lengthy and demanding—long RCs, complex grammar, and vocabulary usage that tests depth.
Comparison: SEBI English is easier. Banking English, especially mains, requires stamina. SEBI focuses more on grammar and vocabulary, while banking focuses on comprehension and length.
Banking exams are built on speed. Sectional timing forces you to move fast. Cut‑offs are high. Accuracy and speed together decide success.
SEBI Grade A is built on accuracy. No sectional timing. Cut‑off is 30% overall. QR appears only in Phase 1 Paper 1. Reasoning and English are moderate. General Awareness balances the paper.
Key takeaway: Banking exams test endurance and speed. SEBI tests clarity and accuracy.
For SEBI Grade A, focus on conceptual clarity. Limited topics in QR and Reasoning mean you don’t need exhaustive practice. Cover Quadratic Equations, Number Series, DI, Simplification, Percentage, and Ratio. For Reasoning, practice seating arrangements, puzzles, syllogism, and inequality. For English, sharpen grammar and vocabulary.
For Banking Exams, practice volume matters. Daily mocks, speed drills, and puzzle practice are essential. Prelims demand speed. Mains demand depth.
| Exam Type | Quant Level vs Banking Prelims | Reasoning Level vs Banking Prelims | English Level vs Banking Prelims |
|---|---|---|---|
| Banking Prelims | Moderate‑High | High (Complex puzzles) | Moderate‑High (Lengthy RC) |
| Banking Mains | Higher (Complex DI) | Very High (Lengthy puzzles) | High (Lengthy RC, tough grammar) |
| SEBI Grade A Phase 1 | Easier or equal | Moderate (Simpler puzzles) | Easier (Shorter RC, grammar focus) |
A plan stands only if it has support. The resources listed here aren’t extras, but they are the backbone of serious preparation.
Here’s a clean, structured table for the resources you listed:
| Resource | Purpose |
|---|---|
| SEBI Study Notes | Comprehensive notes covering key topics for SEBI Grade A preparation |
| SEBI Revision Notes | Concise summaries for quick revision before the exam |
| Sampoorna – Paper 2 Current Affairs | Dedicated material for Paper 2, focusing on current affairs and updates |
| SEBI Notes – Chapterwise Tests | Practice tests organized chapter‑wise to strengthen conceptual clarity |
| SEBI Paper 2 – CA Tests | Current Affairs tests tailored for Paper 2 exam requirements |
| Mock Test 1 to 5 | Full‑length practice exams simulating real exam conditions |
Together, these tools cut the noise, bring clarity, and rebuild the exact pressure of the real exam.
SEBI Grade A Phase 1 is not designed to overwhelm. It is designed to filter. The QR level is equal to or slightly above banking prelims but far below banking mains. Reasoning is moderate. English is easy. The absence of sectional timing and a lower cut‑off make SEBI more approachable.
Banking exams, on the other hand, are built to test speed, stamina, and depth. Prelims push speed. Mains push complexity.
If you have prepared for banking exams, SEBI will feel lighter. If you are starting fresh for SEBI, focus on clarity, limited topics, and accuracy. Don’t waste hours chasing exhaustive practice. Targeted preparation wins here.
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