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Reading Comprehension for CAT 2026 (VARC): Resources + How to Solve RC Faster

Author : Lalita Vishwakarma

June 15, 2026

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Quick Answer: Reading Comprehension is the biggest scoring lever in CAT VARC. In this guide, you’ll get (1) a practical RC-solving framework, (2) the best daily reading sources, 
(3) book/essay recommendations, and (4) free PDFs + a weekly practice plan for CAT 2026.

Boost your speed, accuracy and scores with the best free Reading Comprehension for CAT 2026. Read on to download the RC for CAT PDF.

What you will get in this blog: In this comprehensive blog post, we'll dive into the best free CAT Reading Comprehension resources, best books, and study materials that can elevate your CAT 2026 RC preparation.

Importance of Reading Comprehension in the CAT 2026

Before we talk about the best resources for RC for CAT 2026, let's first understand why the CAT Reading Comprehension Questions are such an important component of the CAT exam.

The Verbal Ability and Reading Comprehension (VARC) section accounts for approximately 34% of the CAT paper.

This means that your performance in the RC section can make or break your chances of securing a top score and getting into your dream B-school. 

It's not just about understanding the passage; you also need to be able to analyse the tone, identify the author's perspective, and draw logical inferences - all within a limited time frame. 

Latest CAT VARC Structure and RC Pattern

The VARC section in CAT usually tests a student’s reading speed, comprehension accuracy, and ability to understand arguments under pressure. In recent CAT papers, VARC has generally included around 24 questions to be attempted in 40 minutes, with Reading Comprehension forming the major part of the section.

VARC Component Typical CAT Pattern
Total VARC Questions Around 24 questions
Sectional Time Limit 40 minutes
RC Weightage Usually 4 passages with around 16 questions
Verbal Ability Questions Around 8 questions from topics like Para Summary, Para Insertion and Odd-One-Out

What Does Reading Comprehension Look Like in CAT?

Reading Comprehension in CAT generally includes passages from areas such as economics, sociology, philosophy, science, history, technology, literature, culture and current issues. The passages are not always fact-heavy. Many of them are idea-based and require you to understand the author’s argument, tone and hidden meaning.

RC Element What to Expect
Number of Passages Usually 4 passages
Questions per Passage Generally 4 questions each
Approximate Passage Length Around 450 to 650 words
Common Question Types Main idea, inference, author’s tone, assumption, conclusion, strengthen/weaken and application-based questions

Time Pressure in CAT VARC

The biggest challenge in VARC is not just understanding the passage but doing it quickly. Since the section usually gives only 40 minutes for around 24 questions, students need to read, analyse and answer with limited time per question. Spending too much time on one difficult RC passage can affect your overall attempt.

A good strategy is to quickly scan all RC passages, start with the one that feels most readable, and avoid getting stuck on confusing questions. Accuracy matters more than attempting every question blindly.

Important Note on Pattern Variation

CAT does not follow a permanently fixed VARC or RC pattern. The number of passages, passage length, difficulty level and question distribution may change from year to year and even from one exam slot to another. Therefore, students should not prepare only for one fixed format.

To adapt better, practise RC passages of different lengths and genres. Build the habit of reading unfamiliar topics, identifying the author’s central argument, and eliminating close answer options. This will help you handle changes in the CAT VARC pattern with more confidence.

CAT RC Question Types: Approach, Traps & Mini Examples

Reading Comprehension questions in CAT are designed to test more than just reading ability. They evaluate how well you understand arguments, identify assumptions, draw logical conclusions, and interpret the author's perspective. The table below covers the most common RC question types along with practical solving tips and common mistakes to avoid.

