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The IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I syllabus is the strategic map for every aspiring Assistant Manager in Regional Rural Banks. While IBPS does not publish a granular topic list in its official notification, it specifies the subject areas tested in each stage of the examination. This page provides the most complete and accurate topic-level breakdown based on the official notification framework and question paper patterns from recent IBPS RRB PO cycles including CRP RRBs XIV (2025).
The most important structural feature of the IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I syllabus is what is absent from the Prelims: English Language. Unlike IBPS PO and SBI PO where English is a mandatory Prelims section, IBPS RRB Prelims tests only Reasoning Ability and Numerical Ability. This makes the examination far more accessible for candidates whose strength lies in aptitude rather than English proficiency, and allows candidates to choose Hindi Language instead of English Language in the Mains examination.
For the complete examination overview, visit the IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I main page. Track your topic completion using the IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Syllabus Tracker.
| Stage Sections Total Marks Duration | |||
| Prelims | Reasoning Ability, Numerical Ability | 80 marks | 45 minutes |
| Mains | Reasoning, Quantitative Aptitude, General Awareness, English/Hindi Language, Computer Knowledge | 200 marks | 120 minutes |
| Interview | Rural banking, current affairs, HR questions | 100 marks | 15 to 25 minutes |
Prelims marks are not counted in the final merit. Mains (80%) + Interview (20%) determines final selection.
Reasoning Ability in IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Prelims tests logical thinking and analytical problem-solving at a moderate to moderately-high difficulty level. The section must be completed in exactly 20 minutes with no ability to transfer time to or from the Numerical Ability section.
Puzzles and Seating Arrangements are the most critical topic in the IBPS RRB PO Reasoning section. They consistently account for 50% to 65% of all Reasoning questions - approximately 20 to 26 questions from 4 to 5 sets per paper. The formats commonly appearing in IBPS RRB PO Prelims include:
IBPS RRB PO puzzle sets are moderately complex - harder than IBPS Clerk level but generally within a 4 to 5 minute solving time per set for candidates who have practised the systematic grid approach extensively.
Syllogisms present 2 to 3 categorical statements and 2 to 3 conclusions. Candidates determine which conclusions follow logically. Both definite-conclusion and possibility-type syllogism questions appear in IBPS RRB PO papers. Understanding the distinction between "definitely follows" and "possibly follows" is essential for this topic.
Inequalities appear in two formats:
Coding-Decoding in IBPS RRB PO predominantly uses the 3-word coded sentence format where the code for each word is determined by comparing multiple coded sentences.
Blood Relations tests family relationship determination. Both coded formats (A@B means A is the father of B) and statement-based formats appear.
Direction and Distance requires tracking sequential movements and computing final direction or straight-line distance using the Pythagorean theorem for diagonal paths.
Alphanumeric Series presents a mixed sequence of letters, numbers, and symbols with questions about position, count, and pattern.
Input-Output presents a machine that processes a row of words and numbers through defined rearrangement steps across multiple passes.
Data Sufficiency presents a question with two statements, asking whether the statements individually or together are sufficient to answer the question.
Preparation approach for Reasoning: Puzzles are non-negotiable. A candidate who cannot solve 3 puzzle sets in 14 minutes within the 20-minute Reasoning window will not achieve a competitive Reasoning score. Practice one puzzle format at a time until that format can be solved consistently within 4 to 5 minutes, then layer complexity. Non-puzzle topics (Syllogisms, Inequalities, Blood Relations, Directions) provide the remaining 15 to 20 questions and should be mastered to the point of automatic application of rules.
Numerical Ability in IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Prelims tests data interpretation, arithmetic competence, and numerical reasoning. With 25 minutes for 40 questions (average 37.5 seconds per question), calculation speed is as important as conceptual clarity. This section receives 5 more minutes than the Reasoning section - use this allocation advantage by completing Simplification/Number Series quickly and investing the remaining time in DI sets.
