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The IBPS Clerk cutoff is one of the most complex cutoff structures in Indian banking examinations. Unlike SBI PO or UPSC CSE where a single national cutoff (category-wise) determines who advances, the IBPS Clerk cutoff operates at three simultaneous levels: sectional cutoff, overall cutoff, and state-wise cutoff. A candidate must clear all three independently at both the Prelims and Mains stages to secure provisional allotment to a bank. This multi-layered cutoff structure makes understanding the data critical for setting realistic preparation targets.
This page covers the complete IBPS Clerk cutoff framework, state-wise and category-wise historical cutoff data from recent cycles, the factors that drive cutoff variation, and practical preparation benchmarks for 2026.
For the complete examination guide, visit the IBPS Clerk Prelims main page. For the exam pattern that shapes these scores, see the IBPS Clerk Exam Pattern page.
Both Prelims and Mains have sectional cutoffs for each section. Candidates must score at or above the minimum marks in each section individually. A very high score in English Language cannot compensate for falling below the sectional minimum in Numerical Ability. All sections must independently clear their sectional threshold.
Sectional cutoffs are released by IBPS along with the result and vary by category (General/OBC/SC/ST/EWS) and by examination shift (since papers across shifts are normalised for difficulty).
After clearing all sectional cutoffs, the candidate's total score must also meet the overall category-wise and state-wise cutoff. Both conditions - all sections above sectional cutoffs AND total above overall cutoff - must be satisfied simultaneously.
This is the most variable and least-understood layer. The IBPS Clerk cutoff is not a single national threshold. Vacancies are allocated state-wise and bank-wise. The cutoff for the same category in one state can be significantly different from the cutoff in another state with fewer vacancies. A General category candidate in Uttar Pradesh (2,781 vacancies in 2025) competes against a different effective cutoff than a General category candidate in a smaller state.
This makes the state-wise cutoff the most practically important benchmark for each candidate's preparation targeting.
IBPS Clerk Prelims cutoff data from the 2025 cycle (CRP CSA-XV, exam held October 2025):
The following reflects the approximate Prelims overall cutoffs observed across major states in the 2025 cycle. These figures are based on expert analysis and official result data.
| State General (Approx.) SC (Approx.) OBC (Approx.) | |||
| Uttar Pradesh | 73-75 | 62-65 | 70-72 |
| Maharashtra | 70-73 | 60-63 | 68-71 |
| Karnataka | 68-72 | 58-62 | 65-70 |
| Tamil Nadu | 71-74 | 61-64 | 68-72 |
| Rajasthan | 69-72 | 59-62 | 66-70 |
| Madhya Pradesh | 68-71 | 58-61 | 65-69 |
| Bihar | 66-70 | 56-60 | 63-68 |
| West Bengal | 70-73 | 60-63 | 67-71 |
| Gujarat | 70-73 | 60-63 | 67-71 |
| Punjab | 67-70 | 57-60 | 64-68 |
Note: These are indicative ranges based on analysis of the 2025 cycle. Exact sectional and overall cutoffs are released by IBPS in the official result. Always verify from the official IBPS website for confirmed figures.
For the Prelims, each section typically has a minimum sectional cutoff in the range of 8 to 12 marks out of the section's total. Specific figures:
| Section General (Typical Range) SC/ST/OBC/PwBD (Typical Range) | ||
| English Language (30 marks) | 8-11 marks | 6-9 marks |
| Numerical Ability (35 marks) | 9-13 marks | 7-11 marks |
| Reasoning Ability (35 marks) | 10-13 marks | 8-11 marks |
These are historical ranges - actual figures vary each year based on paper difficulty. In an easy paper year, sectional cutoffs rise. In a difficult paper year, they fall. The critical point is that sectional cutoffs are typically low enough that a candidate who attempts 18 to 20 questions per section with reasonable accuracy will clear them. The overall cutoff (65 to 75 range) is the harder threshold to clear.