Question Type How to Approach Common Traps Mini Example
Main Idea / Primary Purpose Identify the central message that connects all paragraphs. Focus on what the author is trying to achieve overall. Options focusing on a single paragraph, example, or supporting detail instead of the entire passage. Question: What is the primary purpose of the passage?
Look For: The broadest option that captures the author's overall argument.
Inference-Based Choose an option that logically follows from the passage, even if not directly stated. Extreme conclusions, assumptions beyond the passage, or options requiring outside knowledge. Question: Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?
Look For: What the author implies rather than explicitly says.
Author's Tone Pay attention to adjectives, examples, and criticism used by the author. Confusing "critical" with "negative" or selecting emotionally extreme words. Question: The author's tone can best be described as:
Look For: Neutral, analytical, sceptical, appreciative, cautious, or critical cues.
Author's Viewpoint Identify the position the author ultimately supports or opposes. Mistaking a quoted opinion or opposing viewpoint for the author's own stance. Question: Which statement would the author most likely agree with?
Look For: The conclusion the passage gradually builds towards.
Assumption Find the unstated idea that must be true for the author's argument to hold. Choosing conclusions instead of underlying assumptions. Question: The author's argument assumes that:
Look For: A hidden belief supporting the argument.
Strengthen the Argument Select the option that provides additional support for the author's claim. Choosing options that are merely related but do not improve the argument. Question: Which finding would strengthen the author's position?
Look For: Evidence directly supporting the key claim.
Weaken the Argument Look for evidence that challenges the logic, assumption, or conclusion. Picking information that sounds contradictory but does not affect the core argument. Question: Which of the following weakens the author's argument?
Look For: Alternative explanations or contradictory evidence.
Specific Detail Return to the relevant section of the passage and verify the exact information. Answering from memory and falling for paraphrased distortions. Question: According to the passage, why did the event occur?
Look For: The exact sentence or paragraph discussing it.
Meaning in Context Interpret the word or phrase based on surrounding sentences rather than its dictionary meaning. Selecting the most common meaning instead of the contextual meaning. Question: The word "organic" as used in the passage most nearly means:
Look For: Clues from nearby sentences.
Title Selection Choose a title that reflects the passage's central theme without being too broad or too narrow. Titles based on examples, anecdotes, or minor discussions. Question: Which of the following is the most suitable title?
Look For: A concise summary of the passage's core message.
Application-Based Apply the principle or idea discussed in the passage to a new situation. Selecting an option that resembles the example but violates the principle. Question: Which situation best illustrates the author's argument?
Look For: The option that follows the same logic or principle.

Quick CAT RC Tip: Before looking at the options, try predicting the answer in your own words. This reduces the chances of getting trapped by attractive but incorrect options, which are extremely common in CAT Reading Comprehension questions.

CAT RC Method: A Practical Framework for Faster and More Accurate Reading

Many CAT aspirants focus only on solving more Reading Comprehension passages. However, top scorers usually follow a structured process while reading. Instead of treating RC as a reading exercise, they approach it as an argument-analysis task. The method below can help you improve both speed and accuracy.

Step 1: First Read – Understand the Purpose, Not Every Detail

During the first read, your objective is not to memorise facts. Instead, focus on understanding:

  • What topic is being discussed?
  • Why has the author written this passage?
  • What argument or viewpoint is being presented?
  • Does the author support, oppose, or analyse an idea?

Many students waste time trying to remember every statistic, date, example, or technical term. In CAT RC, understanding the author's message is usually more valuable than remembering minor details.

Step 2: Create a Quick Passage Map

As you read, mentally assign a role to each paragraph. This creates a roadmap that helps you quickly locate information when answering questions.

Paragraph Possible Role
P1 Introduces the topic or problem
P2 Explains background or supporting argument
P3 Presents evidence, examples, or contrasting views
P4 Provides conclusion or author's final position

Example passage map:

  • P1: Defines artificial intelligence.
  • P2: Discusses benefits.
  • P3: Highlights risks and criticisms.
  • P4: Argues for balanced regulation.

This simple map can save valuable time during question solving.

Question-First vs Passage-First: Which Approach Should You Use?

Approach When It Works Best Potential Risk
Passage First Recommended for most CAT aspirants because it builds overall understanding. May take slightly longer initially.
Question First Useful for very dense passages or advanced test-takers. Can lead to fragmented understanding and missed inferences.

For most candidates, a passage-first strategy is safer because CAT questions often require understanding the entire argument rather than finding isolated facts.

Structured Elimination Checklist

CAT RC is often won through elimination rather than direct selection. Before marking an answer, check whether an option suffers from any of these common issues:

Elimination Rule What It Means
Extreme Language Words like always, never, completely, impossible are often incorrect.
Outside Knowledge The answer must come from the passage, not personal knowledge.
Partially Correct Some options start correctly but add unsupported information.
Too Narrow Focuses on only one paragraph or example.
Too Broad Makes claims beyond the author's discussion.
Reversed Logic Changes the direction of the author's argument.

