RRB Paramedical Free Mock Test
RRB Paramedical (Paramedical Categories) is part of India's Government Exams category, covering 4 topics. Kamiyab provides a free RRB Paramedical Full Mock test — questions matched to the official exam pattern with real timing, instant scoring, and per-question explanations. Eligibility: Medical qualification. Aligned to the current 2026 official syllabus.
RRB Paramedical mock is being built
We're working through the RRB Paramedical previous-year papers to build a PYQ-grounded, expert-audited question bank. The syllabus, eligibility and exam pattern below stay accurate — the mock launches as soon as the bank clears audit. Live exams today: SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, and SSC MTS.
Topics covered
Topics are listed for reference. The mock launch unlocks once each topic's PYQ-grounded question bank is audited.
About RRB Paramedical Categories Recruitment
The RRB Paramedical Categories recruitment is conducted by the Railway Recruitment Boards (RRBs) to fill medical and paramedical posts across Indian Railways' nationwide hospital and health network. Indian Railways runs one of the largest employer-managed healthcare systems in the country — central hospitals at every zonal HQ, divisional hospitals, sub-divisional hospitals, health units and dispensaries serving railway employees, their families, and pensioners. These posts staff that network.
The notification covers a wide range of post categories — Staff Nurse, Pharmacist (Grade III), Physiotherapist (Grade II), Health & Malaria Inspector (Grade III), Lab Assistant (Grade II), Lab Superintendent (Grade III), Radiographer / X-Ray Technician, Hospital Attendant, ECG Technician, Audiologist & Speech Therapist, Dietician, Dental Hygienist, Optometrist and Perfusionist. Each post has its own eligibility (qualification + age band) and its Professional Knowledge section is drawn from that post's syllabus.
Unlike most RRB recruitments which are open to any graduate, RRB Paramedical demands a recognised medical/paramedical qualification plus, for clinical posts, valid registration with the corresponding statutory council (State Nursing Council, Pharmacy Council of India, etc.). Selection is via a single computer-based test followed by Document Verification (with council registration check) and a Medical Examination. The role offers central government pay scales, transferable postings across India, and exposure to a busy, multi-speciality hospital environment from day one.
Conducted by: Railway Recruitment Boards (RRBs), Ministry of Railways, Government of India
Eligibility
Staff Nurse
- Age:
- 20-40 years. Age relaxation: SC/ST +5 years, OBC-NCL +3 years, PwBD +10 years, ex-servicemen as per rules.
- Education:
- B.Sc Nursing (3 or 4 years) OR Diploma in General Nursing & Midwifery (GNM) from a recognised institution. Mandatory registration as a Nurse and Midwife with the Indian Nursing Council or any State Nursing Council.
- Nationality:
- Indian citizen, or subject of Nepal/Bhutan, or Tibetan refugee who came before 1 Jan 1962 with intent to settle permanently, or person of Indian origin who has migrated from specified countries.
Pharmacist (Grade III)
- Age:
- 20-35 years. Standard age relaxations apply.
- Education:
- 10+2 with Science PLUS B.Pharm OR D.Pharm from a recognised institution. Mandatory registration as a Pharmacist under the Pharmacy Act, 1948 with a State Pharmacy Council.
- Nationality:
- Same as above.
Physiotherapist (Grade II)
- Age:
- 20-33 years. Standard age relaxations apply.
- Education:
- Bachelor of Physiotherapy (BPT) — 4½ years course including 6 months internship — from a recognised institution.
- Nationality:
- Same as above.
Lab Assistant (Gr II) / Lab Superintendent (Gr III) / Radiographer
- Age:
- 18-33 years for Lab Assistant; 18-36 years for Lab Superintendent and Radiographer. Standard age relaxations apply.
- Education:
- Lab Assistant: 10+2 with Science + DMLT (Diploma in Medical Laboratory Technology) OR B.Sc Medical Lab Technology. Lab Superintendent: B.Sc MLT. Radiographer: 10+2 with Science + Diploma in Radiography / X-Ray Technician course (1-2 years) from a recognised institution.
- Nationality:
- Same as above.
Other paramedical posts (Health & Malaria Inspector, ECG Tech, Dental Hygienist, Optometrist, Dietician, Audiologist, Perfusionist, Hospital Attendant)
- Age:
- 18-36 years (varies — Hospital Attendant 18-33 yrs; specialist posts often 20-35 yrs). Standard age relaxations apply.
