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Updated 2026-05-30 · 2026 Edition

RBI Grade B 7d Plan

A complete 7-day plan covering 20 highest-weightage topics — prioritised by subject weight, not alphabet. No signup, no fees.

Days
7
Topics
20
Subjects
3
Cost
Free
Last-mile sprint one rapid pass over high-weight topics, with a short review of the weakest

How to actually use your 7 days

One fast, weight-prioritised pass over what actually appears on the paper.

Daily study
6–8 hours
New topics / day
≈ 2.9
Approach
one rapid pass over high-weight topics, with a short review of the weakest

This 7d plan gives you 7 days to work through 20 weighted RBI Grade B topics across 3 subjects — roughly 2.9 new topics a day at 6–8 hours of focused study. That pace is brisk but survivable if you protect your highest-weight subjects first.

RBI Grade B marks are not spread evenly across subjects. Economics, English, and Finance carry the heaviest weightage in recent papers, so this plan front-loads them — so they get your first and best hours, before fatigue sets in. Cover RBI Grade B's weight 4–5 topics properly, starting with Economics, English, and Finance. Touch weight-3 topics only if you finish early; skip weight 1–2 entirely.

7 days is enough for one disciplined pass over the high-weight portion of RBI Grade B, not the full 20-topic syllabus. The trap is starting too slow. Begin with the heaviest subjects on day one — you do not have a buffer week.

What to prioritise & cut

Cover RBI Grade B's weight 4–5 topics properly, starting with Economics, English, and Finance. Touch weight-3 topics only if you finish early; skip weight 1–2 entirely.

Mock tests & revision

Sit two or three timed previous-year RBI Grade B papers in the second half and review every wrong answer the same day.

Weekly rhythm

Front-load new RBI Grade B learning into the first 60% of days; reserve the last 40% for previous-year papers and error review.

Week-by-week schedule

Week Days Topics covered
1 1–7 Economics: Introduction to Economics (w3)Finance: Financial Markets and Institutions (w3)English: Grammar and Usage (w3)Economics: Demand and Supply (w3)Finance: Bonds and Debentures (w3)English: Vocabulary in Context (w3)Economics: Elasticity (w3)Finance: RBI and the Banking System (w3)English: Reading Comprehension (w3)Economics: Consumer Behaviour (w3)Finance: Financial Inclusion and Digital Finance (w3)English: Paragraph Formation (Jumbled Paragraphs) (w3)Economics: Theory of Production (w3)English: Sentence Improvement (w3)Economics: Cost Theory (w3)English: Cloze Test (w3)Economics: Market Structures (w3)English: Verbal Reasoning — Analogies (w3)Economics: Factor Markets (w3)English: Summary and Conclusion Skills (w3)

Subject-wise topic split

Each topic shows its weightage (1–5 dots) and the concepts you'll cover. Higher-weight topics appear first.

Economics

8 topics
  • Introduction to Economics ●●●○○

    Covers basic economic concepts, micro vs macroeconomics, economic agents, and the scope of economics in competitive exams including national income, growth, and development metrics.

  • Demand and Supply ●●●○○

    Law of demand and supply, determinants, market equilibrium, movements vs shifts in curves, price elasticity, and applications — foundational microeconomics frequently asked in Prelims.

  • Elasticity ●●●○○

    Price, income, and cross elasticity of demand; elasticity of supply; measurement methods and practical applications in taxation and pricing decisions — a calculative yet scoring topic.

  • Consumer Behaviour ●●●○○

    Utility analysis, indifference curves, budget line, consumer equilibrium, derivation of demand curve, and ordinal utility approach — important for understanding microeconomic foundations.

  • Theory of Production ●●●○○

    Production function, law of variable proportions, returns to scale, isoquant and isocost analysis, and optimal input combination — theoretical base for understanding firm behaviour.

  • Cost Theory ●●●○○

    Short-run and long-run cost curves, explicit and implicit costs, fixed and variable costs, TC, AC, MC relationships, and economies of scale — essential for market structure analysis.

  • Market Structures ●●●○○

    Perfect competition, monopoly, monopolistic competition, and oligopoly — assumptions, equilibrium, efficiency, and real-world examples including duopoly models — a high-weight competitive economics topic.

  • Factor Markets ●●●○○

    Labour market, wage determination, rent, interest, and profit — distribution theory connecting to national income and inequality discussions in macroeconomics.