The Mains cutoff is expressed out of 100 (normalised marks on a 100-mark scale) and is more consequential since it determines provisional allotment. The 2025 Mains highest cutoff was 49.13 out of 100 for Manipur OBC category.
| State General (Out of 100) Vacancy Count Competition Level | |||
| Uttar Pradesh | 32-37 | 2,781 | Moderate (high vacancies) |
| Karnataka | 38-44 | ~800+ | High |
| Tamil Nadu | 36-42 | ~900+ | Moderate-High |
| Maharashtra | 35-40 | ~700+ | Moderate |
| Rajasthan | 34-39 | ~700+ | Moderate |
| West Bengal | 36-41 | ~600+ | Moderate-High |
| Bihar | 30-36 | ~600+ | Moderate |
| Gujarat | 37-42 | ~500+ | High |
| Punjab | 33-38 | ~400+ | Moderate |
| Manipur | 47-49 | Very low | Very High (low vacancies) |
The inverse relationship between vacancies and cutoff is evident. Manipur, with very few vacancies, recorded a Mains cutoff of 49.13 - the highest in the 2025 cycle. Uttar Pradesh, with 2,781 vacancies, had a significantly lower effective cutoff despite larger overall competition.
| Category Mains Cutoff Range (Out of 100, across states) | |
| General/EWS | 26-44 |
| OBC | 22-42 |
| SC | 19-38 |
| ST | 18-35 |
The wide range reflects the state-wise variation. The national average for General category was in the 32 to 37 range, with high-vacancy states at the lower end and low-vacancy states at the higher end.
| Category Mains Cutoff Range (Out of 100, across states) | |
| General/EWS | 28-46 |
| OBC | 24-43 |
| SC | 20-40 |
| ST | 17-37 |
The 2023 cycle had only 4,545 vacancies - the lowest in recent history - which pushed cutoffs higher across most states compared to 2024 and 2025 which had more vacancies.
With only 4,545 total vacancies, the 2023 cycle was the most competitive in recent history. The reduced vacancy pool meant fewer selections from the same large applicant base, pushing Mains cutoffs to some of the highest levels in the 2020-2025 period. Many General category candidates who cleared previous year cutoffs did not qualify in 2023 simply because the vacancy count had contracted.
The 2024 cycle with 6,128 vacancies saw a moderate easing of cutoffs compared to 2023. The overall Mains cutoff came down from the 2023 peaks, reflecting the higher vacancy count absorbing more of the candidate pool.
The 2025 cycle with 10,277 vacancies - the highest in the recent 5-year window - produced notably lower Mains cutoffs in high-vacancy states. Uttar Pradesh with 2,781 vacancies had one of the most accessible effective cutoffs for General category candidates. The 2025 cycle offered one of the better selection opportunities in recent years purely based on the vacancy-to-competition ratio.
This trend reinforces the importance of tracking the vacancy count when the 2026 notification is released. If vacancies remain high (8,000+), preparation targets can be calibrated toward the 32 to 40 Mains range for most states. If vacancies contract to 4,000-5,000 levels, the 40 to 46 range becomes the relevant benchmark for General category candidates.
As demonstrated by the 2023 vs 2025 comparison, vacancy count directly determines how many candidates are selected from each state and category. More vacancies mean lower cutoffs; fewer vacancies mean higher cutoffs even if the paper difficulty is identical. Monitoring the 2026 vacancy announcement (expected August 2026) should be the first step after the notification is released.
The IBPS Clerk Prelims is conducted across multiple shifts on multiple days. Each shift has a different question paper. IBPS normalises scores across shifts to account for difficulty variation. A candidate in a difficult shift who scores 70 raw marks may receive a normalised score that is higher or lower than 70 depending on how their shift compared to other shifts.
This means that raw scores on mock tests are not perfectly predictive of actual performance relative to cutoffs. Candidates should target a score range rather than a specific mark as their preparation benchmark.
Candidate density per vacancy slot varies significantly across states. A state with 1,000 vacancies but 3 lakh applicants has a much higher competition ratio than a state with 500 vacancies but 50,000 applicants. IBPS Clerk's state-wise cutoff system reflects this density differential.
