SSC CGL 2026 Reasoning Syllabus — Complete Topic-Wise Breakdown (What to Master First)

SSC CGL 2026 Reasoning Syllabus — Complete Topic-Wise Breakdown (What to Master First)

If there is one section where an SSC CGL aspirant can bank marks fast, it is Reasoning. There are no facts to memorise, no formulas to derive — just logic you can train. And in the 2026 sectional pattern, Reasoning (General Intelligence & Reasoning) is the very first 15-minute section — so it also sets your confidence for the whole paper. Yet most students treat the syllabus as a flat list of 20 topics and study them all equally. That is the mistake this guide fixes.

Reasoning section at a glance (Tier 1, 2026)

25 questions • 50 marks • 15 minutes (dedicated sectional block, no going back) • −0.50 negative marking per wrong answer • comes first in the fixed section order (Reasoning → GA → Quant → English) • a mix of verbal and non-verbal reasoning.

The honest priority rule

You do not have time to solve all 25 in 15 minutes at equal speed — and you do not need to. A handful of topics are both high-frequency and fast; a few are time-traps that can eat 90 seconds each. So below, every topic is sorted into three buckets by priority, not just listed. Master Bucket A cold, get comfortable with Bucket B, and treat Bucket C carefully.


🟢 Bucket A — Lock these first (fast + frequent)

These are your bread-and-butter. Practised well, each takes 20–40 seconds. Aim to clear this bucket in the first 6–7 minutes and bank the marks.

  • Analogy (Semantic / Number / Figural) — find the same relationship in a new pair. Among the highest-frequency topics (roughly 3–4 questions).
  • Classification / Odd One Out — spot the item that doesn’t fit. Consistently 3–4 questions; often the single most-asked topic.
  • Series (Number, Alphabet, Mixed) — find the next term or the missing term. About 2–3 questions.
  • Coding-Decoding — letter/number coding, and the “coded language” type. Around 2–3 questions and very learnable from PYQs.
  • Mathematical Operations — symbol substitution and BODMAS-style questions. Quick 1–2 questions.
  • Word Formation & Dictionary Order — making a word from given letters, or arranging words as in a dictionary. Fast 1–2 questions.

🟡 Bucket B — Solve next (frequent, need a quick diagram)

Still high-value, but these reward a small diagram or a fixed method. Do them in your second pass (roughly minutes 7–12).

  • Blood Relations — draw a quick family tree; watch the “pointing to a photo” type. About 1–2 questions.
  • Direction & Distance — sketch the path; track net displacement. Around 1–2 questions.
  • Order & Ranking — position from top/bottom, total count. Usually 1 question.
  • Venn Diagram — relationship between groups, and counting from regions. About 1–2 questions.
  • Missing Number (Matrix / Figure) — find the pattern across a grid. Around 1–2 questions.
  • Syllogism — “All / Some / No” statements and conclusions. Best solved with the Venn-diagram method; 1–3 questions but higher difficulty, so don’t rush.
  • Mirror & Water Images — quick once you know the rules; 1–2 questions.

🔴 Bucket C — Non-verbal & traps (attempt last, skip if short on time)

These are worth marks, but some can swallow your clock. Attempt them in the final pass, and the moment one turns into a 90-second rabbit hole, leave it — remember the −0.50 penalty.

  • Paper Folding & Cutting — visualise the punched/cut result. 1–2 questions.
  • Embedded / Hidden Figures — find the given shape inside a complex figure. About 1 question.
  • Figure Counting — count triangles, squares, etc. 1 question, but easy to miscount — be systematic.
  • Dice & Cubes — opposite faces, cube cutting. 1 question and a common trap.
  • Figure Series / Completion (non-verbal) — complete the visual pattern. 1–2 questions.
  • Puzzles & Seating Arrangement — the biggest time-trap in the section. High difficulty; attempt only if you are ahead on time, otherwise skip without guilt.

Your 15-minute attempt plan for the Reasoning section

Minutes 0–7 — Round 1: Sweep Bucket A (+ any obvious Bucket B). Bank every quick, sure question first. Target ~15–18 attempts here.

Minutes 7–12 — Round 2: Do the rest of Bucket B — the ones that need a small diagram.

Minutes 12–15 — Round 3: Attempt Bucket C. If a puzzle or dice question isn’t cracking in ~60–90 seconds, move on. Since Tier 1 is qualifying, a clean, high-accuracy 20–22 beats a risky, guessed 25.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Getting stuck on one puzzle. One seating-arrangement set can burn 3–4 minutes — that’s a quarter of your section for one mark. Skip and return.
  • Guessing blindly under negative marking. Reasoning is your safest section; don’t throw marks away with wild guesses on non-verbal figures you can’t see clearly.
  • Ignoring non-verbal until the exam. Mirror/water images and figure series become quick wins only with a few days of practice. Don’t leave them untouched.
  • Studying all topics equally. Bucket A alone can fetch you 12–15 near-certain marks. Secure those before chasing the hard 1-markers.

Practise Reasoning under the real 15-minute timer

Knowing the buckets is step one; executing them under a ticking 15-minute clock is what actually builds your score. SuperPahal’s free mock tests run in the exact 2026 sectional format — Reasoning as a timed first section, no going back — so you learn your real pace and which topics to attempt first. Attempt a free sectional mock test on SuperPahal →

Building your section-wise plan? Also read our SSC CGL 2026 English Syllabus — Topic-Wise Breakdown.

👉 हिंदी में पढ़ें: SSC CGL 2026 Reasoning Syllabus — Topic-Wise Breakdown (किसे पहले Master करें)

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