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RRB NTPC previous year question papers (PYQs) are among the most reliable preparation resources available because they are the actual papers used in real exam conditions. No study material, however well-designed, replicates the specific difficulty calibration, question format, and topic selection that appears in an actual RRB NTPC paper. Ten years of PYQ analysis (2016 to 2025) reveals consistent patterns: certain topics appear in nearly every shift, the General Awareness section has demonstrable question repetition from year to year, and the Mathematics difficulty has remained at a predictable Class 10 level across all cycles.
This page covers the year-wise availability of official RRB NTPC PYQs, how to download them from authorised sources, the 10-year topic frequency analysis for all three sections (General Awareness, Mathematics, Reasoning), how to use PYQs effectively in a structured preparation plan, and a recommended solving schedule for the 2026 cycle.
General Awareness is the most high-leverage section in RRB NTPC CBT 1, carrying 40 marks. It is also the section with the highest question repetition rate across cycles. Analysis of RRB NTPC papers from 2016 to 2025 shows that a significant proportion of GA questions in every cycle were either directly repeated from previous years or reformulated from previously tested facts. This is a structural feature of how GA question banks are maintained across government exams.
This makes GA PYQ practice different from any other exam: it is not just about understanding formats or difficulty levels; it is about covering a bank of facts that demonstrably recur in actual exams.
| Benefit Mathematics and Reasoning General Awareness | ||
| Difficulty calibration | High | High |
| Format familiarity | High | Moderate |
| Question repetition rate | Low (formats repeat, not questions) | High (specific facts repeat) |
| Coverage of exam-tested topics | High | Very High |
| Currency of preparation | Need recent papers for updated patterns | Even older papers build a reusable GA bank |
The Railway Recruitment Board releases official question papers on regional RRB websites after the final answer key is published. Papers are available in English and Hindi.
| Exam Cycle CBT 1 Dates Level Status | |||
| CEN 06/2025 (2026) | March 16-27, 2026 | Graduate | Official paper release expected post-result |
| CEN 07/2025 (2026) | May 7 to June 21, 2026 | UG | Official paper release expected post-result |
| CEN 05/2024 (2025) | June 5-24, 2025 (CBT 1) | Graduate | Available |
| CEN 06/2024 (2025) | August 7 - September 9, 2025 (CBT 1) | UG | Available |
| CEN 01/2019 (2021) | January to July 2021 (7 phases) | Graduate and UG | Available (Phase-wise papers) |
| CEN 03/2019 (2020) | December 2020 | Graduate | Available |
| CEN 01/2016 (2016) | March to April 2016 | Graduate and UG | Available |
For practical preparation purposes, the most relevant papers are from the 2025 (CEN 05/2024 and 06/2024) and 2021 (CEN 01/2019) cycles, as they reflect the most current exam difficulty and pattern.
Official question papers are released on regional RRB websites alongside or shortly after the final answer key publication. They are available free of charge.
| Step Action | |
| 1 | Identify the regional RRB website for the zone whose papers you want |
| 2 | Visit the official website (e.g., rrbcdg.gov.in, rrbpryj.gov.in) |
| 3 | Navigate to the "Answer Key" or "Previous Year Papers" section |
| 4 | Find the CEN-specific question paper download link |
| 5 | Papers are typically released shift-wise as PDFs |
| 6 | Download all available shifts for maximum variety |
Additionally, the official question paper for each shift can be downloaded from the candidate login portal using Registration Number and password after the exam, during the response viewing window.
After each CBT exam, RRB activates a response viewing window that allows candidates to see their attempted responses, the correct answers, and their question papers. For the Graduate CBT 1 2026, the provisional answer key was released on April 6, 2026, with the objection window closing April 12, 2026. Candidates could download their question papers during this window through their regional RRB login.
For UG CBT 1 2026 candidates, the answer key and paper download window will be activated after the exam concludes in June 2026.
