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RBI Grade B previous year question papers (PYQs) are the most reliable preparation resource for this examination, not only because they calibrate the authentic difficulty standard but also because the RBI draws repeatedly from a finite pool of banking knowledge, economic policy, and financial regulation topics. GA questions on RBI functions, monetary policy framework, Basel norms, and payment systems have appeared in multiple cycles because these are the core knowledge areas tested by the central bank for its own officers.
This page covers year-wise PYQ availability for both Phase 1 and Phase 2, topic frequency analysis across multiple cycles, the unique value of Phase 2 PYQs for descriptive writing practice, an effective usage strategy, and the recommended PYQ solving schedule for the June 13-14, 2026 Phase 1 exam.
The value of PYQs for RBI Grade B is higher than for almost any other banking exam because of two structural features unique to this examination.
Feature 1: The GA section tests a finite, defined knowledge domain. Unlike general current affairs that change daily, the RBI-specific GA topics (RBI Act provisions, monetary policy framework, Basel III norms, NBFC regulations, payment system architecture) form a stable, recurring question pool. Questions on the same concepts appear across multiple years, sometimes with different phrasing. A candidate who has solved 5 to 8 years of Phase 1 GA PYQs has covered the majority of the conceptual territory the RBI tests repeatedly.
Feature 2: Phase 2 descriptive papers test analytical writing on recurring topics. ESI essay questions and Finance and Management descriptive questions are asked on themes that repeat because they are perennial policy issues (financial inclusion, NPA resolution, monetary policy transmission, sustainable finance). Phase 2 PYQs from previous years directly indicate what essay and analytical writing topics are likely to appear in future cycles.
| Benefit Phase 1 PYQ Phase 2 PYQ | ||
| Authentic difficulty calibration | Very High | Very High |
| GA topic repetition | Very High (banking knowledge) | Not applicable |
| ESI/FM topic repetition | Not applicable | High |
| English writing practice | Not applicable | Very High |
| Official difficulty standard | 100% authentic | 100% authentic |
| Sectional timing simulation | Critical (25+25+25+45 min) | Critical (90+90+90 min) |
| Cycle Year Availability | ||
| 2025 | 2025 | Phase 1 papers released post-result; Phase 2 accessible via login |
| 2024 | 2024 | Available |
| 2023 | 2023 | Available |
| 2022 | 2022 | Available |
| 2021 | 2021 | Available |
| 2019 | 2019 | Available |
| 2018 | 2018 | Available |
Unlike SSC or IBPS exams where papers are released on official websites immediately after the result, RBI Grade B papers are harder to obtain officially. RBI does not have a dedicated PYQ section on rbi.org.in. Papers are primarily available through:
For the 2025 Phase 1, the exam was conducted in a single date/shift per stream, making it a single paper per stream. This is different from IBPS or SSC exams that conduct hundreds of shifts across multiple days.
The GA section is where PYQ analysis provides the highest dividend because the same conceptual territory is tested repeatedly.
Banking and Financial Awareness (consistently 45-55 questions per shift):
| Topic Frequency (7 cycles) Average Questions Priority | |||
| RBI Monetary Policy (repo rate, MPC, inflation targeting) | 7/7 (100%) | 6 to 9 | Non-negotiable |
| Banking Regulation (NPA, PCA, Basel III, CRAR) | 7/7 (100%) | 5 to 8 | Non-negotiable |
| Payment Systems (RTGS, NEFT, UPI, CBDC, e-Rupee) | 7/7 (100%) | 4 to 7 | Non-negotiable |
| Financial Inclusion (Jan Dhan, MUDRA, PSL norms) | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Non-negotiable |
| RBI Functions and Acts (RBI Act 1934, BR Act 1949) | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Capital Markets (SEBI, primary/secondary market) | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| External Sector (forex reserves, BOP, FEMA, ECB) | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Government Finance (Union Budget, fiscal deficit, GST) | 6/7 (86%) | 3 to 4 | High |
| International Organisations (IMF, World Bank, BIS, FSB) | 6/7 (86%) | 2 to 4 | High |
| Fintech and Digital Banking | 5/7 (71%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| RBI Publications (Annual Report, FSR content) | 5/7 (71%) | 2 to 4 | High |
Current Affairs (consistently 15-25 questions per shift):
| Topic Frequency Priority | ||
| Banking sector appointments | 7/7 (100%) | Very High |
| RBI regulatory actions and circulars | 7/7 (100%) | Very High |
| Government economic policy decisions | 6/7 (86%) | High |
| National and international economic events | 6/7 (86%) | High |
| Recent financial statistics (GDP, CPI, IIP) | 5/7 (71%) | High |
Static GK (consistently 10-15 questions per shift):
| Topic Frequency Priority | ||
| Headquarters of financial organisations | 6/7 (86%) | High |
| Historical banking/economic events | 5/7 (71%) | Medium |
| Constitutional provisions related to finance | 4/7 (57%) | Medium |
Critical PYQ insight for GA: The same questions in different phrasing appear across cycles. Examples of recurring knowledge areas:
Building a master revision sheet from GA PYQ wrong answers is one of the most valuable preparation activities for RBI Grade B.