- Education:
- Post-specific qualification — H&MI: B.Sc + Sanitary Inspector cert / 1-year Health & Sanitary Inspector course. ECG Tech: 10+2 Sci + 1-yr ECG Tech course. Dental Hygienist: 10+2 + 2-yr Dental Hygienist cert. Optometrist: B.Sc Optometry / Diploma. Dietician: B.Sc Home Sci / Food & Nutrition + PG Diploma. Audiologist & Speech Therapist: B.Sc / BASLP. Perfusionist: B.Sc + Diploma in Perfusion Technology. Council/board registration where applicable.
- Nationality:
- Same as above.
Exam Pattern
Stage-by-stage breakdown of the recruitment process.
Computer Based Test (CBT)
- Mode
- Online CBT, single shift
- Sections
- Professional Knowledge (post-specific) · General Awareness · General Arithmetic · General Intelligence & Reasoning
- Questions
- 100 questions total. Typical split: Professional Knowledge 70 · General Awareness 10 · General Arithmetic 10 · Reasoning 10 (exact split may vary slightly by post category in the CEN)
- Marks
- 100 marks (1 mark per question)
- Duration
- 90 minutes (120 minutes for PwBD candidates with scribe)
- Negative marking
- 1/3 mark deducted for each wrong answer
Professional Knowledge is the dominant section — roughly 70-80% of total marks. The minimum qualifying percentage in CBT is 40% for UR/EWS, 30% for OBC-NCL/SC, 25% for ST (subject to relaxation as per CEN). Normalisation is applied if the exam runs in multiple shifts.
Document Verification (DV)
- Mode
- Offline, at the nominated RRB office
- Sections
- Document and credential verification
- Questions
- —
- Marks
- Qualifying only
- Duration
- As scheduled by the RRB
- Negative marking
- —
Candidates shortlisted on the basis of CBT merit (up to 1.2x or 1.5x the notified vacancies, per CEN) are called for DV. Originals required: matriculation, qualifying medical/paramedical degree or diploma + marksheets, council registration certificate (Nurse / Pharmacy / etc., where applicable), caste/EWS/PwBD certificate, photo ID. Failure to produce a valid council registration disqualifies clinical-post candidates.
Medical Examination
- Mode
- Conducted by Railway Medical Officer at a designated railway hospital
- Sections
- Vision, hearing, general physical fitness, blood/urine investigations as required
- Questions
- —
- Marks
- Qualifying only
- Duration
- As scheduled
- Negative marking
- —
Medical standards are post-specific (typically A-3 or B-1 / B-2 for paramedical posts under the Indian Railways Medical Manual). Final appointment is subject to clearing this stage.
Syllabus
Tap any section to see the full list of subtopics.
Professional Knowledge (post-specific — dominant section, ~70-80% weightage)18 topics
- Anatomy and physiology of major body systems (cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, nervous, renal, endocrine, musculoskeletal)
- Common medical terminology and abbreviations
- Vital signs — normal ranges of pulse, BP, respiration, temperature; how to record them
- Pharmacology basics (for Pharmacist / Nurse) — drug classifications, indications, contraindications, common side effects, Schedule H / H1 / X drugs, prescription standards
- Common medications by class — antibiotics, analgesics, antihypertensives, antidiabetics, antipyretics, antiemetics
- Microbiology basics — common bacterial, viral, parasitic and fungal infections; modes of transmission
- Pathology basics — common lab investigations, normal vs abnormal lab values (CBC, LFT, KFT, urine routine)
- Nursing fundamentals (for Staff Nurse) — IV cannulation, injection techniques (IM, IV, SC, ID), wound dressing, catheterisation, bed-making
- Infection control and biomedical waste management (colour coding of waste bins)
- First aid and emergency care — CPR steps (adult, child, infant), choking management, burns, fractures, snake bite, poisoning
- Public health — National Immunisation Schedule (BCG, OPV, Penta, MMR, DPT etc.), vector-borne diseases (malaria, dengue, chikungunya, filariasis), water-borne diseases
- Major national health programmes — NHM, Ayushman Bharat, RNTCP/NTEP, NLEP, NVBDCP, NPCDCS, RMNCH+A, ICDS
- Common diseases — TB, HIV/AIDS, diabetes, hypertension, COPD, asthma, COVID-19 management basics, common NCDs
- Radiography basics (for Radiographer) — X-ray, USG, CT, MRI principles; radiation safety; ALARA principle
- Lab Technology basics (for Lab Asst/Sup) — sample collection, blood grouping, microscopy, common biochemistry tests
