The Railway Recruitment Board has finally dropped the RPF Constable Answer Key 2025, putting an end to the anxious wait for lakhs of candidates who appeared for the Computer-Based Test (CBT) held from 2nd to 18th March 2025. It’s been the talk of every WhatsApp group and coaching center all week. The answer key isn’t just a peek into how you did—it’s the official word on every question and your shot at ensuring the marking is accurate.
If you’re among the 2025 aspirants, here’s how you access everything: open the RRB regional website you applied through, look for the ‘RPF 02/2024 (Constable)’ section, and hit ‘View Question Paper, Responses & Keys’. Punch in your Registration Number and Date of Birth, and your individual response sheet with the official answers pops up. Cross-checking these keys with your memory and rough scratch work gives you a crystal-clear estimate of your score—way before the actual results drop.
You might notice a question or two marked wrong, or maybe an answer that you’re sure is debatable. The RRB lets you challenge any answer—just don’t sleep on the deadline: the window is open till sharp midnight on 29th March. Raise your objection by paying ₹50 per question, which is actually refundable if your challenge holds water, minus bank charges. The entire process is digital—no long forms or post office runs. Just remember, you’ll need proper documentation or solid references to back up your claim, because every objection gets a manual review by experts.
This year’s Computer-Based Test packed 120 questions into a rapid-fire 90-minute slot, keeping candidates on their toes. Each right answer adds a mark to your kitty, but there’s a catch—every wrong answer slashes your total by one-third of a mark. So, guessing is risky unless you know your stuff.
Once the dust settles and the answer key dispute period wraps up, the RRB will use these finalized answers to compute the actual CBT scores. Only the top scorers get a call for the next stages: the Physical Efficiency Test (PET), the Physical Measurement Test (PMT), and finally Document Verification (DV). The PET weeds out candidates who aren’t physically fit for police work, and the PMT checks height, chest, and other must-have measurements for the 4,208 Constable (Executive) posts that are up for grabs under this cycle. The last stage, Document Verification, is exactly what it sounds like—a full check to make sure your certificates and claims match up.
Here’s a quick timeline so you don’t miss anything:
With the answer key out, there’s finally clarity on where you stand in this year’s RPF hiring race. If you’re eyeing a spot, double-check your score, file objections if you need to, and shift your focus to the next physical and document-based rounds—they’re just around the corner.
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