
📋 Table of Contents
- The Section-Wise Reality of CAT 2026
- The “Take One Section to the Moon” Strategy
- VARC Strategy — From 2 Marks to 31 Marks
- Quant Strategy — Even for Non-Math Students
- DILR Strategy — The Section That Wins Exams
- Which Section Should YOU Take to the Moon?
- Consistency: The Only Thing Toppers Agree On
- Section-Wise Score vs Percentile Benchmarks
- Real CAT Toppers, Real Percentiles
- FAQs
Developing a sharp CAT section wise strategy — rather than spreading effort evenly — is what consistently produces 99 percentile scores.
What separates a 98 percentile from a 90 percentile in CAT? It is rarely total knowledge. It is almost always one section where the student became genuinely dominant. Not average in all three — extraordinary in one, and solid enough in the other two to hold the overall score up.
This is the strategy Quantifiers calls “Take One Section to the Moon” — and the data from every CAT topper conversation at Quantifiers confirms it. In this blog, we break down how this strategy works, section-wise preparation plans for VARC, Quant, and DILR, and — most importantly — how to figure out which section you should be dominating.
1. The Section-Wise Reality of CAT 2026
CAT has three sections of 40 minutes each. What most students don’t realise is that the scoring is percentile-based — meaning you are not competing against the paper, you are competing against other test-takers. A score that gives you 99 percentile in one section can be as few as 10–11 correct answers out of 22 in QA if the paper was difficult enough.
| Section | Questions | Time | For 90%ile | For 99%ile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VARC | 24 | 40 min | ~7–8 correct | ~14–16 correct |
| DILR | 20 | 40 min | ~5–6 correct | ~12–14 correct |
| QA | 22 | 40 min | ~5–6 correct | ~10–11 correct |
Notice that 99 percentile in QA only requires about 10–11 correct answers. That is roughly 45% of the section. The implication: CAT is not about mastering everything — it is about strategic excellence in the right areas.
2. The “Take One Section to the Moon” Strategy
Here is the core insight from every student Sahil Sir has interviewed after they cracked CAT with a top percentile: not one of them was uniformly excellent across all three sections. Every single one had one section they had made their weapon.
✅ The Math That Makes This Work
Imagine a student with: DILR 99 percentile + QA 93 percentile + VARC 92 percentile. Overall result: 98–99 percentile. The section taken to the moon dragged the overall score up. Meanwhile, 93 and 92 percentile in the other two sections are perfectly achievable for any focused aspirant — they do not require perfection, just solid preparation.
This strategy matters especially for students who fear one section. If Quant terrifies you, you do not need to become a Quant wizard. You need to become a VARC or DILR expert while getting Quant to a solid 80–90 percentile range. The section you take to the moon carries your overall score.
⚠️ But Never Completely Neglect Any Section
IIMs have sectional cutoffs. If you score 99 percentile overall but fall below the cutoff in one section, you do not get shortlisted. The strategy is excellence in one + solid in two — never abandon any section entirely. Even your “other” sections need consistent daily practice.
3. VARC Strategy — From 2 Marks to 31 Marks
Here is proof that VARC is the most improvable section in CAT. When a student starts preparation scoring just 2 marks in the VARC section of a mock test — and finishes the year scoring 31 marks — that is not luck. That is what daily reading habit + proper RC technique + consistent practice does to a person over 10–12 months.
VARC cannot be crammed. There is no “VARC shortcut” that works. What works is embarrassingly simple: read every day. One quality article or editorial. Then, from Month 2, one RC from your coaching material. By Month 4, you will be reading faster and understanding better than you thought possible.
| Phase | Daily Activity | What It Builds |
|---|---|---|
| Month 1–2 | Read 1 editorial or long article. Write a 3-line summary. Solve 3–4 Para Jumbles. | Reading fluency, comprehension, sentence-level logic |
| Month 3–5 | 1 full RC (no timer, accuracy focus). 5 non-RC verbal questions. Continue daily reading. | RC accuracy, question-type familiarity, verbal instinct |
| Month 6+ | 2 RCs under timed conditions. 2 VARC sectionals per weekend. Full mock analysis. | Speed, exam strategy, question selection instinct |
✅ Quantifier’s Reading Tip
If newspapers feel difficult to read in the beginning, start with fiction. A good thriller novel — something engaging that you actually want to read — builds reading stamina painlessly. The discipline of sitting with dense text for 30 minutes translates directly into RC performance. Once you are comfortable with fiction, graduate to non-fiction and quality long-form journalism.