Analysing the question distribution across 10 years of RRB NTPC CBT 1 papers produces the most reliable preparation priority map available.
| Topic Frequency (Out of 10 Cycles) Average Questions per Shift Priority | |||
| Current Affairs (national and international) | 10/10 (100%) | 12 to 16 | Non-negotiable |
| Indian History (Ancient, Medieval, Modern) | 10/10 (100%) | 5 to 7 | Non-negotiable |
| Indian Polity and Constitution | 10/10 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Indian and World Geography | 10/10 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) | 10/10 (100%) | 5 to 8 | Very High |
| Indian Economy and Banking | 10/10 (100%) | 2 to 4 | High |
| Indian Railways specific facts | 9/10 (90%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| Sports (recent achievements) | 9/10 (90%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| Static GK (Awards, Important Days) | 9/10 (90%) | 2 to 4 | High |
| Computer and Technology | 7/10 (70%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
| Culture and Heritage | 6/10 (60%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
Current Affairs and Indian History together account for approximately 45 to 55 percent of the GA section in every cycle. No GA topic below "Medium" priority has ever contributed more than 2 questions per shift across 10 years of analysis.
| Topic Frequency (Out of 10 Cycles) Average Questions per Shift Priority | |||
| Arithmetic (Percentage, P/L, SI/CI, TW, TSD, Ratio, Average) | 10/10 (100%) | 15 to 20 | Non-negotiable |
| Number System and Simplification | 10/10 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Geometry and Mensuration | 10/10 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Basic Data Interpretation (Tables and Graphs) | 8/10 (80%) | 2 to 4 | High |
| Algebra (Linear Equations, Quadratic) | 8/10 (80%) | 1 to 3 | High |
| Trigonometry (Ratios, Heights and Distances) | 7/10 (70%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
| Statistics (Mean, Median, Mode) | 6/10 (60%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
| Partnership | 5/10 (50%) | 1 | Lower |
Arithmetic accounts for 50 to 65 percent of the Mathematics section in every cycle across 10 years. This consistency makes it the most important Mathematics preparation area by a significant margin.
| Topic Frequency (Out of 10 Cycles) Average Questions per Shift Priority | |||
| Number and Alphabetical Series | 10/10 (100%) | 5 to 8 | Non-negotiable |
| Analogy (Word, Number, Letter) | 10/10 (100%) | 4 to 6 | Non-negotiable |
| Coding-Decoding | 10/10 (100%) | 3 to 5 | Very High |
| Classification (Odd One Out) | 10/10 (100%) | 3 to 4 | Very High |
| Non-verbal (Mirror, Paper Folding, Embedded) | 10/10 (100%) | 4 to 6 | Very High |
| Syllogism | 9/10 (90%) | 2 to 3 | High |
| Blood Relations | 8/10 (80%) | 1 to 2 | High |
| Direction Sense | 8/10 (80%) | 1 to 2 | High |
| Venn Diagrams | 7/10 (70%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
| Mathematical Operations | 7/10 (70%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
| Statement and Conclusion | 6/10 (60%) | 1 to 2 | Medium |
| Data Sufficiency | 5/10 (50%) | 1 | Lower |
Series, Analogy, Coding-Decoding, Classification, and Non-verbal Reasoning have all appeared in 100 percent of the 10 cycles analysed. Together, they account for 60 to 80 percent of the Reasoning section across all years.
Not all years carry equal preparation weight. The table below rates relevance for the 2026 exam.
| Year/Cycle Relevance for 2026 Reason | ||
| 2025 (CEN 05/2024 and 06/2024) | Very High | Most recent; closest in difficulty and pattern |
| 2021 (CEN 01/2019, 7 phases) | High | Large volume of papers; covers wide topic range |
| 2019 (CEN 03/2019) | High | Recent and reliable difficulty benchmark |
| 2016 (CEN 01/2016) | Medium | Older pattern; GA topics still useful for history and polity |
Begin with 2025 papers. Move to 2021 Phase-wise papers for volume. Use 2019 and 2016 papers for GA topic coverage even if the format has evolved.
Attempting PYQs before completing the syllabus produces guessing-based answers. Track your syllabus coverage using the RRB NTPC Syllabus Tracker and begin full PYQ papers only after 80 to 90 percent of the syllabus is covered.
Set a 90-minute timer and attempt the full 100-question paper without referring to notes or pausing. The 90-minute uninterrupted simulation is what builds timing skill. A paper attempted in pieces or without a timer provides only topic coverage benefit, not the timing benefit.
The RRB NTPC CBT 1 negative marking of 0.33 marks per wrong answer is stricter than many candidates realise. After the paper, calculate your raw score: (correct answers x 1) minus (wrong answers x 0.33). Track this number across papers to see whether your accuracy rate is improving.
After scoring, review every question answered incorrectly. For GA questions, look up the correct fact and add it to your revision notes. For Maths and Reasoning errors, identify whether the issue was a concept gap, a formula error, or a careless mistake. Each type requires a different corrective action.
