
Complete Reasoning Mock Test for IBPS, SBI & RRB PO 2026 helps candidates master key topics like puzzles, syllogisms, blood relations, and seating arrangements. It follows real exam patterns with easy-to-difficult questions and focuses on the “accuracy vs speed” strategy.
Learn smart techniques like “miscellaneous first,” diagram-based solving, and logical elimination. This improves problem-solving skills, reduces mistakes, and boosts overall reasoning performance for upcoming PO exams.
The Reasoning Ability section is often the make-or-break component of Banking and Insurance exams. Our 2026 Mock Test is designed to simulate the exact environment of IBPS, SBI, and RRB PO exams.
It features a curated mix of easy, moderate, and difficult questions, ranging from quick syllogisms to time-intensive floor and box puzzles. This test helps candidates gauge their real-time understanding and identify gaps in logical elimination.
In the 2026 exam cycle, the "Accuracy vs. Speed" trade-off remains the biggest challenge.
The First Round: Focus on miscellaneous questions (Syllogisms, Direction Sense, Inequality) where accuracy is typically 90%+.
The Second Round: Approach puzzles with high confidence.
The Golden Rule: If a puzzle doesn't click in the first 60 seconds, mark for review and skip. Never let one complex arrangement ruin your entire sectional timing.
Here are the types of questions that are asked in Bank exams:
Blood relation puzzles in PO exams now involve multiple generations and marital constraints.
The Concept: Always use a family tree. Differentiate genders clearly (e.g., Square for Male, Circle for Female).
Solved Example: In a family of 9 members with 3 married couples, if "F is the mother-in-law of N" and "B is unmarried," you must map three generations. In our test, the odd-one-out was identified as C (Male), while E, F, and H were females.
Syllogisms are scoring opportunities. Focus on categorical statements: "All," "Some," "No," and "Some Not."
Key Logic: "No boxes are beds" implies a complete separation.
Success Rate: Students typically hit 89-97% accuracy here. Always check for "Either-Or" cases in conclusions.
These questions use coordinate logic and geometric reasoning (Pythagoras Theorem).
Example: If Point R is reached after several turns from Point V, its relative position might be South-West.
Trick: Count the number of left/right turns separately to find the final facing direction quickly.
This involves comparing attributes like height or weight.
Example: Seven individuals (F, I, J, etc.). If $F = 130$ cm and is taller than only one person, F is 6th in descending order. If $I$ is taller than at least three people, $I$ must be in the top 4.
Hexagonal tables are the new favorite for 2026 PO exams.
Constraint: 12 people. Vowels sit at vertices (corners) facing outside; consonants sit on sides facing inside.
Solution Tip: In our mock, P sits opposite F. Always draw two possibilities if the starting point is ambiguous.
Box Puzzle: 7 boxes (A-H) containing items like Speakers, Jeans, and Mobiles.
Constraint: "D contains a speaker," "H contains jeans but not at the bottom."
Floor-Class Puzzle: 7 students on 7 floors, each in a different class.
Logic: S lives on an odd floor below 4 (Floor 1 or 3). If V is in Class 1, he cannot be on the 7th floor.
While Reasoning is a central subject for Banking preparation, students should prioritize Logical Relations and Coding-Decoding as these overlap with mental ability sections.
High Priority: Coding-Decoding (Pattern recognition).
Medium Priority: Blood Relations (Family trees).
Low Priority: Complex Floor Puzzles (Specific to Banking).
Avoid common reasoning errors like wrong assumptions, misinterpreting syllogisms, and ignoring grammar clues that can lead to incorrect answers.
Assuming Genders: Never assume someone is male or female based on a name like "Deepak" or "Kiran" unless specified.
Ignoring "Only a Few": In Syllogisms, "Only a few A are B" means "Some A are B" AND "Some A are NOT B."
Grammar Errors: Misinterpreting "The one who..." can lead to placing the wrong person in a puzzle.
Improve your reasoning performance by using smart techniques like visualization, timed practice, and detailed solution analysis.
Visualization: Always draw diagrams for seating and directions.
Simulation: Use a timer. A PO mock should be completed in 20 minutes.
Analysis: Review the solutions to see if there was a shorter logical path.