July 16, 2026
Is it Easy to Prepare for the JIPMAT 2027 Exam? What is the Right Strategy?
Quick Answer:
To prepare for JIPMAT 2027, build strong Class 9–10 fundamentals in Quantitative Aptitude, develop a daily reading habit for Verbal Ability, and practise Data Interpretation and Logical Reasoning sets under timed conditions.
Study 2–3 hours daily, take a mock test every week, revise from short notes, and analyse every mock to fix weak areas.
Starting 6–8 months before the exam gives most students enough time to cover the syllabus comfortably.
The JIPMAT is one of the most accessible routes into an IIM straight after Class 12 but "accessible" does not mean "easy to crack without a plan."
Two students with the same ability often see very different results simply because one prepared with structure and the other studied in bursts.
This guide gives you that structure: what to study, in what order, how much time to spend, and how to check whether your preparation is actually working.
Before you plan anything, you need to know exactly what you are preparing for. Here is the full structure.
|
Component |
Detail |
|
Total questions |
100 MCQs |
|
Total marks |
400 |
|
Quantitative Aptitude (QA) |
33 questions · 132 marks |
|
Data Interpretation & Logical Reasoning (DILR) |
33 questions · 132 marks |
|
Verbal Ability & Reading Comprehension (VARC) |
34 questions · 136 marks |
|
Marking scheme |
+4 correct · −1 incorrect · 0 for unattempted |
|
Duration |
150 minutes (no sectional time limit) |
|
Mode |
Computer-based test (CBT), English only |
|
Conducting body |
National Testing Agency (NTA) |
Two things here shape your entire strategy. First, there is no penalty for questions you leave blank, so blind guessing is a poor idea, and accuracy matters more than raw attempts. Second, there is no sectional time limit, which means you control how you split your 150 minutes across the three sections. Both facts should influence how you practise from day one.
JIPMAT is generally considered easier than IPMAT Indore and IPMAT Rohtak, because it leans on foundational, Class 10-level concepts rather than advanced analytical questions.
Year to year, the paper has ranged from easy (2021) to a notably harder 2023 exam, settling around easy-to-moderate in 2024 and 2025, so plan for a moderate paper and a tough year won't rattle you.
With consistent 2–3 hour daily preparation over about six months, most students can cover the syllabus comfortably.
The competition, not the paper's toughness, is the real challenge: around 260 combined seats- 140 at IIM Jammu and 120 at IIM Bodh Gaya- draw a very large applicant pool, so a strong, accurate score is what separates selected students from the rest.
Preparation works best when you move through four clear phases rather than studying everything at once. Here is the sequence I recommend to students.
Do not open a single book until you know the exam. Read the JIPMAT syllabus and JIPMAT exam pattern in full, and check your JIPMAT eligibility so you are certain you qualify.
Knowing the weightage of each section tells you where to invest your hours.
Allocate daily time to each section based on your comfort level. If Quant is your weak spot, give it the largest daily slot early on, then rebalance as you improve.
A rough daily split that works for most students: about one hour of Quant, 45 minutes of Verbal (including reading), and 45 minutes of DILR, with revision layered on top.
Solving questions is only half the work. After every sectional test or JIPMAT mock test, spend time understanding why you got each wrong answer wrong.
This single habit- mistake analysis- improves scores faster than solving more questions blindly.
Maintain a compact revision notebook divided into five parts: vocabulary; idioms and phrases; grammar rules; formulas and maths concepts; and logical-reasoning techniques. Revise it before every mock. It becomes your fastest study asset in the final month.
You do not need to prepare for the same length of time as everyone else, but you do need a phased plan. Here is a six-month structure you can compress or extend to fit your start date.
|
Phase |
Duration |
Focus |
|
Foundation |
Months 1–2 |
Build Class 9–10 concepts across all three sections; fix fundamentals |
|
Skill-building |
Months 3–4 |
Topic-wise practice, speed techniques, daily newspaper reading |
|
Application |
Months 5–6 |
Sectional tests, DILR sets, previous year papers |
|
Mastery |
Final 6–8 weeks |
Full-length mocks weekly, revision notes, targeted weak-area fixing |
How long does JIPMAT preparation take?
Most students need 6 to 8 months of consistent study at 2–3 hours daily. If you start in Class 11 or already have a strong maths background, you may need less.
Droppers aiming for a top score should plan a more intensive 8–10 month schedule.