| Topic Frequency (7 cycles) Average Questions Priority | |||
| Puzzles and Seating Arrangement (4-5 sets) | 7/7 (100%) | 22 to 28 | Non-negotiable |
| Syllogism | 7/7 (100%) | 4 to 5 | Non-negotiable |
| Inequalities (Coded) | 7/7 (100%) | 4 to 5 | Non-negotiable |
| Coding-Decoding | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Input-Output | 6/7 (86%) | 4 to 5 | Very High |
| Data Sufficiency | 6/7 (86%) | 3 to 4 | High |
| Blood Relations | 6/7 (86%) | 3 to 4 | High |
| Alphanumeric Series | 6/7 (86%) | 3 to 4 | High |
| Direction Sense | 5/7 (71%) | 2 to 3 | Medium |
| Critical Reasoning | 5/7 (71%) | 3 to 5 | Medium |
Puzzles and Seating Arrangement dominate Reasoning in every RBI Grade B cycle. The key PYQ insight is that RBI consistently uses complex puzzle types: multi-variable floors (5-6 people, 2-3 attributes each), circular arrangements with conditions, and box/month-year scheduling hybrids. Practising PYQ puzzle sets specifically is the highest-return Reasoning preparation activity.
| Topic Frequency (7 cycles) Average Questions Priority | |||
| Data Interpretation (2-3 sets, 15-20 questions) | 7/7 (100%) | 15 to 20 | Non-negotiable |
| Number Series | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Quadratic Equations | 7/7 (100%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| Simplification/Approximation | 6/7 (86%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| Arithmetic (Percentage, P/L, Ratio, Average) | 6/7 (86%) | 4 to 7 | High |
| Probability | 3/7 (43%) | 1 to 2 | Lower |
| Mensuration | 2/7 (29%) | 1 | Lower |
DI has been non-negotiable in every cycle. The DI sets in RBI Grade B PYQs involve:
Solving all available DI sets from Phase 1 PYQs (2018-2025) is the single most impactful QA preparation activity.
| Topic Frequency (7 cycles) Average Questions Priority | |||
| Reading Comprehension (2 passages) | 7/7 (100%) | 8 to 10 | Non-negotiable |
| Cloze Test | 7/7 (100%) | 4 to 6 | Non-negotiable |
| Fill in the Blanks (Double Fillers) | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Non-negotiable |
| Para Jumbles | 7/7 (100%) | 3 to 4 | Very High |
| Error Spotting | 6/7 (86%) | 3 to 4 | Very High |
| Vocabulary (Synonyms, Antonyms) | 6/7 (86%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| Sentence Improvement | 5/7 (71%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| Para/Sentence Completion | 3/7 (43%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
The RC passages in RBI Grade B Phase 1 PYQs are consistently on economic or banking topics: monetary policy, financial stability, emerging market risks, climate finance, digital banking regulation. Building familiarity with these topic areas through reading makes RC comprehension faster and inference questions more intuitive.
Phase 2 PYQs are exceptionally valuable for ESI and English Writing Skills preparation because:
Recurring essay/analytical themes:
Recurring objective question areas:
Finance (recurring):
Management (recurring):
Unlike other banking exams where PYQ practice without timing is somewhat useful, RBI Grade B Phase 1 must always be practised under exact sectional timing (GA: 25 min, English: 25 min, QA: 25 min, Reasoning: 45 min). The sectional time limit is the primary challenge. Paper quality does not replicate this constraint unless you enforce it yourself.
After each Phase 1 PYQ attempt, review every GA question (correct and incorrect). For wrong answers, write down the correct fact in a topic-organised document. For correct answers, reinforce the concept briefly. Over 5 to 8 years of PYQs, this knowledge bank covers the core RBI/banking fact pool the examiner draws from.
For each Phase 2 subject area (ESI, English Writing Skills, Finance and Management), practise one essay, one precis, and one analytical question per week from PYQs. Time each activity as in the actual exam.
After each PYQ attempt, record section-wise scores separately. GA score improvement is the primary indicator of preparation quality. If GA score stagnates across papers, the current preparation approach (likely insufficient banking-specific reading) needs to change.
| Time Remaining Phase 1 PYQs Phase 2 PYQs Focus | |||
| 3 or more weeks | 5 to 7 full Phase 1 papers | 2 to 3 full Phase 2 practice sets | 2025 and 2024 papers first |
| 2 weeks | 4 to 5 Phase 1 papers | Weekly descriptive practice | 2024 and 2023 papers |
| 1 week | 2 to 3 Phase 1 papers | One ESI essay daily | 2025 papers only |
| Final 3 days | 1 Phase 1 revision | Review Phase 2 ESI notes | Light revision; no new papers |
Where can I find RBI Grade B previous year papers? Official papers are not always released on rbi.org.in. Memory-based papers compiled from candidate feedback are available on education platforms. Phase 1 papers from 2019-2025 are widely available. Phase 2 question papers (descriptive prompts) are available from 2018 onwards.
Do questions repeat in RBI Grade B? Exact questions rarely repeat in Phase 1 objective sections. However, the same banking knowledge and economic policy concepts appear repeatedly in different phrasing — especially RBI functions, monetary policy, NPA norms, and payment systems. In Phase 2 descriptive papers, essay themes repeat often.
Is solving Phase 2 PYQs important if I have not cleared Phase 1 yet? Yes. Phase 2 preparation (especially descriptive writing) requires months of practice. The gap between Phase 1 (June 13) and Phase 2 (July 25) is only 42 days. Candidates who begin Phase 2 preparation only after Phase 1 results face a severe time constraint.
How many Phase 1 PYQs should I solve before the June 2026 exam? Solve 5 to 8 complete Phase 1 papers (2018-2025) under sectional timing conditions. Prioritise 2024 and 2025 papers for the most current difficulty calibration.