RMO 2026 is not a test where you could mug up some formulas overnight; it requires a level of problem-solving that can be achieved only through months of in-depth study. This guide is written for Class 8th to 12th students who have passed the IOQM and are going to write the RMO.
The second stage of the Mathematical Olympiad Programme in India is the Regional Mathematical Olympiad (RMO), which is organised by HBCSE at the national level under the aegis of the National Board for Higher Mathematics (NBHM). Its task is to filter students who possess mathematical thinking and move them forward to the Indian National Mathematical Olympiad (INMO). RMO 2026 is likely to be held in mid-November, is offline and has 6 descriptive questions with a syllabus consisting of Algebra, Geometry, Number Theory and Combinatorics, and no calculus at all. Eligibility is based on your IOQM score and regional rank and not on direct registration.
We have covered verified details on the RMO exam pattern, eligibility, syllabus, high-weightage topics, the right books, and the RMO Olympiad preparation plan, so you do not have to hunt across multiple websites to know: how to clear Regional Mathematical Olympiad.
Read More:
- Pre Regional Mathematics Olympiad (PRMO) 2026-27: Registration, Sample Papers, Syllabus, Exam Pattern
- How to Prepare for the Indian Olympiad Qualifier in Mathematics (IOQM) 2026
RMO Exam Pattern 2026: What the Paper Actually Looks Like
Forget the multiple-choice comfort zone you are used to from school exams. The RMO exam pattern 2026 is built entirely around proof writing, and here is what that means in practice:
- Mode: Offline, pen and paper, no calculators or aids.
- Duration: 3 hours (180 minutes) for the whole paper.
- Questions: 6 problems, all subjective and descriptive.
- Marks: 17 marks per question, 102 marks total.
- Languages: English, Hindi, and select regional languages.
- Core focus: Geometry, Number Theory, Combinatorics, Algebra. Calculus is not tested.
Here is the part that first-timers should keep in mind: If you get the correct answer, but don’t show the correct reasoning, you will get very few marks. Examiners are reading your logic one step at a time (race against time phrase meaning) and not looking for the correct number at the bottom of the page. Therefore, if you get the answer correct and the working out is poor, you lose the majority of the 17 marks. Focus your practice on writing, not just (just in case definition) solving.
RMO Eligibility Criteria 2026: Who Actually Gets to Appear
You can’t directly register for RMO. The only path in is through clearing the Indian Olympiad Qualifier (IOQM) with a good enough score in Stage 1. The RMO eligibility criteria 2026 are applied in a layered manner:
Clearing IOQM and the Minimum Score
- Clear IOQM 2026, expected in September 2026. Even after clearing it, you need at least 10% of the total IOQM marks just to be considered for RMO. It’s the bare minimum, not a guarantee.
Eligible Class and Age Group
- Open to students from Class 8 to Class 12. An exceptionally gifted Class 7 student may be allowed in, but only at the regional coordinator’s discretion.
- You must be enrolled in a recognised Indian school and fall within the set age window (for 2026, born between August 1, 2006, and July 31, 2013). You also shouldn’t have started college or cleared Class 12 boards before the current year.
Regional Quotas: Decide Final Selection
Surpassing the 10% in IOQM is not enough to get a seat. HBCSE has divided India into 25 regions with selection being based on two different merit lists for each region:
- Category A (Classes 8-11): This category includes the top 200 students per region and ties.
- Category B (Class 12): Top 40 per region.
- Girls’ quota: 5 additional girls students in each region will also be selected apart from the category of the top 200.
Citizenship Requirements
- Candidates should be a Citizen of India/OCI cardholder. While OCI students are eligible to write RMO and attend selection camps, under the current court order, they are not eligible to represent India at any other platform like IMO.
Key RMO 2026 Dates to Remember
An Olympiad prep that doesn’t have a calendar in front of it, more or less breaks down at month two. Here is the approximate schedule in accordance with the HBCSE routine for each year:
| Event | Expected Timeline |
| IOQM (Stage 1) Examination | September 2026 |
| IOQM Results & RMO Admit Cards | Late October 2026 |
| RMO 2026 Exam Date | November 15, 2026 (1:00 PM to 4:00 PM) |
| RMO Results & INMO Shortlist | December 2026 |
A quick honesty note: these dates follow HBCSE’s historical pattern and are not yet locked in by an official notification. Keep checking the HBCSE Olympiad portal as the season approaches, since dates can shift by a week or so.
