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A CLAT sample paper is useful only when it is honest about its job. It should show you the pattern, section weight, question style, timing pressure and review method. It should not pretend that one downloaded paper can replace a full practice system. CLAT UG is a two-hour exam with 120 objective questions, negative marking and five sections. A sample paper can introduce that structure; serious preparation requires repeated mocks, PYQs, sectionals and topic drills.
This page gives you a practical sample-paper blueprint, original representative questions, a review system and the next steps on LawyerHatch. If you want a full timed attempt, use CLAT mock tests. If you want official paper exposure, use CLAT previous-year question papers. This page is best used before those attempts, or after a bad mock when you need to understand what a good paper should test.
Full CLAT sample paper blueprint
The current CLAT UG structure is built around five sections: English Language, Current Affairs including General Knowledge, Legal Reasoning, Logical Reasoning and Quantitative Techniques. The paper is reading-heavy. Even Quantitative Techniques usually appears through short data sets rather than standalone advanced maths. The blueprint below is a practical representation of the section mix students should train for. Always check the official format for the current cycle, but use this structure to organise practice.
| Section | Approximate question range | Core skill |
|---|---|---|
| English Language | 22-26 | Read a passage, identify main idea, inference, tone, purpose and vocabulary in context. |
| Current Affairs & GK | 28-32 | Connect current issues with static background and passage clues. |
| Legal Reasoning | 28-32 | Apply legal principles to facts without importing outside assumptions. |
| Logical Reasoning | 22-26 | Analyse arguments, assumptions, conclusions, strengthen/weaken and flaws. |
| Quantitative Techniques | 10-14 | Use class-10 arithmetic on charts, tables and short data sets. |
How to use a sample paper before a full mock
If you are new to CLAT, do not begin with ten full mocks in panic. First understand what a paper is asking from each section. A sample paper lets you see the rhythm: long reading in English, issue-based GK, principle application in Legal Reasoning, argument analysis in Logical Reasoning and compact data handling in Quant. Once that rhythm is clear, full mocks become meaningful. You are no longer just surviving the paper; you are testing a process.
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Read the section instructionBefore solving, name the skill being tested. Is this an inference question, a principle application, an assumption question or a data extraction question?
- 2
Attempt in short timed blocksFor your first sample-paper session, attempt section excerpts in 20 to 30 minute blocks. Do not make it a casual reading exercise.
- 3
Review every wrong answerUse a label: concept gap, reading miss, trap option, calculation error, static GK gap or time pressure.
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Convert review into next practiceIf English inference fails, open the inference guide. If Legal Reasoning misses qualifiers, use legal drills. If Quant is slow, practise percentages and ratios.
Representative English sample questions
Which option best states the main idea?
▸ Show solution
What is the author's tone?
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Representative Current Affairs sample questions
Which static background would most help a student understand this passage?
▸ Show solution
Which kind of GK link is most relevant?
▸ Show solution
Representative Legal and Logical sample questions
Can the organiser rely on consent?
▸ Show solution
What is the main flaw?
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Representative Quantitative Techniques sample questions
How many registered users were there in March?
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How many attempts were correct?
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Sample paper versus mock test versus PYQ
Students often use these words as if they mean the same thing. They do not. A sample paper is usually a representative paper built to explain format and provide practice. A mock test is a timed exam simulation with scoring and analysis. A previous-year question paper is an official paper from an earlier CLAT. All three matter, but they serve different purposes. If you use a sample paper as your only test, you miss stamina. If you use only mocks, you may miss the examiner's real habits. If you use only PYQs, you may run out of official papers without building topic weaknesses.
| Resource | Best use | Next step |
|---|---|---|
| Sample paper | Understand pattern, section mix and question types | Move to timed sectionals and full mocks. |
| Mock test | Measure stamina, timing, accuracy and section order | Review errors and repair weak topics. |
| Previous-year paper | Study official CLAT framing and difficulty | Compare with mocks and reattempt after review. |
| Topic drill | Fix one specific weakness | Return to sectionals to test improvement. |
How to review a sample paper
A sample paper review should not end with a score. For each section, identify what kind of decision failed. In English, was it main idea, inference, tone or vocabulary? In Current Affairs, was it fact memory, static background or passage reading? In Legal Reasoning, did you miss the rule or the facts? In Logical Reasoning, did you misidentify the conclusion or assumption? In Quant, was the error calculation, formula, data extraction or time pressure? These labels turn one paper into a plan.
- ✓Mark guessed correct answers separately; they are not stable marks yet.
- ✓Write the exact reason for each wrong answer, not a vague "silly mistake".
- ✓Check whether one section consumed time meant for another section.
- ✓Reattempt difficult questions after 48 hours without looking at the solution.
- ✓Turn repeated errors into topic-drill work.
- ✓Attempt a full mock only after you know what you are testing.
A three-paper beginner sequence
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Paper 1: Sample paperUse this to learn the section mix and identify unfamiliar question types. Do not panic about the score.
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Paper 2: Full mockUse a LawyerHatch mock to test timing, question palette use and two-hour stamina.
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Paper 3: Previous-year paperAttempt a PYQ to compare your practice with official CLAT framing.
Common sample-paper mistakes
The biggest mistake is treating a sample paper as proof of final readiness. A sample can be easier, harder, more balanced or less balanced than the real exam. Another mistake is solving it without a timer, then assuming the score reflects exam performance. A third mistake is skipping review because the questions were only "sample" questions. If a question exposes a real weakness, it matters. The paper may be sample; the error is real.
Avoid sample papers that follow the old legal aptitude style too heavily, overuse direct law memory, ask isolated static GK without passage context, or include advanced maths that CLAT does not require. A good sample paper should be close to the current pattern and should explain answers well. The solution quality matters as much as the questions. If the solution only says "option B is correct" without showing why, it teaches very little.
Where to go after this page
Use the page as a bridge. If the sample Legal Reasoning question felt slow, open the Legal Reasoning hub. If the Quant examples felt uncomfortable, start with percentages and ratios. If English felt unpredictable, work on main idea and inference. If GK felt too open-ended, build a monthly issue tracker. The goal is not to collect another sample paper. The goal is to know what to practise next.
How to judge your first sample-paper score
Your first sample-paper score is not a verdict. It is a map of friction. A low score with clear error labels is more useful than a decent score you cannot explain. Look for section behaviour. Did you understand passages but run out of time? Did you attempt too many doubtful GK questions? Did Legal Reasoning feel accurate but slow? Did Quant scare you before you checked whether the numbers were simple? These observations tell you where the next week should go.
Do not compare your first sample score with someone else's polished mock score. Compare it with your next attempt after targeted repair. If English inference improves after three drills, the sample paper did its job. If Quant attempts rise from two to eight after percentage practice, the sample paper did its job. The paper is a diagnostic tool, not a rank predictor.
When to stop using sample papers
Move beyond sample papers once you understand the pattern and can identify your weak question types. At that point, the higher-value work is timed mocks, official PYQs, sectionals and topic drills. Sample papers are useful for entry and reset. They should not become an endless comfort zone where you avoid full two-hour pressure.