This is unique to GA and represents one of the highest-value activities in RRB NTPC preparation. As you review GA answers from PYQs, compile the correct facts into a running revision document organised by topic (History, Polity, Science, etc.). This fact bank, built from actual exam questions, is one of the most reliable revision resources available.
Record your score for every PYQ attempt: GA marks, Maths marks, Reasoning marks, and total. Plotting these across 10 to 15 papers reveals whether you are improving and which section is most in need of focused work.
For candidates with exam dates in June 2026, the following schedule is recommended.
| Time Before Exam PYQs to Solve Focus | ||
| 4 or more weeks | 15 to 20 full papers | 2025 first, then 2021 Phase-wise |
| 2 to 4 weeks | 10 to 15 full papers | 2025 and recent 2021 phases |
| 1 to 2 weeks | 6 to 10 full papers | Most recent 2 years only |
| Final 7 days | 4 to 6 papers | 2025 only; focus on GA answer review |
Pair PYQ practice with full mock tests from the RRB NTPC Tier 1 Test Series. PYQs calibrate real exam difficulty; mock tests provide volume, fresh content including recent current affairs, and the ability to track improvement systematically across 400 tests.
| Aspect PYQ Mock Test | ||
| Difficulty authenticity | 100% real | Approximation |
| GA topic coverage | Historical; may miss very recent events | Current including latest affairs |
| Volume available | Limited (finite papers) | Large (400 tests in series) |
| Normalisation benchmark | Directly tied to official cutoffs | Not applicable |
| Question repetition insight | High value for GA | Limited |
| Score tracking continuity | Disrupted by varying paper difficulty | Consistent format |
| Availability | Free from official RRB sites | Available via test series |
The optimal strategy is to use PYQs and mock tests in combination: PYQs for difficulty calibration and GA fact building, mock tests for volume and recent content.
Solving without a timer: Without the 90-minute constraint, the paper does not build speed or section management skills. Always enforce the timer strictly.
Skipping GA review: GA errors from PYQs are the most valuable learning inputs. Each wrong GA answer is a fact that has appeared in a real exam and may appear again. Skipping the review of these errors means missing one of the highest-value learning opportunities.
Using only the most recent year's papers: A single year of papers (even if it is the most recent) gives too narrow a view of topic coverage. The full benefit of PYQ analysis comes from seeing which topics appear consistently across multiple cycles.
Not calculating the 0.33 penalty: Many candidates assess PYQ performance based on questions correct rather than actual marks. Always calculate the actual score with the 0.33 deduction applied.
Treating PYQs as a substitute for current affairs: PYQs cover events up to their exam year. For an exam in June 2026, current affairs from the past 6 to 12 months are critical and cannot come from any PYQ. Supplement PYQ preparation with consistent current affairs coverage.
Where can I download official RRB NTPC question papers for free? Official papers are published on regional RRB websites after the final answer key is released for each cycle. They are available at no cost. All 21 RRB zone websites carry papers for their respective exams.
Do questions repeat in RRB NTPC? Exact question repetition is uncommon in Mathematics and Reasoning. In General Awareness, specific facts (historical dates, constitutional articles, science fundamentals, and static GK) recur regularly across cycles. Solving PYQs builds familiarity with this recurring fact bank.
How many shift-wise papers are available for each cycle? A typical two-week exam window with three shifts daily produces 18 to 30 individual shift papers. The 2021 cycle (7 phases over 6 months) produced over 100 individual shift papers, making it the largest single source of RRB NTPC PYQs.
Should I solve Graduate-level PYQs for UG-level preparation? Yes, with the understanding that Graduate-level papers are slightly more difficult. Practising on Graduate-level papers raises the difficulty ceiling, making UG-level papers feel comparatively easier. This is beneficial for candidates targeting high scores.
PYQ availability data and topic-wise frequency analysis are based on official question papers from RRB NTPC CEN 01/2016, CEN 03/2019, CEN 01/2019 (2021 cycle), CEN 03/2019, CEN 05/2024, and CEN 06/2024 published on regional RRB websites. Topic frequency data is derived from analysis of official question papers across all available phases and shifts.
Stay updated with the latest news and notifications about RRB NTPC PYQ 2026: Previous Year Question Papers CBT 1 and CBT 2 with Answer Keys and other exams.
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