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The IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I cutoff is among the most complex cutoff structures in Indian banking examinations. It operates across three independent stages - Preliminary Examination, Main Examination, and Final Allotment - and varies both state-wise and category-wise at each stage. A candidate who clears the Prelims cutoff in Rajasthan competes against a very different competitive landscape than one who cleared the same Prelims in Tamil Nadu. Understanding this layered complexity is essential for setting realistic preparation benchmarks and interpreting performance data from scorecards.
This page covers the complete IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I cutoff framework with authenticated data from the CRP RRBs XIV (2025) cycle, year-wise trends from 2022 to 2025, the factors that drive cutoff variation across states, and preparation targets for 2026.
For the complete examination guide, visit the IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I main page. For the exam pattern that shapes these scores, see the IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Exam Pattern page.
The Prelims cutoff is applied to the 80-mark Prelims score. It is released state-wise and category-wise along with the Prelims scorecard. Both a sectional cutoff (minimum marks in each section) and an overall cutoff apply. Candidates who clear both advance to Mains.
The Mains cutoff is applied to the 200-mark Mains score. State-wise, category-wise, and section-wise cutoffs all apply simultaneously. Candidates must clear sectional minimums in all five Mains sections AND the overall state-wise cutoff to be shortlisted for the interview. Since Mains is conducted in multiple shifts, marks are normalised before the cutoff is applied.
The final cutoff is based on the combined score of Mains (80% weightage) and Interview (20% weightage), expressed out of 100. This is the most meaningful cutoff for aspirants because it determines who actually gets selected. The highest final cutoff in the 2025 cycle was 55.08 out of 100 for Tamil Nadu (UR category).
Prelims marks are never counted toward the final merit. Clearing Prelims is a binary qualifying event. The score achieved in Prelims has no bearing on final allotment position.
The IBPS RRB PO Prelims 2025 was conducted in August 2025 across multiple shifts. The Prelims scorecard and cutoff were released on 24th December 2025.
Based on available scorecard data and official releases, the 2025 Prelims General category cutoffs across major states were approximately:
| State / RRB Region General/UR (Approx.) SC (Approx.) OBC (Approx.) | |||
| Haryana (Punjab Gramin Bank area) | 61.75 (highest) | 50 to 55 | 58 to 62 |
| Himachal Pradesh | 58 to 62 | 48 to 52 | 55 to 60 |
| Rajasthan | 55 to 60 | 45 to 50 | 52 to 57 |
| Uttar Pradesh | 53 to 58 | 43 to 48 | 50 to 55 |
| Bihar | 50 to 55 | 40 to 45 | 47 to 52 |
| Maharashtra | 52 to 57 | 42 to 47 | 49 to 54 |
| Karnataka | 50 to 55 | 40 to 45 | 47 to 52 |
| West Bengal | 50 to 55 | 40 to 45 | 47 to 52 |
| Telangana | 20.50 (lowest major state) | 15 to 20 | 18 to 23 |
| Assam / Northeast states | 30 to 42 | 25 to 35 | 28 to 40 |
| Tamil Nadu | 55 to 60 | 44 to 49 | 52 to 57 |
Source: Compiled from official IBPS scorecards and expert analysis of CRP RRBs XIV. The Haryana figure of 61.75 and Telangana figure of 20.50 are confirmed from official scorecard data. Other ranges represent compiled analysis.
The dramatic spread from 61.75 (Haryana) to 20.50 (Telangana) illustrates the scale of state-wise variation in IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Prelims cutoffs. This reflects the vacancy count per state, the quality and density of the candidate pool, and the normalisation of scores across shifts.
The Mains was conducted on 28th December 2025 (revised from the earlier date). The Mains scorecard and cutoff were released on 30th January 2026.
The Mains cutoff operates on two levels simultaneously:
| Section Marks General (Indicative Minimum) | ||
| Reasoning | 50 | 10 to 14 marks |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 50 | 10 to 14 marks |
| General Awareness | 40 | 8 to 12 marks |
| English/Hindi Language | 40 | 8 to 12 marks |
| Computer Knowledge | 20 | 4 to 6 marks |
These sectional minimums are low enough that a candidate who prepares all sections adequately will clear them comfortably. The decisive threshold is the overall Mains cutoff, which varies meaningfully across states.