- Pharmacy practice — drug storage, expiry management, dispensing protocols, indenting (for Pharmacist)
- Physiotherapy basics — common modalities (TENS, IFT, US, SWD), exercises, post-op rehab (for Physiotherapist)
- Hospital procedures, patient care, communication, and medical ethics
General Awareness (10 questions)9 topics
- Indian History — Ancient, Medieval, Modern, Freedom Struggle
- Indian Geography — physical, political, agricultural basics
- Indian Polity — Constitution basics, key Articles, Schedules, fundamental rights
- Indian Economy basics — Budget, RBI, major schemes
- Healthcare context — Ayushman Bharat (PMJAY), National Health Mission, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, AIIMS, ICMR, NMC (National Medical Commission), INC (Indian Nursing Council), PCI (Pharmacy Council of India), WHO India
- General Science (10th level) — Physics, Chemistry, Biology basics
- Current Affairs (last 12 months) — health-related events tend to be over-represented
- Static GK — sports, awards, books and authors, important days
- Railways awareness — basic facts about Indian Railways, zones, recent budget allocations
General Arithmetic (10 questions, Class 10 level)9 topics
- Number system, simplification
- Percentages (including hospital/dose-related word problems)
- Profit and loss (single step)
- Ratio and proportion (drug dilution and dose calculation context)
- Simple interest and compound interest (basic)
- Averages
- Time and work, time-speed-distance (basic)
- Basic mensuration (perimeter, area, volume)
- Data interpretation — simple bar charts and tables
General Intelligence & Reasoning (10 questions)11 topics
- Number and letter series
- Coding-decoding (letter shift, numeric, symbolic)
- Analogies (semantic, symbolic, numeric)
- Classification (odd-one-out)
- Blood relations
- Direction sense
- Mathematical operations and inequalities
- Ranking and ordering
- Calendar and clock (basic)
- Syllogism (2-statement, basic)
- Venn diagrams (2-3 set logic)
Preparation Strategy
Professional Knowledge is where the exam is won or lost — it carries 70-80% of the marks. Treat your degree or diploma textbooks as the primary source: Brunner & Suddarth's Medical-Surgical Nursing for Staff Nurse, K.D. Tripathi's Essentials of Medical Pharmacology for Pharmacist, Solomon's Anatomy & Physiology and McCance Pathophysiology for clinical roles. Build a chapter-wise revision plan from your own course curriculum and finish two full passes before mocks.
Don't underprepare the 30 'general' questions. They are easy marks if revised, easy marks lost if ignored. Use Lucent's General Knowledge for static GK, an NCERT 9-10 Science quick read for General Science, and a single current-affairs source (Pratiyogita Darpan monthly or a daily one-page compilation) for the last 9-12 months. Maintain a separate page on healthcare GK — schemes, councils, programmes — since the paper consistently weights health-related GK.
For Reasoning and General Arithmetic, RS Aggarwal's two standard books are enough. These sections are short (10 questions each) but high-accuracy targets — aim 9/10 on each. Solve 10 reasoning + 10 arithmetic questions every day for 60 days to build the reflex; speed matters less here than accuracy because they are quick wins.
Track the CEN (Centralised Employment Notification) on the regional RRB websites (rrbahmedabad.gov.in, rrbbhopal.gov.in, etc.) — Paramedical CENs are released less frequently than NTPC/Group D, so notifications are easy to miss. Register on the regional RRB site of your home zone, and verify your council registration is current and valid for the application year.
Mock test strategy: in the last 6 weeks, attempt 3 post-specific Professional Knowledge mocks per week + 2 full 100-question mocks under exam conditions (90 minutes, 1/3 negative marking). Single-topic practice on Kamiyab is ideal for daily topic revision; a full-length mock replicates the real timer and difficulty for end-stage prep.
Recent Changes to Know
- Indian Nursing Council registration (or State Nursing Council registration) is now strictly verified at the DV stage for Staff Nurse — applicants without a valid live registration are disqualified at DV, not at application.
- RRB Paramedical CBT is fully computer-based — no offline OMR option at any stage.
- Normalisation is applied if the CBT is conducted in multiple shifts. Raw scores are scaled before merit is drawn.