The 5-Step Daily CAT RC Workflow

Follow this process every day while practising Reading Comprehension:

  1. Read One Quality Passage: Choose a passage from philosophy, economics, science, history, or sociology.
  2. Identify the Purpose: Summarise the passage's main idea in one sentence.
  3. Create a Paragraph Map: Write a short note describing the role of each paragraph.
  4. Solve Questions Using Elimination: Remove wrong options before selecting the final answer.
  5. Review Every Mistake: Identify whether the error came from poor comprehension, wrong inference, rushing, or falling for a trap option.

Practising this workflow for 20–30 minutes daily develops the exact skills required for CAT Reading Comprehension: understanding arguments, identifying author intent, and making accurate decisions under time pressure.

Pro Tip: After finishing a passage, try summarising it in 15–20 words without looking back. If you can explain the author's central argument clearly, you have understood the passage well enough to answer most CAT RC questions accurately.

CAT RC Time Management, Passage Selection & Recovery Strategy

Even strong readers struggle in CAT because of time pressure. Success in Reading Comprehension is not only about understanding passages but also about making smart decisions regarding passage selection, question attempts, and time allocation.

Recommended Time Splits for CAT RC

Assuming a typical CAT VARC section with approximately 16 RC questions across 4 passages, the following time allocation can serve as a benchmark:

Activity Recommended Time
Quick Scan of All RC Passages 1-2 minutes
Reading One Passage 3-4 minutes
Answering One RC Question 45-75 seconds
Complete RC Set (Passage + 4 Questions) 6-8 minutes
All RC Passages 24-30 minutes

Benchmark: If a passage is taking more than 8-9 minutes without delivering answers confidently, it is likely becoming a low-return investment.

Passage Selection Rubric

Before starting a passage, evaluate it on three factors:

Factor High Score Low Score
Topic Familiarity Economics, business, science topics you comfortably understand Highly abstract philosophy or unfamiliar academic discussions
Passage Density Short paragraphs, simple sentence structure, clear examples Long sentences, heavy jargon, complex theories
Question Style Direct inference and main idea questions Multiple abstract inference and assumption questions

After a quick scan, rank passages as:

  • Priority A: Easy to read + familiar topic
  • Priority B: Moderate difficulty
  • Priority C: Dense, abstract, or uncomfortable topic

Attempt A passages first, then B, and leave C passages for later.

CAT RC Skip Rules

Top CAT performers do not attempt every question immediately. They skip strategically.

Situation Recommended Action
Unable to understand passage after 2 paragraphs Move to another passage and return later
Stuck between two options for more than 60 seconds Mark for review and move ahead
Question requires excessive rereading Skip temporarily and revisit later
Passage already consuming 8+ minutes Leave remaining difficult questions and proceed

How to Recover When You Are Behind Time

Many students panic when they realise they have spent too much time on the first one or two passages. Recovery is possible if you act quickly.

Scenario 1: 15 Minutes Gone, Only One RC Completed

  • Stop chasing perfection.
  • Select the easiest remaining passage immediately.
  • Focus on accuracy rather than attempting every question.
  • Skip lengthy re-reading.

Scenario 2: 25 Minutes Gone, Two RCs Completed

  • Target one complete passage and high-confidence questions from another.
  • Avoid spending more than 45 seconds on any single question.
  • Eliminate options aggressively.

Scenario 3: Last 5 Minutes Remaining

  • Attempt only questions where you can eliminate at least two options.
  • Avoid reading a completely new passage.
  • Review marked questions from passages already read.

The 80/20 Rule for CAT RC

In most CAT papers, approximately 20% of the questions consume nearly 50% of the time. These are usually highly abstract inference questions. Do not let them derail your section.

Your goal is not to solve every RC question perfectly. Your goal is to maximise overall VARC score by securing the easiest and most accurate marks available first.

Golden Rule: If a passage feels difficult, remember that every other student is facing the same challenge. CAT rewards smart selection and disciplined time management more than brute-force attempts.

CAT RC Preparation Tracks: Beginner, Intermediate & Advanced

Not every CAT aspirant should follow the same Reading Comprehension strategy. Your preparation plan should depend on your current accuracy, reading speed, and comfort level with RC passages. The following three-track framework helps students systematically improve from comprehension-focused practice to mock-driven optimisation.

Track 1: Beginner Level (Build Comprehension & Accuracy First)

Who should follow this track?

