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IBPS PO Prelims previous year question papers (PYQs) are among the most valuable resources available to candidates preparing for the 2026 exam. They are the actual papers used in real exam conditions, making them the single most authentic benchmark for difficulty level, topic distribution, question format, and timing strategy. No mock test series, however well-designed, can fully replicate the experience and calibration that comes from solving original papers.
This page covers why PYQs are critical, what years are available and from where to access official copies, topic-wise frequency analysis derived from papers spanning 2016 to 2025, how to use PYQs within a structured preparation plan, and how many papers to solve before the IBPS PO Prelims 2026 exam on August 22 and 23, 2026.
Many candidates underestimate PYQs, treating them as just another practice test. The difference between a PYQ and a random mock test is fundamental.
| Feature | PYQ | Mock Test |
| Source | Actual IBPS exam | Test series designer - AspirantMitraa |
| Difficulty calibration | Exact real-exam level | Approximation |
| Question format accuracy | 100% authentic | Variable |
| Normalisation benchmark | Directly tied to cutoff data | Not applicable |
| Year-wise comparability | Enables trend analysis | Not possible |
| Official answer key | Available from IBPS | Depends on provider |
Beyond the format and difficulty advantage, PYQs serve a specific function that no mock test can replace: they reveal which topics IBPS actually tests versus which topics coaching institutes include based on assumptions. Over a 10-year span of papers (2016 to 2025), the data from PYQs clearly shows what IBPS consistently prioritises and what it tests only occasionally.
IBPS releases official question papers on its website ibps.in after the answer key challenge window closes for each exam cycle. Papers are available both in English and Hindi.
| Exam | Cycle | Prelims Exam Year Pattern | Availability |
| CRP PO/MT-XV | 2025 | Revised (QA 30, Reasoning 40) | Available post-result |
| CRP PO/MT-XIV | 2024 | Revised (QA 30, Reasoning 40) | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-XIII | 2023-24 | Earlier (QA 35, Reasoning 35) | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-XII | 2022 | Earlier pattern | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-XI | 2021 | Earlier pattern | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-X | 2020 | Earlier pattern | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-IX | 2019 | Earlier pattern | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-VIII | 2018 | Earlier pattern | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-VII | 2017 | Earlier pattern | Available |
| CRP PO/MT-VI | 2016 | Earlier pattern | Available |
Because the exam is conducted in multiple shifts across two dates, each cycle has 6 to 10 distinct shift-wise papers. The total officially released IBPS PO Prelims papers from 2016 to 2025 runs to over 60 individual shift papers.
Not all years carry equal relevance. The closer the exam year to 2026, the more directly applicable its difficulty and pattern. The table below rates each period's relevance for the 2026 cycle.
| Period | Relevance for 2026 | Reason |
| 2024 and 2025 | Very High | Same revised pattern (QA 30, Reasoning 40); closest in difficulty |
| 2022 and 2023-24 | High | Recent cycles; some pattern overlap; useful for topic range |
| 2019 to 2021 | Medium | Earlier pattern (QA 35, Reasoning 35); still useful for topic coverage |
| 2016 to 2018 | Lower | Older pattern; useful for topic diversity and GA bank |
Start with 2024 and 2025 papers. Use 2022 and 2023-24 papers for additional volume. Use 2019 to 2021 papers for supplementary topic practice.
IBPS publishes official question papers on ibps.in under the "Previous Year Question Paper" section. Follow these steps:
Papers are released in Hindi and English. Download both if you wish to compare question phrasing across languages, or download only the language you will use in the exam.