Starting early is a genuine advantage; it removes deadline stress and leaves room for multiple revision cycles and mock tests. For a tighter run-up, see our 2-month/60-day JIPMAT plan.
JIPMAT Quantitative Aptitude tests concepts up to Class 10 mathematics; it does not go into advanced territory. So resist the urge to over-study difficult topics; depth in the fundamentals scores more marks here.
High-frequency topics to prioritise:
Number System
Percentages
Profit & Loss
Ratio & Proportion
Time, Speed & Work
Simple & Compound Interest
Averages and Allegation
Basic Algebra (linear and quadratic equations)
Mensuration and basic Geometry (Class 10 level only)
Low-frequency topics: Based on past-paper trends, topics like inequalities, polynomials, and progressions have appeared rarely in JIPMAT unlike in IPMAT Indore. But since NTA does not publish a fixed syllabus, treat these as low-priority rather than guaranteed exclusions: cover the basics, then redirect most of your time to the frequently asked topics above.
In practice, Number System, Percentages, and Time & Work alone tend to account for a large share of the QA section nail these three thoroughly before touching anything fancier.
How to study this section well:
Strengthen concepts from textbooks before jumping to shortcuts.
Learn speed techniques (including short tricks for multiplication and division) to save time in the exam.
Keep a formula flashcard set and review it daily.
Solve a few problems from each topic every day; consistency beats occasional marathon sessions.
| Topic | Download Link |
|---|---|
| Basic Algebra & Polynomials | |
| Combination | |
| Percentage | |
| Profit, Loss & Discount | |
| Ratio, Proportion, Variation & Partnership | |
| Average, Mixture & Alligation | |
| Simple & Compound Interest | |
| Time, Work, Pipes & Cisterns, Chain Rule | |
| Surds, Indices & Logarithms | |
| Set Theory | |
| Functions & Graphs | |
| Linear & Quadratic Equations | |
| Geometry & Mensuration | |
| Inequalities & Modulus | |
| Coordinate Geometry & Trigonometry | |
| Permutation & Combination | |
| Probability | |
| Progression (AP, GP, HP) | |
| Work & Time | |
| Matrices | |
| Miscellaneous Topics | |
| Basic Algebra – Linear Equations | |
| Fundamental Principle of Counting | |
| Geometry – Circles | |
| Logarithm | |
| Mean, Mode & Median | |
| Mensuration (2D & 3D) | |
| Number System & Factors | |
| Number Theory | |
| Time, Speed & Distance (Boats, Streams, Linear Motion) |
The DILR section has 33 questions. Unlike CAT or IPMAT Indore, JIPMAT DILR sets are shorter and less complex, but that is exactly why accuracy here can lift your overall rank.
Focus areas:
Data Interpretation: tables, bar charts, pie charts; practise reading trends, percentages and comparisons quickly.
Logical Reasoning: series, syllogisms, blood relations, seating arrangements, directions, order and ranking, and analogies. Solve JIPMAT logical reasoning questions regularly.
How to build speed and accuracy:
Always practise under timed conditions to simulate exam pressure.
Solve puzzles, Sudoku and brain teasers to sharpen pattern recognition.
Even though JIPMAT rarely throws very hard sets, prepare for a range of question types so that no surprises rattle you on exam day.
For a sense of how JIPMAT compares to tougher exams, see our IPMAT vs JIPMAT comparison.
| Topic | Download Link |
|---|---|
| Clock and Calendars | |
| Syllogism | |
| Critical Reasoning | |
| Analogy and Classification | |
| Analytical Puzzles | |
| Number and Letter Series | |
| Blood Relation and Direction & Distance | |
| Coding and Decoding | |
| Non-Verbal Reasoning | |
| Verbal Reasoning | |
| Seating Arrangement | |
| Dice and Cube | |
| Matching Type | |
| Mathematical Operations | |
| Counting Figures and Venn Diagrams | |
| Data Arrangement and Interpretation |
VARC carries the most questions (34), so a strong verbal score can anchor your entire paper. The good news: this section rewards daily habits more than last-minute cramming.
Build these habits:
Read daily. Spend 1–1.5 hours on a newspaper, giving at least 30 minutes to the editorial page. Mark new words and revise them. If editorials feel hard at first, start with sections that interest you and work up.
Practise regularly. Do cloze tests aiming for full accuracy, and learn 10–12 of the most-asked idioms and phrases for management entrance exams.
Master reading comprehension. Focus on understanding, interpreting and inferring from passages rather than just reading them.
Cover grammar broadly. Tenses, parts of speech, sentence structure, synonyms, antonyms and para-jumbles all appear.
See more JIPMAT verbal ability questions to practise against real formats.
| Topic | Download Link |
|---|---|
| Vocabulary | |
