Data Sufficiency questions test your ability to analyze problems and determine whether given data is sufficient to answer them. These appear in IBPS PO, SBI PO, RBI Grade B and other bank exams. Each question has two statements, and you must decide if:
(A) Only statement 1 is sufficient
(B) Only statement 2 is sufficient
(C) Both statements together are sufficient
(D) Either statement alone is sufficient
(E) Neither statement is sufficient
Here are 10 practice questions with solutions to help you prepare. 
Question 1: A person starts walking from point A and moves 5 km east to reach point B, then turns left and walks 3 km to reach point C. What is the shortest distance between point A and point C?
Statements:
I. Point C is to the northeast of point A.
II. After reaching point C, the person turns right and walks 4 km to reach point D.
Explanation:
The initial movement:
5 km East (A → B)
Left turn (North) → 3 km (B → C)
Shortest distance (AC) = √(5² + 3²) = √34 km (Pythagoras theorem).
Statement I confirms direction but doesn't add new info.
Statement II introduces a new point D but doesn't help find AC.
Answer: (A) Statement I alone is sufficient (since the path is already clear).
Question 2: Can we conclude that "Some cats are dogs"?
Statements:
I. All dogs are animals. Some animals are cats.
II. No cats are dogs. All dogs are pets.
Explanation:
Statement I: "All dogs are animals" + "Some animals are cats" → No direct relation between cats and dogs. (Insufficient).
Statement II: "No cats are dogs" → Directly negates the conclusion.
Answer: (B) Statement II alone is sufficient to conclude that the statement is false.
Question 3: In a certain code language, "APPLE" is written as "CRRNG". How is "ORANGE" written in that code?
Statements:
I. Each vowel is replaced by the next vowel (A→E, E→I, etc.), and consonants are replaced by the next consonant (P→Q→R, etc.).
II. The code shifts each letter +2 positions forward (A→C, P→R, etc.).
Explanation:
APPLE → CRRNG:
A→C (+2), P→R (+2), P→R (+2), L→N (+2), E→G (+2).
Statement I is incorrect (vowels in "APPLE" don't follow the given pattern).
Statement II matches perfectly.
Applying +2 to "ORANGE" → QTCPIG.
Answer: (B) Statement II alone is sufficient.
Question 4: Five friends-A, B, C, D, E-are sitting in a row facing north. Who is sitting in the middle?
Statements:
I. A is to the immediate left of C, and D is at one of the ends.
II. B is second to the right of E, who is not at any end.
Explanation:
From Statement II: E is not at the ends, so possible positions: 2, 3, or 4.
"B is second to the right of E" → E _ B or _ E _ B.
From Statement I: D is at an end, and A is left of C (A, C adjacent).
Combining both: Possible arrangement: D, A, C, E, B → Middle is C.
Answer: (C) Both statements together are sufficient.
Question 5: What is the next term in the series: A1, C3, E5, G7, ___?
Statements:
I. Letters skip one alphabet (A, C, E, G...), numbers follow odd numbers (1, 3, 5, 7...).
II. Series alternates between vowel and consonant (incorrect here).
Explanation:
Pattern:
Letters: A (+2)→ C (+2)→ E (+2)→ G → I.
Numbers: 1, 3, 5, 7 → 9.
Statement I fits perfectly (next term = I9).
Statement II is irrelevant (A is vowel, C is consonant, but E is vowel, breaking alternation).
Answer: (A) Statement I alone is sufficient.
Question 6: If '∆' means 'greater than', '□' means 'less than', and '○' means 'equal to', what does "A ∆ B □ C ○ D" mean?
Statements:
I. A > B < C = D
II. Symbols follow left-to-right precedence unless brackets are used.
Explanation:
Statement I directly decodes the symbols:
A ∆ B □ C ○ D → A > B < C = D.
Statement II clarifies precedence but isn't needed here.
Answer: (A) Statement I alone is sufficient.
Question 7: How is P related to Q?
Statements:
I. Q is the son of R, who is P's sister.
II. P is the uncle of S, who is Q's brother.
Explanation:
Statement I:
R (P's sister) → Q (R's son) → P is Q's maternal uncle.
Statement II:
S is Q's brother → P is uncle of S → P is Q's uncle.
Answer: (D) Either statement alone is sufficient (both lead to P being Q's uncle).
Question 8: A person walks 10 m south from point X, then turns left and walks 5 m. In which direction is he from his starting point?
Statements:
I. After walking 5 m, he turns right and walks 3 m.
II. His final position is southeast of X.
Explanation:
Initial movement:
10 m South → turns left (East) → 5 m.
Statement I: Adds a right turn (South) + 3 m → Final position is Southeast.
Statement II directly states the direction but isn't needed.
Answer: (A) Statement I alone is sufficient.
Question 9: Is it true that "All pens are pencils"?
Statements:
I. No pencils are erasers. Some erasers are pens.
II. Some pens are pencils, and all pencils are markers.
Explanation:
Statement I: No direct link between pens and pencils.
Statement II: "Some pens are pencils" → "All pens are pencils" is false.
Answer: (B) Statement II alone is sufficient to reject the conclusion.
Question 10 : Among five boxes-P, Q, R, S, T-which is the heaviest?
Statements:
I. P > Q but P < T.
II. R > S but R < Q.
Explanation:
From Statement I: T > P > Q.
From Statement II: Q > R > S.
Combining: T > P > Q > R > S.
Answer: (C) Both statements together are sufficient (T is heaviest).
Direction Sense: Use path + Pythagoras or direction clues.
Syllogism: Look for direct negation or Venn diagram logic.
Coding-Decoding: Check letter/number shifts or patterns.
Puzzles: Combine constraints to form arrangements.
Blood Relations: Draw family trees for clarity.