Based on released scorecard data and expert analysis of CRP RRBs XIV:
| State General/UR (Approx.) OBC (Approx.) SC (Approx.) | |||
| Tamil Nadu / Puducherry | 130 to 140 (highest) | 120 to 130 | 110 to 120 |
| Kerala | 125 to 135 | 115 to 125 | 105 to 115 |
| Karnataka | 120 to 130 | 110 to 120 | 100 to 110 |
| Maharashtra | 115 to 125 | 105 to 115 | 95 to 105 |
| Rajasthan | 110 to 120 | 100 to 110 | 90 to 100 |
| Uttar Pradesh | 108 to 118 | 98 to 108 | 88 to 98 |
| Haryana | 115 to 125 | 105 to 115 | 95 to 105 |
| Bihar / Jharkhand | 100 to 112 | 90 to 102 | 80 to 92 |
| West Bengal | 110 to 120 | 100 to 110 | 90 to 100 |
| Northeast states | 80 to 105 | 70 to 95 | 65 to 88 |
| Telangana | 85 to 100 | 75 to 90 | 65 to 80 |
These are approximate ranges based on available scorecard analysis. Always verify from the official IBPS website for your state-specific and category-specific cutoff.
The Final Allotment cutoff is the combined Mains + Interview score expressed out of 100 (Mains at 80% weight, Interview at 20% weight).
Key confirmed data point from the 2025 cycle (CRP RRBs XIV):
This figure means a General/UR candidate in Tamil Nadu needed a combined normalised score of at least 55.08 out of 100 (Mains 80% + Interview 20%) to be provisionally allotted to an RRB in Tamil Nadu.
| Competition Level State Examples Final Cutoff Range (General/UR) | ||
| Very High | Tamil Nadu, Kerala | 50 to 55+ |
| High | Karnataka, Maharashtra, Haryana | 44 to 52 |
| Moderate | UP, Rajasthan, West Bengal | 38 to 48 |
| Lower | Bihar, Jharkhand, Northeast states | 30 to 42 |
The reserve list cutoffs are typically 2 to 5 marks below the main allotment cutoff for each state and category.
The 2022 Mains cutoff showed significant variation. States like Chhattisgarh recorded a Mains cutoff of approximately 103.89 (one of the highest historically) while other states had more moderate thresholds. The Prelims cutoff in 2022 ranged from approximately 29.25 (Tripura) to 59.75 (Himachal Pradesh) for the General category.
The Mains being conducted post-COVID with normalcy returning to examination participation contributed to moderately high cutoffs in competitive states.
The 2023 cycle saw the Final Result released on 1st January 2025. Prelims cutoffs for the General category ranged from approximately 30 to 62 across states. The high variance reflects the difference in vacancy availability and candidate density across states.
In 2023, Punjab's Mains cutoff was among the highest at approximately 99.81, while Tamil Nadu and Puducherry recorded comparatively lower scores at the Mains level. The final cutoff for the 2023 cycle was released along with the result.
The 2024 cycle produced Prelims cutoffs with Haryana again featuring high General category cutoffs. The overall competition intensified compared to 2023, reflected in higher cutoffs in traditionally competitive states (Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala).
As detailed above, the 2025 cycle recorded:
The Mains was unusually delayed to 28th December 2025 (from the originally planned October/November date), and the Mains cutoff was released on 30th January 2026.
The most direct driver of cutoff variation is vacancies relative to the applicant pool. A state with 500 vacancies and 1 lakh applicants faces much lower competition per seat than a state with 100 vacancies and 80,000 applicants.
Telangana's historically low Prelims cutoffs (including the 20.50 figure for 2025) reflect a combination of relatively few competitive candidates and specific vacancy distribution among the 2 Telangana-based RRBs.
States with deeper banking exam preparation cultures - Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra - consistently produce higher-scoring candidate pools, pushing cutoffs higher even when vacancy counts are comparable. These states have large numbers of coaching-prepared aspirants, creating a more competitive distribution at every score level.
