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Complete guide to crack the AMCAT test with preparation strategy, sample questions, and tips. Master all sections including Quantitative, Logical, English, and Domain.
AMCAT (Aspiring Minds Computer Adaptive Test) is one of India's most widely used employability assessment tests. Over 4,000 companies including Amazon, HCL, Deloitte, and MindTree use AMCAT scores for fresher hiring.
Whether you're appearing for on-campus AMCAT or taking it independently for job opportunities, this comprehensive guide covers everything you need to crack the test.
AMCAT is a computer-adaptive test that assesses:
| Benefit | Description |
|---|---|
| Job Opportunities | Apply to 4000+ companies |
| Campus Placements | Many colleges use AMCAT for screening |
| Off-Campus Hiring | Direct access to job openings |
| Skill Validation | Prove your abilities to recruiters |
| Lifetime Score | One test, multiple job applications |
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Duration | 2-3 hours |
| Mode | Computer-based, adaptive |
| Validity | Scores valid for 3 years |
| Cost | βΉ1,100-1,500 (independent test) |
| Format | Multiple choice questions |
| Result | Industry percentile ranking |
Every candidate must complete these three sections:
| Section | Questions | Time | Score Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quantitative Ability | 16 | 16 min | 0-900 |
| Logical Reasoning | 14 | 14 min | 0-900 |
| English Comprehension | 18 | 18 min | 0-900 |
Based on your specialization:
| Domain | Questions | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Computer Science | 25 | 25 min |
| Electronics | 25 | 25 min |
| Mechanical | 25 | 25 min |
| Civil | 25 | 25 min |
| Computer Programming | 25 | 25 min |
| Automata (Coding) | 2 | 45 min |
Non-skippable but no preparation needed:
| Topic | Weight | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Mathematics | 20% | Easy |
| Applied Mathematics | 25% | Medium |
| Engineering Mathematics | 15% | Medium-Hard |
| Data Interpretation | 25% | Medium |
| Data Sufficiency | 15% | Medium-Hard |
| Topic | Key Concepts |
|---|---|
| Numbers | LCM, HCF, divisibility, remainders |
| Percentages | Basic calculations, changes |
| Profit & Loss | CP, SP, discounts |
| Simple Interest | SI formula, time calculations |
| Ratio & Proportion | Direct, inverse variations |
Sample Question:
A shopkeeper sells an article at 20% profit. If he had bought it at
10% less and sold it for βΉ10 less, he would have gained 25%.
Find the cost price.
A) βΉ200 B) βΉ250 C) βΉ300 D) βΉ400
Answer: A) βΉ200
| Topic | Key Concepts |
|---|---|
| Time & Work | Efficiency, wages, pipes |
| Time, Speed, Distance | Relative speed, trains, boats |
| Averages | Weighted average, age problems |
| Mixtures & Alligation | Concentration, mixing ratios |
| Permutations & Combinations | Arrangements, selections |
| Probability | Basic probability, events |
Sample Question:
A can do a piece of work in 10 days and B can do the same work
in 15 days. How many days will they take to complete the work
together?
A) 4 days B) 5 days C) 6 days D) 8 days
Answer: C) 6 days
(1/10 + 1/15 = 1/6, so 6 days)
| Type | What to Practice |
|---|---|
| Tables | Reading data, calculations |
| Bar Graphs | Comparison, trends |
| Pie Charts | Percentage distribution |
| Line Graphs | Trend analysis |
| Data Sufficiency | Logical data analysis |
| Week | Focus |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Basic mathematics (numbers, percentages) |
| Week 2 | Applied mathematics (TSD, work) |
| Week 3 | Data interpretation |
| Week 4 | Mixed practice, data sufficiency |
| Resource | Best For |
|---|---|
| IndiaBix | Practice questions |
| PrepInsta | AMCAT-specific |
| RS Aggarwal | Conceptual clarity |
| AMCAT Previous Papers | Pattern familiarity |
| Topic | Weight |
|---|---|
| Deductive Reasoning | 25% |
| Inductive Reasoning | 20% |
| Abductive Reasoning | 20% |
| Critical Reasoning | 35% |
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Syllogisms | Statements and conclusions |
| Logical Deductions | If-then scenarios |
| Blood Relations | Family trees |
| Coding-Decoding | Pattern recognition |
| Direction Sense | Spatial reasoning |
Sample Question:
Statements: All cats are animals. Some animals are dogs.