- Document Verification now includes a digital cross-check of council registration databases (INC / SNC / PCI) wherever the council provides a verification portal.
Important Dates
- Notification
- Released by the RRBs whenever a centralised Paramedical Categories CEN is issued — historically every 3-4 years rather than annually. Watch the regional RRB websites and indianrailways.gov.in for the CEN announcement.
- Exam
- CBT typically 4-6 months after the application window closes. DV and Medical Examination follow over the subsequent 3-4 months.
- Results
- CBT result published 1-3 months after the exam. Final panel released after DV + Medical Examination.
Paramedical recruitment is cycle-based, not annual. Dates change every CEN. Always check the latest notification on the regional RRB website and indianrailways.gov.in before applying.
Widely-Used Reference Books
Popular books many aspirants use — pick what fits your level.
- Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing — Staff Nurse
- Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice — Staff Nurse
- K.D. Tripathi — Essentials of Medical Pharmacology — Pharmacist / Nurse
- Remington: The Science and Practice of Pharmacy — Pharmacist
- Indian Pharmacopoeia (latest edition) — Pharmacist reference
- Solomon — Introduction to Human Anatomy and Physiology — all clinical posts
- McCance & Huether — Pathophysiology: The Biologic Basis for Disease — clinical posts
- Sutherland's Textbook of Medical Laboratory Technology — Lab Asst / Lab Sup
- Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine — Health & Malaria Inspector
- Christensen's Physics of Diagnostic Radiology — Radiographer
- Sushil Yadav / Disha — RRB Paramedical Previous Year Solved Papers
- Lucent's General Knowledge — General Awareness (static)
- Pratiyogita Darpan (monthly) — Current Affairs
- RS Aggarwal — Quantitative Aptitude and Verbal & Non-Verbal Reasoning
RRB Paramedical preparation guides
- How to Prepare for a Government Exam While Working Full-TimeYou don't need 12 free hours a day to crack a Sarkari exam — you need a system that fits around a job. Here's how working aspirants use 2–3 focused hours to compete with full-time students.
- Negative Marking: When to Guess and When to SkipNegative marking quietly decides results. Here's the simple maths of when an educated guess pays off, when to leave a question, and how to stop bleeding marks you've already earned.
- Mock Test Strategy: How Many to Take and How to Analyse ThemTaking mocks isn't the hard part — analysing them is. Here's how many mock tests to take, when, and the review routine that actually turns them into a higher score.
- How to Use Previous Year Questions (PYQs) to Crack Any Sarkari ExamPrevious year questions are the single best predictor of what your exam will ask. Here's how to use PYQs the right way — to map the syllabus, spot repeats, and turn practice into marks.
RRB Paramedical mock test — frequently asked questions
Is the RRB Paramedical mock test on Kamiyab really free?
Yes, completely free. No payment and no hidden charges — every RRB Paramedical full mock on Kamiyab is free to use.
Do I need to create an account to attempt the RRB Paramedical mock test?
Yes — you sign in (free) with your mobile number or Google before starting a RRB Paramedical mock. It takes a few seconds and lets us save your scores and weak-topic insights.
How many questions are there in the RRB Paramedical mock test?
A Full Mock is built to match the real RRB Paramedical exam pattern and timing — a complete, full-length paper. You can also practise a single topic on its own for a shorter, focused session.
Which subjects and topics are covered for RRB Paramedical?
4 topics are covered for RRB Paramedical, including Professional Knowledge, General Awareness, General Intelligence & Reasoning and more. Each topic can be practised on its own or combined into a full-length mock.
Are the RRB Paramedical questions reliable and up to date with the latest syllabus?
Every question is hand-curated and kept aligned with the current official RRB Paramedical syllabus, each with a short explanation. When the exam body revises the syllabus, the question bank is updated so you are not practising removed or out-of-syllabus topics.
Do I get the correct answers and explanations for RRB Paramedical?
Yes. After you submit the test, every question shows the correct option along with a short explanation, so you can review and fix weak areas immediately.
Will the RRB Paramedical mock test work on a low-end phone or slow connection?
Yes. Kamiyab runs in any modern mobile browser with no app install. The timer, scoring and explanations all work on basic Android phones and on slow networks.
How should I use Kamiyab to prepare for RRB Paramedical?
Practise a single topic daily for focused revision, then take a full-length mock to simulate the real RRB Paramedical timer and pressure. Read the explanations after every test and re-practise the topics where you score low.