CLAT 2022 Question Paper
150 questions · passage-based (current pattern) · official answer key included.
Source: Consortium of NLUs official CLAT 2022 paper + provisional answer key. Used for educational practice.
CLAT 2022 paper: pattern and analysis
The CLAT 2022 paper carried 150 questions to be answered in 120 minutes, and like every paper of its time it was fully passage-based: you read a passage and answer the questions that hang off it. Marking was +1 for a correct answer, −0.25 for a wrong one and 0 for an unattempted one, and the exam was conducted by the Consortium of NLUs. The crucial thing to grasp is the pace — 150 questions in 120 minutes works out to under 50 seconds per question, noticeably tighter than the current 120-question papers. 2022 sits squarely in the 150-question comprehension era (2020–2023), so it is the right paper to practise on if you want to build raw reading speed. To see how each section is defined, read it alongside the CLAT syllabus.
| Section | Questions | Approx weight |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Reasoning | 40 | ~27% |
| Current Affairs & GK | 35 | ~23% |
| English Language | 30 | 20% |
| Logical Reasoning | 30 | 20% |
| Quantitative Techniques | 15 | ~10% |
What the 2022 paper demands
- ✓Legal Reasoning and Current Affairs & GK are the two biggest blocks — together they account for 75 of the 150 questions, exactly half the paper. Get these two right and most of your score is settled.
- ✓Reading speed is everything. With 150 questions in 120 minutes, you have under 50 seconds per question on average, so the paper rewards a reader who moves through a passage quickly and confidently far more than one who knows isolated facts.
- ✓Every section is passage-based, including Quantitative Techniques, which gives you a data set and asks linked questions — so comprehension carries weight even in the maths.
- ✓Quantitative Techniques is the smallest section at 15 questions, about 10% of the paper — worth locking down, but not where the bulk of your marks live.
How to use the CLAT 2022 paper
- 1
Attempt it timed, as a real mockSit all 150 questions in one 120-minute block on the exam screen — no breaks, no peeking at answers. Take it as a timed mock so the navigation, flagging and pacing all feel familiar. The first honest attempt is the only true read of your reading speed at this tighter pace.
- 2
Review with the official answer keyGo through every wrong answer with the official key. Don't just note the correct option — return to the passage and find the exact line that forces it, and the line that should have warned you off your choice. Name the cause each time: misread the passage, fell for a tempting option, or simply ran out of time.
- 3
Drill your weakest sectionYour error log will point clearly at one or two weak sections — often Legal Reasoning or Quantitative Techniques. Spend the following days on targeted topic-wise practice there, then re-attempt the passages that beat you so the same type never costs you twice.
- 150 questions in 120 minutes, fully passage-based, conducted by the Consortium of NLUs.
- Marking is +1 for a correct answer, −0.25 for a wrong one and 0 for an unattempted one.
- Section split: Legal Reasoning 40, Current Affairs & GK 35, English 30, Logical Reasoning 30, Quantitative Techniques 15.
- Pace is tight — under 50 seconds per question, faster than the current 120-question papers.
- Legal Reasoning and Current Affairs together make up half the paper; Quant is the smallest at ~10%.