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RC passages, Para Jumbles, Para Summary — quality material aligned with actual CAT patterns. Free, no signup needed.Start VARC Practice →
4. Quant Strategy — Even for Non-Math Students
The most common fear in CAT preparation: “I left maths after Class 10. I can’t do Quant.” This is a myth that costs many students their IIM dream. CAT Quant does not require Class 12 maths, engineering maths, or any advanced mathematics. It is entirely based on Class 9–10 concepts — percentages, ratios, basic algebra, geometry, and number properties.
For non-math students, the strategy is to start Quant early, go through basics patiently, and specialise heavily in Arithmetic while building a solid base in Algebra and Geometry. Arithmetic alone accounts for 35–40% of the Quant section — mastering it gives you a reliable score even before touching the other topics.
| Student Background | Quant Starting Point | Priority Topics | Realistic Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-engineer, no Class 12 maths | NCERT Class 9–10 revision | Arithmetic first, then Algebra basics, then Geometry minimum | 85–93 percentile in QA |
| Commerce student, some maths exposure | Direct to coaching LOD material | Full Arithmetic + full Algebra, then Geometry | 90–97 percentile in QA |
| Engineer with strong maths base | Straight to advanced workshops | Algebra + Geometry deep-dive + Number System | 95–99+ percentile in QA |
One crucial rule: do not completely skip any Quant topic. Even topics with low weightage like Number System and Modern Maths appear every year. If CAT 2026 throws a difficult Arithmetic paper — which it can — the students who covered all topics will find safe marks in areas the paper is easier. Students who skipped “less important” topics will have nowhere to turn.
5. DILR Strategy — The Section That Wins Exams
DILR is the great equaliser of CAT. It does not care about your educational background. Engineers and non-engineers start at roughly the same point in DILR — because none of them practised DILR sets in school. It is a completely learnable skill and the student who puts in the daily practice almost always wins this section.
The most important skill in DILR is not speed — it is data organisation. The student who can correctly structure a complex set into a clean table or grid in 3–4 minutes will always outperform the student who tries to hold all the information in their head. Practice one Sudoku daily from Day 1. It teaches the exact mental habit DILR requires: structured thinking before solving.
One of the most reliable DILR exam strategies: in each DILR section, there is almost always one set that is significantly easier than the others. Finding and completing this set is almost guaranteed marks. Students who panic and spend 15 minutes on the hardest set miss the easy one entirely. Always scan all sets in the first 2–3 minutes before committing to one.
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6. Which Section Should YOU Take to the Moon?
| Your Profile | Take This to the Moon | Keep These Solid |
|---|---|---|
| Engineer with strong maths background | QA — your natural advantage, double down on it | VARC daily reading + DILR daily sets |
| Non-engineer, humanities or commerce background | VARC — reading is your strength, weaponise it | Quant structured basics + DILR daily |
| Strong analytical thinker, loves puzzles | DILR — the most learnable section if you commit fully | QA daily practice + VARC daily reading |
| Balanced profile, no clear strength yet | Take your first 3 mocks, then decide based on natural score distribution | All sections — equal attention until you identify your moonshot section |
7. Consistency: The Only Thing Toppers Agree On
Quantifiers has interviewed dozens of CAT toppers. Students who scored 99 percentile from engineering colleges, arts colleges, commerce backgrounds, non-math streams. Students who started strong and students who struggled through the middle months. The one thing every single one of them said: consistency is the key.
Mock scores will drop sometimes. Some weeks will feel like nothing is improving. The preparation journey is not linear — everyone hits plateaus, everyone has bad mock days. What separates the students who crack 99 percentile from the ones who don’t is not talent or intelligence. It is the students who kept showing up on the bad days too.