  • Students scoring below 50% accuracy in RC.
  • Students struggling to understand passage arguments.
  • Non-readers who are new to CAT preparation.
  • Students who frequently fall for trap options.

Primary Goal

Focus on understanding the passage correctly before worrying about speed.

Weekly Target Recommendation
RC Passages 12–15 passages per week
Reading Habit 20–30 minutes daily
Analysis Time 20–30 minutes after every practice session
Error Log Updates After every RC set

Difficulty Progression

  • Start with science, business and social science passages.
  • Gradually introduce philosophy and abstract humanities passages.
  • Focus on accuracy above 70% before introducing time limits.

Success Benchmark

Consistently achieve 70-75% accuracy without strict timing pressure.

Track 2: Intermediate Level (Timed Sets + Deep Analysis)

Who should follow this track?

  • Students achieving 70%+ accuracy.
  • Students who understand passages but struggle with time management.
  • Students targeting 85-95 percentile in VARC.

Primary Goal

Improve decision-making speed while maintaining accuracy.

Weekly Target Recommendation
RC Passages 18–24 passages per week
Timed RC Sets 4–5 full RC sets weekly
Review Time 1.5–2 times the solving duration
Error Log Updates Weekly pattern analysis

Difficulty Progression

  • Introduce CAT previous-year RCs.
  • Practice dense philosophy and sociology passages.
  • Reduce reading time gradually while maintaining comprehension.
  • Experiment with passage selection strategies.

Success Benchmark

Maintain 75-85% accuracy while completing RC sets within recommended CAT time limits.

Track 3: Advanced Level (Mock-Driven Refinement)

Who should follow this track?

  • Students consistently scoring above 85% accuracy.
  • Students targeting 98+ percentile in VARC.
  • Students comfortable with all major RC genres.

Primary Goal

Maximise score through passage selection, risk management and mock analysis.

Weekly Target Recommendation
Full-Length Mocks 2–4 mocks per week
VARC Sectionals 3–4 section tests weekly
RC Passages 20–30 high-quality passages
Mock Review 2–3 hours per mock
Error Log Updates Detailed mistake categorisation

Difficulty Progression

  • Focus on hardest CAT-level passages.
  • Train under exam conditions only.
  • Experiment with passage order and skipping strategy.
  • Refine attempt strategy instead of increasing volume.

Success Benchmark

Consistently score 85%+ accuracy while managing time efficiently across complete VARC sections.

How to Maintain an RC Error Log

Regardless of your track, maintain an error log using the following structure:

Column What to Record
Passage Topic Economics, Science, Philosophy, History etc.
Question Type Inference, Main Idea, Tone, Assumption etc.
Mistake Category Comprehension, Time Pressure, Trap Option, Misread Question
Correct Learning What you should have noticed

When Should You Move to the Next Track?

Current Track Promotion Criteria
Beginner → Intermediate 75%+ accuracy over 3 consecutive weeks
Intermediate → Advanced 80–85% accuracy with stable timing performance

Key Insight: Most CAT aspirants try to improve by solving more passages. High scorers improve by reviewing mistakes more deeply. As a rule, spend at least as much time analysing RCs as solving them. Review is where most percentile gains happen.

CAT RC PYQ Workflow: How to Learn from Previous Year Questions Effectively

Many CAT aspirants solve Previous Year Questions (PYQs) only to check their scores. However, the real value of PYQs lies in understanding CAT's thought process, identifying recurring traps, and improving decision-making. The workflow below helps convert every PYQ into a long-term learning opportunity.

Step 1: Attempt Two RC Passages Under Timed Conditions

Select two CAT Previous Year RC passages and attempt them exactly like you would in the exam.

  • Allocate 12-15 minutes per passage set.
  • Avoid checking explanations during the attempt.
  • Mark questions where you are unsure.
  • Use the same elimination process you would use in an actual CAT exam.

The objective is to simulate genuine decision-making rather than solve questions casually.

Step 2: Check Answers and Categorise Every Question

After completing the passages, check the answer key and classify each question according to its type.

Question Type Examples
Main Idea Central theme, primary purpose
Inference Implied meaning, logical conclusion
Tone Author attitude or perspective
Assumption Hidden premise supporting argument
Application Applying passage logic to new situations
Detail-Based Fact retrieval from passage

Step 3: Write Why Every Wrong Option Is Wrong

This is the most important step and the one most students skip.