Conclusions: I. Some dogs are cats.
II. Some animals are cats.
A) Only I follows
B) Only II follows
C) Both follow
D) Neither follows
Answer: B) Only II follows
| Type | Focus |
|---|---|
| Number Series | Find the pattern |
| Letter Series | Alphabetical patterns |
| Analogies | Relationship patterns |
| Classification | Odd one out |
Sample Question:
2, 6, 12, 20, 30, ?
A) 36 B) 40 C) 42 D) 48
Answer: C) 42
Pattern: nΒ² + n = 2, 6, 12, 20, 30, 42
| Type | Skills Tested |
|---|---|
| Statement-Assumptions | Hidden assumptions |
| Statement-Arguments | Validity of arguments |
| Cause and Effect | Causal relationships |
| Course of Action | Problem-solving decisions |
| Topic | Weight |
|---|---|
| Grammar | 30% |
| Vocabulary | 25% |
| Reading Comprehension | 35% |
| Verbal Ability | 10% |
| Topic | What to Master |
|---|---|
| Tenses | Usage and rules |
| Subject-Verb Agreement | Singular/plural matching |
| Articles | a, an, the usage |
| Prepositions | Correct usage |
| Voice | Active/passive conversion |
| Error Spotting | Identify grammatical errors |
Sample Question:
Find the error:
The team are (A) / working on (B) / the project (C) / since morning (D).
Answer: D should be "since this morning" or A should be "is"
(but more likely D with "from this morning")
| Focus Area | Practice Method |
|---|---|
| Synonyms | Word lists, flashcards |
| Antonyms | Opposite word pairs |
| Word Meanings | Context-based learning |
| Idioms | Common phrases |
| One-word Substitution | Single word for phrase |
Sample Question:
Select the word most similar in meaning to "Ephemeral":
A) Eternal B) Temporary C) Ancient D) Mysterious
Answer: B) Temporary (meaning short-lived)
| Skill | Approach |
|---|---|
| Main Idea | Identify central theme |
| Inferences | Read between lines |
| Vocabulary in Context | Word meaning from context |
| Author's Tone | Identify perspective |
| Logical Flow | Paragraph organization |
Strategy:
| Week | Focus |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Grammar rules and error spotting |
| Week 2 | Vocabulary building (50 words/day) |
| Week 3 | Reading comprehension practice |
| Week 4 | Mixed practice and speed improvement |
| Topic | Questions |
|---|---|
| Data Structures | 6-8 |
| Algorithms | 4-5 |
| DBMS | 4-5 |
| Operating Systems | 4-5 |
| Computer Networks | 3-4 |
| OOPs | 3-4 |
| Topic | Focus Points |
|---|---|
| Arrays | Operations, complexity |
| Linked Lists | Types, operations |
| Stacks & Queues | Applications, implementation |
| Trees | BST, traversals, AVL |
| Graphs | BFS, DFS, shortest path |
| Hashing | Hash functions, collision |
| Topic | Focus Points |
|---|---|
| SQL | Queries, joins, subqueries |
| Normalization | 1NF, 2NF, 3NF, BCNF |
| Transactions | ACID properties |
| Keys | Primary, foreign, candidate |
| ER Diagrams | Entities, relationships |
| Topic | Focus Points |
|---|---|
| Process Management | States, scheduling |
| Memory Management | Paging, segmentation |
| Deadlock | Conditions, prevention |
| File Systems | Organization, allocation |
| CPU Scheduling | FCFS, SJF, Round Robin |
Automata is AMCAT's coding assessment with:
| Level | Type | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Easy | Basic logic | Sum of digits, palindrome check |
| Medium | Array/String manipulation | Sorting, searching, patterns |
| Hard | Advanced logic | DP, recursion variants |
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Number Problems | Prime check, factors, GCD |
| String Problems | Reverse, substring, pattern matching |
| Array Problems | Sorting, searching, subarray |
| Matrix Problems | Traversal, rotation, patterns |
| Pattern Problems | Star patterns, number patterns |
# Problem: Find the second largest element in an array
def second_largest(arr):
if len(arr) < 2:
return -1
first = second = float('-inf')
for num in arr:
if num > first:
second = first
first = num
elif num > second and num != first:
second = num
return second if second != float('-inf') else -1
# Input: [10, 5, 8, 20, 15]
# Output: 15
| Week | Focus |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Basic problems (numbers, strings) |
| Week 2 | Array and matrix problems |
| Week 3 | Sorting, searching algorithms |
| Week 4 | Practice on AMCAT platform |
| Day | Morning (1 hour) | Evening (1 hour) |
|---|---|---|
| Mon | Quantitative Ability | Domain (CS/ECE) |
| Tue | Logical Reasoning | Coding practice |
| Wed | English Comprehension | Quantitative Ability |
| Thu | Domain Subject | Logical Reasoning |
| Fri | Coding practice | English + Vocab |
| Sat | Full mock test | Analysis and revision |
| Sun | Weak areas review | Rest |
| Week | Primary Focus |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Fundamentals of all sections |
| Week 2 | Practice and identify weak areas |
| Week 3 | Intensive weak area work |
| Week 4 | Mock tests and final revision |
| Action | When |
|---|---|
| Sleep well | Night before |
| Light meal | 2 hours before |
| Reach venue | 30 min early |
| Carry documents | ID proof, hall ticket |
| Calm mindset | Before entering |
| Section | Time per Question |
|---|---|
| Quant | 1 minute |
| Logical | 1 minute |
| English | 1 minute |
| Domain | 1 minute |
| Coding | 20-22 min per problem |
AMCAT adapts to your performance:
Strategy: Getting some questions wrong is okay. Focus on accuracy over speed.
| Mistake | Solution |
|---|---|
| Ignoring weak sections | Balance all sections |
| Only practicing easy questions | Challenge yourself |
| Not taking mock tests | Simulate real conditions |
| Last-minute cramming | Consistent daily practice |
| Mistake | Solution |
|---|---|
| Rushing through questions | Read each question fully |
| Spending too long on one question | Move on after 2 minutes |
| Not attempting all questions | Attempt everything |
| Anxiety affecting performance | Practice relaxation |
| Score | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| 0-400 | Below average |
| 400-500 | Average |
| 500-600 | Good |
| 600-700 | Very good |
| 700+ | Excellent |
| Company | English | Logical | Quant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon | 500+ | 500+ | 500+ |
| Infosys | 400+ | 400+ | 400+ |
| TCS | 350+ | 350+ | 350+ |
| Cognizant | 400+ | 400+ | 400+ |
| Accenture | 450+ | 450+ | 450+ |
| HCL | 425+ | 425+ | 425+ |
Note: Cutoffs vary by role and year. Aim for 550+ in each section for most opportunities.
| Resource | Best For |
|---|---|
| PrepInsta | AMCAT-specific content |
| IndiaBix | Practice questions |
| GeeksforGeeks | CS domain, coding |
| CareerRide | Reasoning, aptitude |
| YouTube tutorials | Concept clarity |
| Resource | What It Offers |
|---|---|
| myAMCAT.com | Official test, sample papers |
| AMCAT Prep | Official preparation module |
| Mock Tests | Full-length simulations |
| Book | Subject |
|---|---|
| RS Aggarwal | Quantitative Aptitude |
| Wren & Martin | English Grammar |
| Made Easy | CS Domain |
| Previous Papers | Pattern understanding |
4-6 weeks of focused preparation is ideal. Minimum 2 weeks if you have strong basics.
AMCAT is adaptive, so it adjusts to your level. This makes it feel challenging but fair. It's comparable to other employability tests like CoCubes, eLitmus.
No, AMCAT doesn't allow calculators. Practice mental math and rough calculations.
You can retake after 45 days. Use the time to prepare weak areas thoroughly.
AMCAT gets you shortlisted for interviews. You still need to clear technical and HR rounds.
It's the coding section where you write actual programs. Crucial for software roles.
Looking for more placement preparation resources? Explore more guides on Sproutern for comprehensive interview and aptitude test preparation.
This article was last reviewed and updated on February 23, 2026. Source: Sproutern Career Research Team.
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