✅ When Mock Scores Drop — This Is What to Do
A bad mock score is data, not destiny. Go back to your mock, identify the three most common error types, and target those specifically in the next week’s practice. Do not take a break. Do not stop solving. The dip is telling you exactly what to fix. Fix it and watch the next mock score improve.
8. Section-Wise Score vs Percentile Benchmarks
| Overall Percentile | VARC Score | DILR Score | QA Score | Total Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 99+ percentile | ~38–42 | ~30–36 | ~33–39 | ~115–130 |
| 98 percentile | ~30–36 | ~24–30 | ~27–33 | ~100–115 |
| 95 percentile | ~24–30 | ~18–24 | ~21–27 | ~80–95 |
Note: Scores are approximate and vary by paper difficulty and normalisation. Use as a guide, not an absolute.
9. Real CAT Toppers, Real Percentiles
99.96%ile
Nikhil — FMS Delhi
“Working full time and still cracked it. I made DILR my strongest section and built Quant and VARC to a level where both stayed above the sectional cutoffs. The strategy was clear — take one section to the top, keep the others honest.”
99.70%ile
Ritvik — Top IIM
“Engineer here — I leaned into Quant heavily, got it to 99+ percentile, and worked on VARC daily to stay above the cutoff. Quantifiers’ structure made the whole journey feel organised rather than overwhelming.”
Ready to Take Your Section to the Moon?
Quantifiers builds section-wise strategies tailored to your profile — small batches, personalised timetables, 24/7 doubt support, and a track record of 99.98%ile. The right strategy makes all the difference.Join Quantifiers — quantifiers.in
📞 9988656569 / 99885656560
🔗 Useful External Resources
- IIM Ahmedabad – CAT selection criteria & sectional cutoffs ↗
- Official CAT exam website ↗
- Quantifiers free DILR practice sets ↗
10. FAQs
Q1. Can a non-math student score well in CAT Quant?
Yes — CAT Quant is based entirely on Class 9–10 mathematics. Students who left maths after Class 10 have successfully scored 93–96 percentile in QA at Quantifiers by starting from basics and being consistent. The background matters less than the preparation structure and the consistency of daily practice.
Q2. Which section is easiest to improve quickly?
VARC shows the most dramatic improvement for students who build a consistent daily reading habit. Going from very low VARC scores to 90+ percentile in VARC is genuinely possible within one preparation cycle — but only with daily reading from Day 1. DILR improves fastest for students who commit to daily set practice. Quant improves steadily with proper foundations and daily questions.
Q3. What if my mock scores are not improving?
Plateaus are normal and expected between Month 4 and Month 7 of preparation. The fix is always the same: go deeper in mock analysis, identify your 2–3 most consistent error types, and spend a focused week fixing those specifically. Do not take a break from mocks when scores plateau — that is exactly when you need more mock exposure, not less.
Q4. How many hours per day are needed for 99 percentile?
Approximately 400–500 total focused hours over 9–12 months. That translates to roughly 1.5–2 hours per day on weekdays with solid weekend sessions. The key word is focused — 2 hours of distraction-free practice beats 5 hours of half-hearted studying every single time.
Q5. Should I start with my strongest section or weakest?
Build all three sections from Day 1 — but spend more time on your moonshot section. If VARC is your moonshot, prioritise it without neglecting daily Quant practice and DILR sets. The “take one to the moon” strategy does not mean ignoring the others — it means having one section where you invest an extra 30–40% of your study time.
Q6. Is it possible to crack CAT in 6 months?
Yes, with the right profile and intensity. Students with strong academic backgrounds, prior aptitude exposure, or engineering maths backgrounds can crack 95+ percentile in 6 months with 3–4 hours of daily practice. For most aspirants starting fresh, 9–12 months is the more realistic and less stressful preparation window.
Q7. How important are sectional cutoffs in IIM shortlisting?
Extremely important — and often overlooked. IIM Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Calcutta, and most other top IIMs have minimum sectional percentile cutoffs, typically 70–80 percentile per section for general category candidates. Scoring 99 overall but 60 in one section means no shortlist. This is precisely why the “take one to the moon” strategy requires keeping the other sections above the cutoff threshold.






























