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Top Mensuration Questions to Practice for CAT 2026

Table of Contents

Why Mensuration Matters for CAT 2026

Key Mensuration Formulas You Must Know

2D Mensuration Questions

Q2. Rectangle—Diagonal: A rectangle has a length of 15 cm and a breadth of 8 cm. Find its diagonal.

3D Mensuration Questions

This last question is the exact style CAT has leaned into recently—a composite solid where you need two formulas (Pythagoras for the slant height, then the frustum volume formula) chained together rather than a single plug-in.

Composite and Ratio-Based Questions

CAT rarely stops at single-shape plug-ins for its harder Mensuration questions. It likes to test whether you can relate two shapes or track how a change in dimensions affects area or volume. The next two questions sit at that higher difficulty band.

Common Mistakes Students Make in Mensuration

Most marks are lost here not because the concept is hard but because of avoidable slips under time pressure:

  • Mixing up radius and diameter. A huge share of errors trace back to this single substitution mistake—always underline which one the question gives you.
  • Forgetting units on volume vs. area. Area is squared, volume is cubed; converting between cm and m incorrectly compounds the error.
  • Applying the wrong formula to a “look-alike” shape. A frustum is not a cone, and a hemisphere’s TSA is not half of a sphere’s TSA (it includes the flat circular base, too).
  • Skipping the diagram. For composite-shape questions, not sketching the figure is the single biggest reason students misidentify which dimension is shared between two shapes.
  • Rushing the slant height step in cone/frustum problems. Skipping the Pythagoras check here produces a wrong final answer even when every other step is correct.
  • Assuming volume and area scale the same way as length. As Q12 shows, doubling a radius doesn’t just double the volume — it can have a squared or cubed effect depending on where that dimension sits in the formula. Test each scaling question on paper rather than eyeballing it.

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Mensuration can single-handedly lift your Quant percentile—but only if you stop treating it as an afterthought. Circles, Cubes, Cylinders, Cones, Spheres, and Composite Solids show up in CAT every single year, without fail. The aspirants who prepare this topic with real structure, not scattered PDFs and random YouTube videos, are the ones walking into results day with the strongest QA scores.

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How to Prepare Mensuration for CAT 2026

Summary

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Recent CAT papers have featured around 4–6 Mensuration questions within the Quantitative Aptitude section, usually as part of the broader Geometry cluster.

It’s considered one of the more scoring topics because it’s largely formula-based. The difficulty comes from composite-shape questions, not from the underlying concepts.

2D Mensuration covers the perimeter and area of flat shapes like squares, triangles, and circles. 3D Mensuration covers surface area and volume of solids like cubes, cylinders, cones, and spheres.

Area and perimeter formulas for triangles, circles, and quadrilaterals, plus volume and surface area formulas for cubes, cylinders, cones, and spheres — along with the Pythagoras-based slant height relationship for cones and frustums.

One to two weeks to build strong conceptual clarity, followed by continued practice through sectional tests and full mocks in the months leading up to the exam.

Yes. Because it’s a predictable, high-accuracy topic, converting Mensuration into a near-perfect scoring area can meaningfully lift your overall Quant percentile.

Conclusion

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