Phase I preliminary exam
Phase I is wide-ranging and tests awareness, reasoning, aptitude, English, and rural-development linked knowledge.

NABARD Grade A 2025 (IT) - Phase2 Paper2
Practice NABARD Grade A with exam-style mocks, section-wise revision, and performance analysis that helps you improve accuracy under time pressure.
Phase I is wide-ranging and tests awareness, reasoning, aptitude, English, and rural-development linked knowledge.
Phase II contains a full English descriptive paper plus a policy or stream paper with economic and agricultural depth.
Interview carries forward the same expectation: clarity on rural economy, development, and institutional themes.
NABARD Grade A combines a broad Phase I screen with a policy-heavy Phase II, where descriptive English becomes a major paper rather than a side section.
Phase I is the broad screen and should be prepared with both awareness depth and speed discipline.
Paper I is a full descriptive English paper and needs independent practice beyond general essay preparation.
The second paper tests subject depth in development economics, agriculture, or stream-linked areas.
NABARD Grade A 2025 score improvement usually comes from better section discipline on the areas that drive the paper most heavily.
Phase I coverage across reasoning, aptitude, awareness, and English
Economic and social issues with rural-development context
Agriculture and rural development awareness
Transitioning into a long-form Phase II writing paper
The course is tied to the official exam flow instead of feeling like a detached set of objective mocks.
The priority sections show where score movement usually happens fastest in the official pattern.
Scheme cards and source visibility make the page easier to trust and easier to scan before you spend prep time.
You can judge the pattern, focus areas, and likely usage flow before deciding how to use the mocks.
NABARD Grade A Phase II Paper I is an English descriptive paper for 100 marks with a 90-minute duration.
It is more policy- and development-oriented, so essays and analysis need stronger rural, agriculture, and economic context.
Rural development, agriculture, financial inclusion, ESI themes, public policy, and sustainability are the strongest topic areas.
Because the English paper is a major Phase II component, and users need more than a short sales block to understand how the course fits the actual exam.