IBPS RRB Prelims is conducted across multiple shifts. Marks are normalised to account for difficulty variation between shifts before the cutoff is applied. A candidate in a harder shift who scores 50 raw marks might receive a normalised score of 53, while a candidate in an easier shift with 50 raw marks might receive 47. Cutoffs are applied to normalised scores, not raw scores.
Each RRB is sponsored by a specific commercial bank (SBI, PNB, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Union Bank, etc.). The number of vacancies allocated to each RRB - and by extension to each state - determines the competition intensity within that state's pool.
An important strategic insight emerges from the multi-stage cutoff structure: clearing Prelims by a wide margin provides no advantage in Mains. Prelims marks are not carried forward. A candidate who scored 75 in Prelims and one who scored 55 are equally positioned at the Mains starting line, provided both cleared the cutoff.
This means the optimal strategy is to achieve a comfortable buffer above the Prelims cutoff (not the maximum possible score) and channel the bulk of preparation energy into Mains performance - particularly the General Awareness section (which differentiates candidates most) and the Reasoning and Quantitative Aptitude sections (which carry 50 marks each, the highest per-question value in Mains at 1.25 marks/question).
| State Competition Level Recommended Target | |
| Very High (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, Haryana) | 62 to 70 marks |
| High (Maharashtra, UP, Rajasthan, West Bengal) | 58 to 66 marks |
| Moderate (Bihar, Jharkhand, Himachal Pradesh) | 52 to 60 marks |
| Lower (Northeast states, Telangana) | 42 to 52 marks |
These targets provide a 5 to 10-mark buffer above historical cutoffs in each category, accounting for year-to-year cutoff variation.
| Competition Level General Target SC/ST Target | ||
| Very High (Tamil Nadu, Kerala) | 140 to 160 | 115 to 135 |
| High (Karnataka, Maharashtra, Haryana) | 128 to 148 | 105 to 122 |
| Moderate (UP, Rajasthan, WB) | 118 to 138 | 95 to 115 |
| Lower (Bihar, Northeast) | 105 to 125 | 85 to 102 |
For General/UR category candidates: targeting a final score of 50 to 58 provides coverage across most competitive states. For Tamil Nadu and Kerala specifically, 52+ is the minimum safe target.
The IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Prelims Test Series on Aspirant Mitraa provides full-length mock tests calibrated to actual IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I difficulty. Benchmark your consistent mock test scores against the state-specific Prelims cutoff target:
Track topic completion across both Prelims and Mains preparation using the IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Syllabus Tracker.
IBPS releases the official cutoff simultaneously with the scorecard at each stage. To check your cutoff:
The cutoff is also separately downloadable as a PDF at ibps.in for candidates to review all state and category combinations.
What was the highest IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I final cutoff in 2025? The highest final cutoff in the CRP RRBs XIV (2025) cycle was 55.08 out of 100 for Tamil Nadu, UR (General) category, released along with the final result.
Is the cutoff the same across all states? No. The cutoff is state-wise and category-wise at all three stages (Prelims, Mains, Final). Tamil Nadu and Kerala consistently produce the highest final cutoffs while northeastern states and Telangana tend to have lower cutoffs.
When are IBPS RRB cutoffs released? Prelims cutoff is released with the Prelims scorecard (typically within 3 to 4 weeks of Prelims result). Mains cutoff is released with the Mains scorecard (approximately 2 to 4 weeks after Mains result). Final cutoff is released with the Final Result.
Does clearing Prelims with a higher score give an advantage in Mains? No. Prelims marks are not carried forward. Every candidate who clears the Prelims cutoff starts Mains from the same position, regardless of their Prelims score.
Why was the Telangana Prelims cutoff only 20.50? Telangana's low cutoff reflects a combination of limited vacancies distributed across the two Telangana-based RRBs relative to the applicant pool structure in that state. Normalisation of marks across shifts also plays a role. It does not mean the examination was easier for Telangana candidates - it reflects the vacancy-to-competition dynamics in that state.
Stay updated with the latest news and notifications about IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Cutoff 2026 - Prelims, Mains, and Final Cutoff with State-wise Trend Analysis and other exams.
ExamUpdateAspirantMitraa
24 May 2026
ExamAnalysisAspirantMitraa
24 May 2026