| Idioms and Phrases | |
| Miscellaneous | |
| Error Spotting | |
| Sentence Improvement | |
| Grammar-Based Fill in the Blanks | |
| Narration and Voice | |
| Reading Comprehension | |
| Para Completion | |
| Para Jumbles | |
| Listening Transcript | |
| Antonyms | |
| One Word Substitution | |
| Direct & Indirect Speech | |
| Synonyms | |
| Punctuations | |
| Tenses | |
| Spelling Test | |
| Cloze Test | |
| Sentence Arrangement / Para Jumbler |
|
Section |
Topics Frequently Asked |
|
Verbal Ability & Reading Comprehension |
Reading Comprehension, Synonyms & Antonyms, Fill in the Blanks, Para-jumbles, One-word Substitutions |
|
Data Interpretation & Logical Reasoning |
Series, Directions, Syllogism, Order & Ranking, Blood Relations, Seating Arrangement, Data Interpretation (tables, charts) |
|
Quantitative Aptitude |
Number System, Percentage, Profit & Loss, Ratio & Proportion, Time & Work, Simple & Compound Interest, Average, Mensuration |
Choose books that give you plenty of practice questions aligned to the latest syllabus. These are the most widely recommended.
|
Section |
Recommended Book |
Author |
|
Verbal |
Word Power Made Easy |
Norman Lewis |
|
Verbal |
High School English Grammar & Composition |
Wren & Martin |
|
Verbal |
Objective General English |
S.P. Bakshi |
|
Quantitative Aptitude |
Quantitative Aptitude |
R.S. Aggarwal |
|
Quantitative Aptitude |
Quantitative Aptitude |
Arihant |
|
DILR |
Logical Reasoning & DI for CAT |
Nishit K. Sinha |
|
Reasoning |
A New Approach to Reasoning (Verbal & Non-Verbal) |
B.S. Sijwali & Indu Sijwali |
| Elementary Algebra Booklet | |
| Book on Concepts for Geometry | |
| Number System Concepts Booklet | |
| Inequalities Concepts Booklet | |
| Booklet on Syllogisms | |
| Booklet on Vocabulary Building Techniques | |
| Data Arrangement & Puzzles Booklet | |
| Booklet on Idioms & Phrases |
Books build your base, but they cannot tell you where you stand. Pair them with regular mocks and previous year papers to convert knowledge into exam-day performance.
Even well-prepared students lose marks to avoidable errors. Watch for these:
Guessing blindly. With −1 for wrong answers and no penalty for blanks, reckless guessing quietly drains your score.
Skipping mock analysis. Taking mocks without reviewing mistakes wastes their real value.
Over-studying advanced maths. JIPMAT stays at Class 10 level time spent on inequalities or progressions is largely time wasted.
Ignoring daily reading. Verbal ability cannot be crammed; students who start reading late almost always underperform in VARC.
No revision system. Without compact notes, last-month revision becomes chaotic and incomplete.
Here's what I tell every student in their first mentoring session: don't prepare in a straight line. Learn a topic, test it in a mock, fix what broke, and revise, then loop back.
The students who genuinely improve are the ones who run that loop again and again, not the ones who race to "finish" the syllabus once.
Begin with your weakest section while your motivation is high, protect your daily reading habit no matter what, and let your mock-test data, not your gut feeling, decide where you study next.
No. Admission through JIPMAT has no interview or group discussion round. Selection to the five-year Integrated Programme in Management (IPM) at IIM Jammu and IIM Bodh Gaya is based on your JIPMAT score together with your academic record, but the exact formula differs by institute and is revised each cycle.
For the 2026-31 batch, IIM Jammu used 70% JIPMAT + 15% Class 10 + 15% Class 12, while IIM Bodh Gaya relied on the JIPMAT score alone.
The 2027-31 policies are not yet released, so confirm the official criteria for your year before applying. Either way, your exam-day performance is decisive; there is no interview stage to recover a weak score.
The students who clear JIPMAT rarely study the most hours; they study the right things in the right order and check their progress with mocks.
Get the pattern (100 MCQs, 400 marks, +4/−1 marking), build Class 10 fundamentals, read daily, and let mock analysis drive your next move.
Do this over 6–8 months, and you give yourself a genuine shot at an IPM seat at IIM Jammu or IIM Bodh Gaya, where your exam score, with no interview to fall back on, is what counts.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the important topics of the JIPMAT Verbal Ability Section?

How can I improve my vocabulary for JIPMAT 2026 exam?

What are the important topics that I need to prepare for JIPMAT Quantitative Syllabus?

How to prepare for JIPMAT 2026 in one month?

How can I improve my time management skills for solving JIPMAT reasoning questions?

How solving JIPMAT mock tests will help me score good marks in the exam?

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