For every incorrect answer, do not simply read the explanation. Instead, write down:

  • Why the correct option is correct.
  • Why each incorrect option is wrong.
  • Which trap was used by the examiner.

Common CAT RC traps include:

  • Extreme language (always, never, completely)
  • Partially correct statements
  • Options introducing outside knowledge
  • Reversed logic
  • Over-generalisation
  • Too narrow or too broad interpretations

This exercise trains your brain to recognise CAT's option-setting patterns.

Step 4: Update Your RC Error Log

Every mistake should be recorded in an error log.

Field Example Entry
Passage Topic Philosophy
Question Type Inference
Mistake Type Fell for extreme language trap
Correct Learning Inference must remain within passage scope

Step 5: Reattempt the Same Passages After 7 Days

Seven days later, solve the same two passages again without looking at your previous answers.

The goal is not to test memory. The goal is to verify whether:

  • You avoid the same trap options.
  • Your reasoning process has improved.
  • You can identify the author's argument faster.
  • Your elimination strategy is becoming stronger.

If you repeat the same mistakes after one week, it indicates a conceptual weakness rather than a temporary error.

How to Track RC Improvement Effectively

Instead of tracking only overall accuracy, track performance by question type.

Question Type Attempted Correct Accuracy %
Inference 20 14 70%
Main Idea 15 13 87%
Tone 10 8 80%

This approach quickly reveals your weak areas. For example:

  • Low inference accuracy usually indicates reasoning problems.
  • Low main idea accuracy suggests passage-mapping issues.
  • Low tone accuracy often points to poor author-perspective identification.

Weekly PYQ Routine

Activity Target
Timed PYQ RC Passages 6–10 passages
Detailed Option Analysis Every incorrect question
Error Log Updates Weekly review
7-Day Reattempt Sessions 2–3 previously solved RC sets

Best Practice: Do not judge your RC preparation solely by mock scores. Track accuracy separately for Inference, Main Idea, Tone, Assumption, Application and Detail-Based questions. The students who consistently improve these individual categories usually see the biggest gains in CAT VARC percentile.

Top Free Resources for CAT Reading Comprehension Questions 2026

Here are the best sources to prepare for Reading Comprehension for CAT 2026, all available for free, that you can use to improve your CAT score and percentile.

Resource Type

Examples & Details

How It Helps

Newspapers & Editorials

The Hindu editorial, Indian Express, Live Mint, The Wire

Build current affairs awareness and reading depth

Essay & Article Sites

Aeon Essays, Project Syndicate

Read articulate essays with a search by genre

Classic & Contemporary Books

Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers, George Orwell's Politics and the English Language

Learn exceptional writing style and logical flow

Free PDF Libraries

Supergrads Telegram Channel, Supergrads WhatsApp groups

Access essays, books, and study material PDFs

Online Practice Platforms

Toprankers SuperGrads portal

Structured practice with mocks and question packs

Popular YouTube Channels

SuperGrads CAT Coaching

Free video tutorials and RC tips

Free Online Resources for Effective RC for CAT 2026 Preparation

Now, let's explore the best free resources that can help you master the art of RC for CAT 2026:

Some Important and Reputable News Sources

1. The Hindu Editorial

Start your day by reading the editorials in The Hindu newspaper. These well-written, thought-provoking pieces will not only improve your reading skills but also expose you to a diverse range of topics and writing styles.

2. The Wire, Livemint, and Indian Express

Gain access to multi-topic editorial opinions, excellent for exposure to reading comprehension passages for CAT 2026.

3. Project Syndicate

 This global platform features insightful commentary and analysis from renowned experts, economists, and public intellectuals. It's a treasure trove of well-written, intellectually stimulating content.

4. Art and Letters Daily

This website curates the best essays, reviews, and articles from around the web, making it an excellent resource for genre-based reading practice.