States with historically strong banking exam preparation cultures (Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Gujarat) tend to have higher effective cutoffs even for moderate vacancy counts because the average score of the candidate pool is higher.
For most General category candidates applying in major states (UP, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan, MP), targeting 72 to 80 marks out of 100 in Prelims provides a comfortable buffer above the historical 68 to 75 range of cutoffs observed across these states.
For smaller states with fewer vacancies and historically higher cutoffs, the target should be 76 to 82 marks to account for the higher competition-to-vacancy ratio.
SC/ST candidates should target 62 to 70 marks to provide a similar buffer above historical SC/ST cutoff ranges of 56 to 65 in most states.
For Mains, the cutoff expressed out of 100 reflects normalised scores. Setting a target of 40 to 50 marks out of 100 in Mains for General category in major states with moderate vacancies covers the historical range (32 to 46) with meaningful margin.
In low-vacancy states where cutoffs have historically been in the 43 to 49 range, targeting 50 to 55 marks is the safer benchmark.
Remember that the Mains cutoff includes both sectional and overall thresholds. A strong performance in General/Financial Awareness (which is the most knowledge-based and least time-pressured section) can significantly boost the total Mains score since it has lower time pressure per question compared to Reasoning or QA.
Since sectional cutoffs are mandatory, every section must be prepared sufficiently. The common strategy of "covering up" a weak section with a strong section does not work in IBPS Clerk. A candidate who scores 85 overall but only 7 in the English Language section when the sectional cutoff is 9 does not qualify.
This means:
IBPS Clerk typically releases one or two reserve lists after the initial allotment. The reserve list fills vacancies that remain after the first allotment round (due to candidates declining joining or other dropouts).
The reserve list cutoffs are typically slightly lower than the initial allotment cutoff because they represent candidates who were just below the first-round threshold. For candidates who are close to the Mains cutoff, the reserve list provides a second opportunity without needing to reappear in the examination.
The 2024 cycle had two reserve list cutoffs:
Candidates near the expected cutoff should monitor official allotment announcements rather than assuming non-selection after the first round result.
Is the IBPS Clerk cutoff the same across all states? No. The cutoff is state-wise and category-wise. Each state has its own cutoff determined by the number of vacancies in that state, the number of candidates applying from that state, and the overall difficulty of the paper. A General category candidate in Uttar Pradesh (high vacancies) and in Manipur (very low vacancies) will face very different effective cutoffs.
Can I see my IBPS Clerk cutoff after the exam? Yes. IBPS releases the state-wise, category-wise, and section-wise cutoff marks along with the result scorecard. Candidates can log in to ibps.in to download their scorecard, which shows their marks alongside the applicable cutoffs.
Do Prelims marks count toward the Mains cutoff? No. Prelims marks are not counted in the Mains or final merit calculation. Prelims only determines whether a candidate is shortlisted for Mains. The Mains cutoff applies exclusively to Mains marks.
What is the highest IBPS Clerk Mains cutoff in recent history? The highest recorded in the recent 2023-2025 window was 49.13 (Manipur, OBC category, 2025 cycle). High cutoffs in specific states reflect very low vacancy counts relative to the applicant pool in those states.
How does normalisation affect the cutoff? IBPS normalises marks across shifts to account for varying paper difficulty. This means a raw score of 68 in a difficult shift might normalise to 72, while 68 in an easy shift might normalise to 64. Cutoffs are applied to normalised scores, not raw scores. This system makes the cutoff fairer across shifts but means that absolute raw score targets are approximate rather than exact benchmarks.
When will the IBPS Clerk 2026 cutoff be released? The Prelims cutoff will be released along with the Prelims scorecard, which typically comes within 2 to 3 weeks of the Prelims result. The Mains cutoff and final provisional allotment cutoffs are released with the final allotment result, typically 3 to 4 months after the Mains examination.
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ExamUpdateAspirantMitraa
20 May 2026
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20 May 2026