Data Interpretation (DI) is consistently the highest-weightage topic, contributing 15 to 20 questions from 3 to 4 DI sets per paper.
Common DI formats in IBPS RRB PO Prelims:
Number Series in IBPS RRB PO Prelims tests pattern recognition. One set of 5 questions typically appears per paper. Common patterns:
Simplification and Approximation questions test BODMAS arithmetic with fractions, percentages, surds, and mixed operations. These are the fastest-scoring questions in the section for prepared candidates - typically solvable in 15 to 20 seconds each.
Quadratic Equations present two quadratic expressions. Roots are found for each equation and compared (greater than, less than, equal, or cannot be determined).
Arithmetic Topics appearing individually (not within DI sets) include:
| Topic Key Subtopics | |
| Percentage | Percentage change, successive percentage changes, percentage errors |
| Profit and Loss | Cost price, selling price, discount, markup, trade transactions |
| Simple and Compound Interest | SI and CI formulae, instalment problems, effective rate calculations |
| Ratio and Proportion | Direct and inverse proportion, alligation and mixture |
| Average | Simple and weighted averages, change with additions or removals |
| Time and Work | Individual rates, combined work, pipes and cisterns |
| Time, Speed, and Distance | Relative speed, train crossing, boats and streams |
| Mixtures and Alligations | Mixing two liquids, replacement of solutions |
| Partnership | Profit sharing based on investment ratio and time |
Preparation approach for Numerical Ability: DI practice must be daily and timed. The 25-minute window for 40 questions requires completing DI sets efficiently without sacrificing accuracy. Simplification should be automated through repeated practice until solutions come in under 20 seconds. Arithmetic topics must be conceptually solid to handle the algebraic setup questions that IBPS RRB PO uses (particularly in compound interest and time-work application problems).
Mains Reasoning follows the same topic structure as Prelims but at significantly higher complexity. Each question carries 1.25 marks (50 marks for 40 questions). Multi-variable complex puzzles with 6 to 8 conditions, double-sided arrangements, and critical reasoning questions are the norm at Mains level.
Key additional topics that appear more prominently at Mains level:
Mains Quantitative Aptitude covers all Prelims topics at higher difficulty plus additional formats:
This section is absent from Prelims and is the most differentiating section in the Mains examination. It specifically includes "special reference to banking industry" - meaning banking and financial awareness is not supplementary but central.
| Sub-topic Key Coverage Areas | |
| Current Affairs (6 months) | National events, government schemes, summits, awards, appointments, international news |
| Banking Awareness | RBI structure and functions, monetary policy (repo rate, reverse repo, CRR, SLR), MPC decisions |
| Rural Banking | NABARD role and functions, RRBs overview, agricultural credit, Kisan Credit Cards |
| Financial Inclusion | PM Jan Dhan Yojana, PM Fasal Bima Yojana, MGNREGS banking, Aadhaar-linked benefits |
| Government Schemes | PM Kisan, Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana, PM Mudra Yojana |
| Banking Terms | NPA, SARFAESI Act, IBC, CIBIL, credit rating, priority sector lending |
| International Finance | IMF, World Bank, ADB, NABARD bonds, forex market |
| Static Banking | Negotiable instruments, types of accounts, types of banks, bank mergers |
| RRB-Specific Knowledge | Sponsoring bank system, Central Government-State-Sponsor ownership, NABARD supervision |
Rural banking and NABARD-related knowledge is more prominent in IBPS RRB GK than in commercial bank examinations. Questions about NABARD's functions, agricultural credit targets, Kisan Credit Cards, and RRB-specific regulations appear regularly. Candidates preparing specifically for IBPS RRB should dedicate additional preparation time to these rural banking topics that do not typically appear in IBPS PO or SBI PO preparations.
English Language option:
Hindi Language option (Rajbhasha):
The Hindi Language option is a genuinely distinct advantage of IBPS RRB over IBPS PO and SBI PO (where English is mandatory). Candidates from Hindi-medium educational backgrounds or those stronger in Hindi than English should seriously consider the Hindi Language option - it tests the same number of marks (40) with familiar language content rather than English Language sections where vocabulary and grammar nuances may be challenging.