Common Sources of Reading Comprehension for CAT 2025

Here are the common reading comprehension passages that were asked in CAT 2025:

Slot

RC Topic

Source Title / Publisher

Source Type

1

Craftsmanship and Creativity

The Economist

Magazine

Bandicoots in Australia

The Smithsonian

Magazine / Research

Digital Rights of Content

The Guardian

Newspaper / Online News

Behavioural Economics

Public Books

Online Article / Review

2

Spice Trade

Yale Global

Academic / Global Affairs

Consequences of Technology

NY Times Magazine

Magazine

Peer Review of Research

Nature.com

Academic Journal / Online

Animals vs Humans

Vijesti.me

Online News Article

3

AI Regulation

The Economist

Magazine

Contamination of Space

Foreign Policy

Magazine / Policy Journal

Moutai Madness

The Economist

Magazine

Languages

HuffPost

Online News / Blog

Find out | CAT cut off for IIMs

Common Sources of Reading Comprehension for CAT 2024

Here are the common reading comprehension passages that were asked in CAT 2024:

Slot

RC Topic

Source Title

Source Type

1

Wolf

The Economist

Magazine

Change in Work Culture

Jared Diamond

Online Article

Indian Ocean

The Conversations

Online News Article

Human Behaviour

Public Books

Online Article/Review

2

Fast Fashion and Pollution

Prospect Magazine

Magazine

Translated Netflix in Europe

The Economist

Magazine

Falling of Liberalism

The Economist

Magazine

Historical Facts and Interpretations

What is History (by E.H. Carr)

Book

3

Global Warming and Colonialism

The Wire Science

Magazine

Romantic Aesthetics

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Academic Journal

Archaeology Paradox

The Los Angeles Times

Newspaper / Magazine

Rationality

The Washington Post

Newspaper / Magazine

Read More: VARC Syllabus for CAT 2026 [Important Topics] PDF Download

Recommended Books, Essays, and Writers to Build Reading Depth

Add variety and richness to your preparation for Reading Comprehension for CAT 2026

Author/Book Name

Reason to Read

Availability

Yuval Noah Harari - Sapiens

Engages with broad perspectives, excellent narrative

Online PDFs, libraries

Malcolm Gladwell - Outliers, Blink

Simplified complexity, story-based learning

PDFs & bookstores

Stephen Pinker - Better Angels of Our Nature

Deep insights into human nature and logic

Online free versions, archives

George Orwell - Politics and the English Language

Masterful essay on writing clarity and precision

Widely available online for free

Amartya Sen - The Argumentative Indian

Accessible, culturally rich essays

PDFs and online libraries

Check Now: CAT 2026 English Syllabus

 CAT Online Coaching

 CAT Online Coaching

CAT Reading Comprehension Questions Weightage Over the Past 5 Years

Year

Weightage (No. of Questions)

2024

16

2023

16

2022

16

2021

16

2020

16

Also Check | CAT Total Marks and Weightage

Develop a Winning RC Preparation Strategy With Us

Now that you're aware of the best free resources available, it's time to create a structured plan to maximise your RC preparation for CAT 2026. 

Monday to Friday

  • Read 2 articles from the reputable news sources mentioned earlier, such as The Hindu, The Wire, or Project Syndicate.
  • Solve 2 RC sets from the CAT previous year papers to boost your speed and accuracy.
  • Analyse the passages, identify the tone, traps, and inference errors, and maintain an error log to track your progress.

Weekends

Set aside time for a timed RC practice session using the free resources or the OMET & CAT Test Series.

Review your error log and identify the areas that need more attention. Develop a plan to address your weaknesses.

Remember, the key to success in the RC section is not just about solving more passages but about improving your accuracy and comprehension abilities. By following this structured approach and leveraging the free resources we've discussed, you'll be well on your way to mastering the RC section and achieving your CAT 2026 goals.

Conclusion

The Reading Comprehension for CAT VARC section is one of the most important parts. By leveraging the best free reading comprehension resources we've discussed, you can elevate your RC skills and increase your chances of securing a top score in the exam.

Remember, consistency and a structured approach are the cornerstones of effective RC preparation. Combine the free tools and materials with personalised guidance from the CAT Scholar Quest program, and you'll be well on your way to conquering the CAT 2026 exam.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is reading comprehension important for the CAT exam?

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About the Author

Faculty
Lalita Vishwakarma

Content Writer

Lalita Vishwakarma is a professional content writer with 5+ years of experience in the IPMAT and CUET domain. She specializes in creating accurate, student-focused content based on the latest exam patterns, syllabus, and preparation strategies. With strong subject understanding and research-backed insights, she simplifies complex topics into clear, easy-to-follow guidance, helping students prepare with confidence and clarity.... more

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