60-Day RRB Group D Study Plan: Complete Subject-Wise Guide to Crack the Exam

60-Day RRB Group D Study Plan: Complete Subject-Wise Guide to Crack the Exam
April 17, 2026
Central Govt. Exams . Railway

Every year, crores of aspirants appear for the Railway Recruitment Board Group D exam — one of the most popular and fiercely competitive government job exams in India. The job is stable, the pay is decent, and working for Indian Railways is still a dream for millions of families across the country. But the truth is brutal: most candidates appear multiple times and still don’t make the cut — not because they aren’t capable, but because they never had a clear, structured plan.

If you’re starting fresh or have around 60 days left before your exam, this guide is exactly what you need. We’ll walk you through the full syllabus, subject-wise strategies, common mistakes to avoid, and a complete 60-day RRB Group D study plan — available as a downloadable PDF — so you never have to wonder “what should I study today?”

What Is RRB Group D? A Quick Overview

RRB Group D recruitment is conducted by the Railway Recruitment Board to fill Level 1 posts under the 7th CPC Pay Matrix. These posts include Track Maintainer Grade IV, Helper/Assistant in various technical departments (Electrical, Mechanical, S&T), Assistant Pointsman, and other entry-level positions across Indian Railways.

The selection process involves:

  • Computer-Based Test (CBT) – 100 questions, 90 minutes
  • Physical Efficiency Test (PET) – Running and weight carrying tasks (gender-specific)
  • Document Verification & Medical Examination

The CBT is the first and most critical filter. It covers four subjects: Mathematics, General Intelligence & Reasoning, General Science, and General Awareness & Current Affairs. Your primary goal for the next 60 days is to dominate this test. So, to know more about the syllabus, exam pattern and timings, first you should go for an RRB Group D Online Coaching.

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Understanding the RRB Group D Syllabus

Before building your study plan, you need to know exactly what the exam tests. The good news is that the syllabus is well-defined and largely overlaps with other competitive exams like SSC MTS and RRB NTPC, so you’re not starting from zero.

Read More: Know More about RRB Group D Syllabus!

Mathematics covers number systems, BODMAS, decimals and fractions, LCM and HCF, ratio and proportion, percentages, mensuration, time and work, time and distance, simple and compound interest, profit and loss, elementary algebra, geometry, and trigonometry.

General Intelligence & Reasoning includes analogies, alphabetical and number series, coding and decoding, mathematical operations, relationships, syllogism, Venn diagrams, data interpretation, conclusions, jumbling, puzzles, and statement-argument type questions.

General Science focuses on Physics, Chemistry, and Life Science at the Class 10 level — meaning NCERT content is your best friend here. Topics include basic laws of motion, electricity, magnetism, chemical reactions, periodic table, biology basics (cells, human body, ecology), and more.

General Awareness & Current Affairs covers current events of national and international importance, history, culture, geography, polity, economics, sports, science and technology developments, and government schemes.

Why 60 Days Is Enough (If You’re Smart About It)

RRB Group D is not a deep-knowledge exam. It tests whether you can answer moderate-difficulty questions quickly and accurately across four subjects. The questions are at a Class 10 level — the challenge is breadth, speed, and consistency, not depth. We discussed a detailed 60-day plan. To download the PDF, click on the button below.

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60 days gives you:

  • Enough time to complete the entire syllabus twice
  • Time to take 20–25 full-length mock tests with thorough analysis
  • Time to strengthen weak areas and consolidate strong ones
  • Sufficient revision time for static GK and General Science theory

The difference between candidates who pass and those who don’t is rarely raw intelligence. It’s planning and discipline. Without a day-by-day roadmap, 60 days evaporate into vague “studying” with no real progress. The plan we’ve created solves that problem entirely.

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Subject-Wise Preparation Strategy

Mathematics: Shortcuts Win the Game

The math section in RRB Group D is not hard by nature — but it rewards speed. If you’re spending 2–3 minutes on each problem, you’re already losing. The questions are at a Class 10 level, but solving them in under 60 seconds requires knowing shortcuts.

Start by revising your fundamentals. Percentage, ratio, profit & loss, and time & work form the bulk of the questions. Get these rock solid in the first two weeks. Then invest time in learning calculation tricks — Vedic math for multiplication, fraction-based shortcuts for percentages, and formula-based approaches for mensuration.

Daily target: 40–50 practice questions. Weekly: at least one timed full math section test.

General Intelligence & Reasoning: Repetition is Everything

Reasoning is the most predictable section across all Railway exams. The same question types appear year after year: number series, coding-decoding, blood relations, mirror images, Venn diagrams, and syllogisms. Once you’ve solved 50 questions of each type, you’ll recognize patterns instantly.