The Computer Knowledge section carries only 20 marks (0.5 marks per question) but is 40 questions - making it low-stakes per question but collectively meaningful.
| Topic Specific Coverage | |
| Hardware | CPU components, input/output devices, storage (RAM, ROM, HDD, SSD, USB) |
| Software | System vs application software, operating system types, drivers |
| Networking | LAN, WAN, MAN, internet protocols, IP address, routers, modems |
| Internet | Browser, search engine, email protocols (SMTP, POP, IMAP), URL structure, HTTP/HTTPS |
| MS Office | Word (formatting, mail merge), Excel (formulas, charts), PowerPoint (slide design) |
| Cybersecurity | Malware types, phishing, firewall, antivirus, encryption, digital signatures |
| Database | DBMS, SQL basics, data types, ERD |
| Number Systems | Binary, decimal, octal, hexadecimal - conversions and arithmetic |
| Computer Abbreviations | Comprehensive list of IT abbreviations tested in banking exams |
With 15 minutes for 40 questions (22 seconds per question), Computer Knowledge requires almost automatic recall of basic concepts. This section rewards candidates who have specifically prepared from a Banking Exams Computer Knowledge book, where each topic is covered at the appropriate depth and acronyms are consolidated.
Preparation priority: Computer Knowledge is low per-question value (0.5 marks) but easy to score in with 2 to 3 weeks of focused preparation. It should not be neglected because the sectional cutoff must be cleared independently, and leaving Computer Knowledge largely unattempted risks failing the section's minimum mark threshold.
While there is no formal "syllabus" for the interview, the IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I interview panels consistently cover:
Preparing specifically for the rural banking angle - NABARD's role, agricultural credit, financial inclusion metrics, RRB history - distinguishes IBPS RRB interview preparation from the generic banking awareness prepared for commercial bank interviews.
Based on consistent question frequency across CRP RRBs XII, XIII, and XIV papers:
Highest Priority (Prelims):
Highest Priority (Mains):
Medium Priority:
The IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Prelims Test Series on Aspirant Mitraa is structured around the two-section Prelims syllabus with topic-wise tests for each Puzzle format and each DI type, section-wise timed tests with 20-minute Reasoning and 25-minute Numerical Ability windows, and full-length mocks replicating the 80-question, 45-minute paper.
Is English Language tested in IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Prelims? No. The Prelims has only two sections: Reasoning Ability and Numerical Ability. English Language (or Hindi Language) is tested only in the Mains examination.
Can I choose Hindi Language instead of English in IBPS RRB Mains? Yes. The Language section in Mains allows candidates to choose between English Language and Hindi Language. The marks allocation and time are the same for both. Hindi Language is a genuine full option, not a simplified version.
Is Computer Knowledge tested in IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I? Yes. Computer Knowledge is a section in the Mains examination carrying 40 questions for 20 marks in a 15-minute window. It covers hardware, software, networking, internet basics, MS Office, cybersecurity, and number systems.
How is IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I different from IBPS PO in terms of syllabus? Key differences: IBPS RRB Prelims has no English Language section; IBPS PO Prelims does. IBPS RRB Mains has a Computer Knowledge section; post-2025 IBPS PO Mains does not. IBPS RRB Mains General Awareness has a specific rural banking and NABARD focus. IBPS RRB candidates can choose Hindi Language instead of English Language in Mains.
How many months of current affairs are needed for IBPS RRB Mains GK? The General Awareness section covers the last 6 months before the Mains exam date. For a Mains scheduled in October 2026, the relevant period is approximately April to October 2026. Rural banking, agricultural schemes, and NABARD-related current affairs should receive special attention alongside standard banking and national current affairs.
Stay updated with the latest news and notifications about IBPS RRB Officer Scale-I Syllabus 2026 - Complete Prelims and Mains Topic-wise Guide and other exams.
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