Analysing the topic distribution across CRP PO/MT-VI to CRP PO/MT-XV (2016 to 2025) produces a definitive picture of what IBPS consistently tests. This is the most reliable guide for preparation prioritisation.
| Topic | Frequency (Out of 10 Cycles) | Average Questions per Shift |
| Reading Comprehension | 10 of 10 (100%) | 7 to 10 |
| Cloze Test | 10 of 10 (100%) | 5 to 7 |
| Para Jumbles | 10 of 10 (100%) | 3 to 5 |
| Error Spotting | 9 of 10 (90%) | 2 to 4 |
| Fill in the Blanks | 9 of 10 (90%) | 2 to 4 |
| Sentence Improvement | 8 of 10 (80%) | 2 to 3 |
| Synonyms and Antonyms | 7 of 10 (70%) | 1 to 3 |
| Word Rearrangement | 5 of 10 (50%) | 2 to 3 |
| Double Fillers | 4 of 10 (40%) | 2 to 3 |
| Match the Column | 3 of 10 (30%) | 2 to 3 |
Reading Comprehension, Cloze Test, and Para Jumbles have appeared in 100 percent of IBPS PO Prelims cycles analysed. These three topics alone often account for 15 to 22 of the 30 English questions. Mastering them is not optional; it is the baseline.
| Topic | Frequency (Out of 10 Cycles) | Average Questions per Shift |
| Data Interpretation (Tables, Graphs, Charts) | 10 of 10 (100%) | 10 to 15 |
| Simplification and Approximation | 10 of 10 (100%) | 5 to 7 |
| Number Series | 10 of 10 (100%) | 4 to 5 |
| Arithmetic (Percentage, Profit/Loss, SI/CI, TW, TSD) | 10 of 10 (100%) | 7 to 10 |
| Quadratic Equations | 8 of 10 (80%) | 3 to 5 |
| Average and Age Problems | 8 of 10 (80%) | 1 to 2 |
| Ratio and Proportion | 7 of 10 (70%) | 1 to 2 |
| Mixture and Alligation | 6 of 10 (60%) | 1 to 2 |
| Mensuration | 4 of 10 (40%) | 1 to 2 |
| Probability | 3 of 10 (30%) | 1 |
Data Interpretation, Simplification, Number Series, and Arithmetic have appeared in every single IBPS PO Prelims cycle. These four categories together account for 26 to 32 of the 35 QA questions in most shifts. Quadratic Equations has become a near-constant feature from 2019 onward.
| Topic | Frequency (Out of 10 Cycles) | Average Questions per Shift |
| Puzzles and Seating Arrangement | 10 of 10 (100%) | 15 to 20 |
| Syllogism | 10 of 10 (100%) | 3 to 5 |
| Inequalities | 10 of 10 (100%) | 3 to 5 |
| Coding-Decoding | 9 of 10 (90%) | 2 to 3 |
| Blood Relations | 9 of 10 (90%) | 2 to 3 |
| Alphanumeric Series | 9 of 10 (90%) | 2 to 3 |
| Direction Sense | 8 of 10 (80%) | 1 to 2 |
| Input-Output | 5 of 10 (50%) | 3 to 5 |
| Data Sufficiency | 4 of 10 (40%) | 2 to 3 |
| Ranking and Order | 4 of 10 (40%) | 1 to 2 |
Puzzles and Seating Arrangement, Syllogism, and Inequalities have appeared in every single IBPS PO Prelims cycle across 10 years. These three categories alone account for 21 to 30 of the 35 Reasoning questions in most shifts.
The frequency analysis above translates directly into preparation priorities. The following table maps the findings to action.
| Priority Level | Topics | Action Required |
| Non-negotiable | RC, Cloze Test, Para Jumbles (English); DI, Simplification, Number Series, Arithmetic (QA); Puzzles, Syllogism, Inequalities (Reasoning) | Master these before any other topic; test daily |
| High | Error Spotting, FIB, Sentence Improvement (English); Quadratic Equations (QA); Coding-Decoding, Blood Relations, Alphanumeric Series (Reasoning) | Cover in phase 1; test weekly |
| Medium | Synonyms/Antonyms, Word Rearrangement (English); Average, Ratio, Mixture (QA); Direction Sense, Input-Output (Reasoning) | Cover in phase 1; review if time permits |
| Lower | Match the Column, Double Fillers (English); Mensuration, Probability (QA); Data Sufficiency, Ranking (Reasoning) | Cover briefly; do not invest heavy time |
This table, derived from 10 years of PYQ analysis, tells candidates exactly where to invest preparation time to maximise marks per hour of study.
