The wait is finally over for lakhs of Railway aspirants across India. On May 7, 2026, the Railway Recruitment Board (RRB) kicked off the first leg of the NTPC Undergraduate (CBT 1) examinations. As the gates opened for Shift 1, the atmosphere was a mix of nervous energy and high expectations.
If you are slated to appear in the coming days—anywhere between now and June 21—this deep dive is for you. We’ve moved beyond the raw data to bring you a "boots-on-the-ground" analysis of what really happened inside the exam hall today, which topics dominated the screen, and how you should tweak your 11th-hour strategy.
The first shift of Day 1 often sets the tone for the entire recruitment cycle. Based on immediate feedback from candidates leaving the centers in Delhi, Patna, and Mumbai, the paper followed a balanced trajectory.
There were no major "shocks" in terms of exam pattern changes, which is a massive sigh of relief. The difficulty level hovered comfortably in the Easy to Moderate zone. While the General Awareness section tested your memory, the Mathematics section tested your speed.
| Section | No. of Questions | Difficulty Level | Good Attempts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mathematics | 30 | Moderate (Calculative) | 22-25 |
| General Intelligence & Reasoning | 30 | Easy | 26-28 |
| General Awareness | 40 | Easy to Moderate | 28-32 |
| Overall | 100 | Easy to Moderate | 76-85 |
Pro-Tip: Don’t let the "Easy" tag fool you. In a 90-minute race, the challenge isn't solving the question; it's solving it in 45 seconds without hitting the negative marking trap.
The Math section was largely dominated by Arithmetic. If your fundamentals in percentages and ratios are strong, you could easily clear the initial hurdle. However, several students reported that 3–4 questions in Data Interpretation and Interest were "lengthy," designed specifically to eat into your time.
The Strategy: If a calculation looks like it's going to take more than a minute, mark it for review and move on. The goal is to find the "low-hanging fruit" first.
This was arguably the most "student-friendly" section today. Most candidates finished this section in under 20 minutes. The logic was straightforward, though a few Seating Arrangement questions required careful reading to avoid silly mistakes.
Expert Take: Reasoning is where you build your cushion for the cut-off. Aim for 100% accuracy here.
The GA section was a mix of Static GK and Current Affairs from late 2025 to early 2026. Interestingly, there was a significant focus on Indian Railways' recent technological upgrades and Government Schemes.
If your exam is in the next few days, don't just study harder—study smarter. Here is what today’s analysis tells us:
Don't ignore the history and recent news of Indian Railways. Questions about Vande Bharat expansions or dedicated freight corridors are becoming a staple.
With a 1/3rd negative marking rule, "guessing" is your worst enemy. Today's successful candidates were those who stuck to what they knew. If you're stuck between two options, use the elimination method, but never blind-guess on a 4-option uncertainty.
100 questions in 90 minutes sounds generous, but the 40 GA questions need to be wrapped up in 15 minutes. This gives you roughly a minute per question for the 60 Math/Reasoning problems.
While Current Affairs gets the hype, the bulk of the GA section still relies on Static GK. Revisit your notes on Art & Culture, Famous Personalities, and First-in-India.
For the Mathematics section, several questions were direct applications of formulas. Spend 30 minutes every morning revising squares (up to 30), cubes (up to 20), and basic trigonometric values.
The RRB NTPC Undergraduate Exam 2026 is a marathon, not a sprint. Today’s analysis shows that the board is looking for candidates with a balanced knowledge base rather than specialists in one subject.
Stay calm, keep your Admit Card and ID proofs ready, and most importantly—get enough sleep the night before. The paper is designed to be solved; you just need to manage your clock better than the person sitting next to you.
Good luck, Aspirants! See you on the merit list.