Bank math is a speed-and-accuracy game
Most bank recruitment math sections are lost on time management, not concept awareness. Candidates who can solve moderate questions quickly create score advantage.
Training must prioritize fast recognition of pattern types and clean arithmetic execution.
Use drill blocks by question family
Divide practice into short blocks: percentages, ratio, profit-loss, simple/compound interest, and data interpretation. Rotate these blocks through the week with fixed timers.
This creates both breadth and response-speed stability under pressure.
Review mistakes before adding new volume
If you keep adding new sets without fixing repeated errors, speed gains collapse. Maintain a weekly error log and reattempt old traps after a short interval.
Improvement comes from reduced repeat mistakes, not only increased question count.
A 45-minute daily bank math routine
A practical routine is 15 minutes of rapid arithmetic warm-up, 20 minutes of timed mixed sets, and 10 minutes of error replay. This keeps momentum high without burnout.
Track attempt time per question family instead of overall mood. Speed is built through measurable repetition, not vague confidence.
When to shift from topic drills to full sections
Once core topics become stable, start running full-section simulation twice a week. This reveals transition costs between question families that isolated drills can hide.
Use section-level review to identify where speed drops after difficult items. This is often where candidates lose rank in bank recruitment tests.