Solving PYQs without a strategy is less effective than solving fewer papers with full analysis. The following approach maximises the value of each paper.
Do not attempt a full PYQ before covering the high-priority topics listed above. Attempting a paper on topics you have not studied produces guessing-based answers that do not build skill. Use the IBPS PO Prelims Syllabus Tracker to confirm coverage before attempting the first full PYQ.
Set a timer for exactly 60 minutes with 20-minute per section splits. No pausing, no looking at notes, no switching sections early or late. The 20-minute sectional timer is the most important simulation element in IBPS PO Prelims practice. If you do not enforce it in PYQ practice, you do not get the timing benefit.
After time is up, score the paper using the official answer key. Record:
Then, for every incorrect answer, trace the error back to its cause: concept gap, calculation mistake, misread question, or negative mark from overconfident guessing.
After each PYQ, identify the 2 to 3 topics where the most marks were lost. Return to those topics for focused revision before attempting the next paper. This revision loop is what drives score improvement across successive PYQ attempts.
PYQs are finite. After exhausting the 2024 and 2025 papers, candidates need fresh material. The Aspirant Mitraa IBPS PO Prelims Test Series provides 400 tests, including topic-wise, subject-wise, and full mock tests. This ensures candidates never run out of practice material regardless of how far in advance they begin preparation.
| Time Before Exam | Minimum PYQs to Solve | Focus Years |
| 3 months or more | 20 to 30 full papers | 2024, 2025, then 2022, 2023-24 |
| 1 to 3 months | 15 to 20 full papers | 2024, 2025 first; 2022 if time permits |
| 3 to 4 weeks | 10 to 12 full papers | 2024 and 2025 exclusively |
| Final 2 weeks | 5 to 8 full papers | Most recent 2 years only |
At minimum, every candidate should solve at least two shift-wise papers from each of the 2024 and 2025 cycles before the IBPS PO Prelims 2026 exam.
Solving without a timer: A paper solved at leisure gives no time management benefit. Always enforce the 20-minute per section limit, regardless of whether the timer feels artificial.
Skipping difficult questions without reviewing them: If a question was left unattempted or answered incorrectly and you move to the next paper without understanding it, the knowledge gap persists. Every question not understood is a mark left on the table in the actual exam.
Using PYQs as the only practice tool: PYQs cover topics from previous years. Current affairs and recently introduced question formats are not in older papers. Supplement PYQs with fresh practice material from the IBPS PO Prelims Test Series to ensure complete coverage.
Not recording scores consistently: Score tracking across 10 to 20 papers reveals whether preparation is improving. Without tracking, a candidate has no objective view of their readiness level.
Where can I download official IBPS PO Prelims question papers for free? Official papers are published on ibps.in under the "Previous Year Question Paper" section after the answer key challenge window closes. These are free to access and download.
Are questions from IBPS PO Prelims PYQs repeated in the actual exam? IBPS does not reuse questions directly. However, question formats, topic combinations, and DI data structures closely follow established patterns. Solving PYQs builds familiarity with these formats, which speeds up solving in the actual exam.
How many shift-wise papers are available for each exam cycle? Typically 6 to 10 shift-wise papers per cycle, depending on the number of exam dates and shifts conducted. For a two-day Prelims with three shifts each day, six papers are available.
Should I solve the paper in Hindi or English? Solve in the language you will use in the actual exam. If you plan to attempt in English, practise exclusively in English. Language-switching between practice and exam creates unnecessary adjustment difficulty.
PYQ availability data and topic-wise frequency analysis on this page are based on official IBPS question papers released at ibps.in for CRP PO/MT-VI through CRP PO/MT-XV (2016 to 2025). The 2026 PYQ will be added to this page after the official release following the CRP PO/MT-XVI exam cycle.
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24 May 2026
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