Finance

4 topics
  • Financial Markets and Institutions ●●●○○

    Financial System in India: Structure of the Indian financial system — RBI, commercial banks, co-operative banks, NBFCs, payment banks, small finance banks, and their regulatory framework — foundational knowledge for RBI Grade B Finance paper.

  • Bonds and Debentures ●●●○○

    Banking and Financial Institutions: Role of commercial banks, development finance institutions (SIDBI, NABARD), insurance sector (IRDAI), pension fund regulator (PFRDA), and market regulators (SEBI) — institutional landscape for RBI finance preparation.

  • RBI and the Banking System ●●●○○

    Money and Capital Markets: Money market instruments (T-bills, commercial papers, call money), capital market (equity, debentures, derivatives), stock exchanges (BSE, NSE), and market participants — key for understanding financial market operations.

  • Financial Inclusion and Digital Finance ●●●○○

    Financial Mathematics and Accounting: Time value of money, NPV, IRR, ratio analysis, balance sheet interpretation, and basic accounting concepts — quantitative finance for RBI officers.

English

8 topics
  • Grammar and Usage ●●●○○

    Tense, subject-verb agreement, articles (a, an, the), prepositions, conjunctions, voice (active/passive), narration (direct/indirect), and error spotting — grammar fundamentals tested in BITSAT English section.

  • Vocabulary in Context ●●●○○

    Synonyms, antonyms, one-word substitutions, homophones, idioms, phrases, and phrasal verbs — contextual vocabulary usage and word power tested through sentence completion and reading passages.

  • Reading Comprehension ●●●○○

    Passages on general, scientific, and literary topics with questions on main idea, inference, vocabulary in context, tone, and fact-vs-opinion — speed reading and comprehension skills assessed.

  • Paragraph Formation (Jumbled Paragraphs) ●●●○○

    Rearranging jumbled sentences to form a coherent paragraph — tests logical sequencing, connector usage, and understanding of discourse structure in written English.

  • Sentence Improvement ●●●○○

    Identifying the most grammatically correct and stylistically appropriate version of an underlined portion — combines grammar precision with clarity of expression.

  • Cloze Test ●●●○○

    Passage with missing words to be filled from given options — tests vocabulary, grammar, and contextual coherence simultaneously in a time-efficient format.

  • Verbal Reasoning — Analogies ●●●○○

    Word pairs with relationships (synonym, antonym, part-whole, function, cause-effect) — reasoning through linguistic relationships and logical word connections.

  • Summary and Conclusion Skills ●●●○○

    Identifying the main point or best summary of a passage — tests ability to extract core meaning and distinguish between details and central ideas in written text.

Why a 7-day plan beats a 1,200-page prep book

DimensionTypical RBI Grade B bookThis 7d Plan
Time to startHours of reading before any study startsSeconds — plan is already here
PersonalisationOne-size-fits-allFits exactly your 7 days
FreshnessPrinted months agoUpdated for the 2026 cycle · verified 2026-05-30
Weightage signalAuthor guessDerived from last 5 years' papers
Cost₹500–2,500₹0
Sign-up requiredOften (with a trial trap)None

Other RBI Grade B plans

RBI Grade B 7d Plan — common questions

Is 7 days enough to prepare for RBI Grade B? +

7 days is enough for one disciplined pass over the high-weight portion of RBI Grade B, not the full 20-topic syllabus. The honest answer depends on your starting point, but this 7d plan is built to get the most from the time you have: one fast, weight-prioritised pass over what actually appears on the paper.

How many hours a day does this RBI Grade B 7d plan need? +

Plan for 6–8 hours of focused study, covering about 2.9 new topics a day. Front-load new RBI Grade B learning into the first 60% of days; reserve the last 40% for previous-year papers and error review.

What should I skip if I am short on time? +

Cover RBI Grade B's weight 4–5 topics properly, starting with Economics, English, and Finance. Touch weight-3 topics only if you finish early; skip weight 1–2 entirely.

When should I start mock tests on this plan? +

Sit two or three timed previous-year RBI Grade B papers in the second half and review every wrong answer the same day.

Already know the pattern? Generate a topic-by-topic plan.

The full personalised roadmap covers weak topics first, tracks completion, and adapts as you mark topics done.

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