Don’t overthink this section. The strategy is simple: practice daily. Aim for 100% accuracy on easy question types (series, analogy, coding) and at least 80% on moderate types (syllogism, data sufficiency, seating arrangement).

Daily target: 30–40 reasoning questions. Focus on speed, not just correctness.

General Science: NCERT Is Your Bible

This is where many Group D aspirants lose marks unnecessarily. They either skip General Science or try to study from advanced books — both are mistakes.

The entire General Science section is based on Class 9 and Class 10 NCERT content. Read the Science NCERT textbooks for both classes thoroughly. Make short notes for Physics formulas, Chemistry equations, and Biology diagrams. Revise these notes every 10 days.

Focus areas in Physics: laws of motion, work and energy, electricity, sound, light. In Chemistry: atoms and molecules, chemical reactions, acids and bases, metals and non-metals, carbon compounds. In Biology: cells, tissues, life processes, reproduction, heredity, and ecosystems.

Target: Complete both NCERT Science books in the first 3 weeks. After that, only practice questions and revision.

General Awareness & Current Affairs: Quality Over Quantity

GA is both the easiest section to score in and the easiest to waste time on. The key is to be smart about what you study.

Split your GA preparation into two tracks:

Static GK — Indian history (ancient, medieval, modern), freedom struggle, geography (physical, economic), Indian polity (Constitution, government structure), economy basics, science and technology milestones, sports, awards, books, national symbols, and important dates. This content doesn’t change. Create short notes and revise them weekly.

Current Affairs — Cover the last 12 months before the exam. Prioritize: government schemes, appointments, international summits, sports events, national awards, science and space news, and environment-related events. Use a reliable monthly current affairs PDF and revise it every week.

Mock Tests: Your Most Powerful Preparation Tool

If there’s one thing that separates successful candidates from repeated failures, it’s mock tests. Aspirants who take 20+ full-length mocks before the exam consistently outperform those who only study.

Here’s why: the CBT isn’t just a knowledge test. It’s a 90-minute pressure test. Your ability to manage time, skip difficult questions strategically, and stay focused throughout — none of this comes from reading. It only comes from practice under real conditions.

Start full-length mock tests from Week 3. Don’t wait until you feel “ready.” Take the test, carefully analyze every wrong answer, identify the pattern of your mistakes, and fix them. That cycle — test, analyze, fix — is the real engine of improvement.

Aim for at least 3 mock tests per week from Week 3 to Week 8. Use platforms like Testbook, Adda247, or PracticeMock for Railway-specific mocks.

Common Mistakes RRB Group D Aspirants Make

Studying without a daily target. Opening random chapters without a goal is not preparation — it’s just spending time. Every day must have a clear subject target and a question quota.

Skipping Physical Efficiency Test (PET) preparation. Many aspirants focus exclusively on CBT and realize too late that they’re not physically ready for PET. Start basic running and endurance training from Week 1 itself — even 20–30 minutes a day makes a huge difference over 60 days.

Underestimating General Science. Group D is unique because it has a dedicated 25-mark General Science section. This section is purely NCERT-based. Skipping it means giving away a quarter of your score.

Studying current affairs only in the last week. Current affairs need consistent weekly attention. Cramming 12 months of events in the last 7 days simply doesn’t work for retention.

Not analyzing mock tests. Taking a mock test and moving on without reviewing wrong answers is one of the most common — and costly — mistakes. Analysis is where real learning happens.

Burning out. Many aspirants try to study 12–14 hours a day in the first two weeks and crash by Week 3. Study 6–7 focused hours per day. Sleep well. Take one half-day off per week. Sustainable effort beats short-burst intensity every time.

The 60-Day RRB Group D Study Plan

The complete day-by-day study plan is structured across four phases:

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  • Phase 1 (Days 1–15): Foundation — Core concepts, NCERT Science, basic topics
  • Phase 2 (Days 16–35): Intensive Practice — Advanced topics, high-volume question practice
  • Phase 3 (Days 36–50): Mock Test Cycle — Full-length mocks with deep analysis
  • Phase 4 (Days 51–60): Revision Sprint — Weak areas, static GK, final mock tests

Final Words: Consistency Beats Everything

You don’t need to be the most talented person in the room to crack RRB Group D. You need to be the most consistent. Show up every day. Follow the plan. Take your mocks. Review your mistakes. Revise your notes. Train for PET.

The candidates who clear this exam are not the ones who had a perfect study session one Saturday — they’re the ones who showed up reliably, every single day, for sixty days straight.

The railway job is waiting. Your seat is there. Go get it.

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RRB Group D 60 Days Study Plan

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