Check Out: Maths Olympiad Exams 2026-27 – IMO, PRMO, RMO, INMO, IOM
RMO Syllabus 2026: The Complete Topic-Wise Breakdown
Unlike the chapter-wise syllabus of your school textbook, there’s no neat, numbered syllabus for RMO and that’s the reason most students are lost when planning. The RMO Syllabus 2026 as prescribed by the HBCSE includes topics from pre-college mathematics from Classes 8 to 12 except Calculus and Statistics. It is based on 5 pillars:
| Pillar | Foundation Level | Where It Gets Harder |
| Algebra | Polynomial factorisation, roots of equations, AP/GP/HP progressions, binomial expansion | Two-variable polynomials, symmetric equations, functional equations, complex numbers |
| Geometry | Triangle and polygon properties, circle and quadrilateral theorems, ruler-compass constructions, basic trig identities | Ceva’s and Menelaus’ theorems, collinearity and concurrency, coordinate geometry, conics, sine/cosine rules. |
| Number Theory | Prime factorisation, divisibility rules, Euclidean algorithm, GCD/LCM | Modular arithmetic, Chinese Remainder Theorem, Fermat’s Little Theorem, Wilson’s Theorem, Euler’s Phi function |
| Combinatorics | Basic counting, permutations and combinations | Pigeonhole Principle, Inclusion-Exclusion, recurrence relations, elementary graph theory, derangements |
| Inequalities | AM-GM inequality, basic inequality rules | Cauchy-Schwarz, Rearrangement Inequality, AM-GM-HM relationships, optimisation problems |
But here’s what you can completely remove from your preparation list because it’s not going to be on your paper:
- Calculus: limits, derivatives, integration, none of it is tested.
- Statistics: mean, median, mode, variance, standard deviation, all excluded.
High-Weightage Topics in RMO You Cannot Afford to Skip
Not all five pillars have the same weight when it comes to the actual paper and knowing this beforehand can save you weeks of unfocused revision.
- Number Theory and Geometry usually dominate, often together making up two to three of the six questions.
- Within Number Theory, modular arithmetic and the Chinese Remainder Theorem appear again and again.
- In Geometry, triangle properties, circle theorems and concurrency problems are repeat favourites.
- Combinatorics, particularly Pigeonhole Principle questions, is the third heavy hitter.
- Algebra leans toward functional equations and polynomial roots rather than basic equation solving.
- Inequalities is the smallest pillar, but often shows up as one standalone AM-GM or Cauchy-Schwarz question.
When time is limited, study Number Theory, Geometry and Pigeonhole based Combinatorics first. Algebra and Inequalities may follow.
Best Books and Resources for RMO 2026 Preparation
This is something which your school book will not prepare you for. RMO questions are deliberately framed to be non-routine which means one needs books specially designed to solve Olympiad type problems.
| Book | Author | Why It Matters |
| Challenge and Thrill of Pre-College Mathematics | V. Krishnamurthy, C. R. Pranesachar et al. | The standard Indian foundation text covers all four pillars with solid theory. |
| An Excursion in Mathematics | M. R. Modak, S. A. Katre et al. | Chapter-wise summaries and mock exercises built for Indian Olympiads. |
| Problem-Solving Strategies | Arthur Engel | Teaches proof techniques like the Invariance and Extremal Principles. |
| Geometry Revisited | H.S.M. Coxeter, S.L. Greitzer | Deepens Euclidean geometry, cyclic quadrilaterals, power of a point. |
| Elementary Number Theory | David M. Burton | Clean starting point for modular arithmetic and congruences. |
| Pathfinder for Olympiad Mathematics | Vikash Tiwari, V. Seshan | Strong on counting, Pigeonhole Principle and grid problems. |
| Secrets in Inequalities | Pham Kim Hung | Masterclass on AM-GM, Cauchy-Schwarz and bounding techniques. |
Also worth bookmarking: the HBCSE official Olympiad portal, which hosts free RMO previous year papers and INMO papers along with answer keys.
How to Use These Books Effectively
It’s pointless having all seven books if you read them as a novel. These are the ways in which toppers make use of them:
- Complete a foundation book before working on topic specific books. Half-read books in five subjects create confusion, rather than clarity.
- Attempt every problem yourself for at least twenty minutes before peeking at the solution.
- Keep a separate notebook for tricks and techniques you discover, like a clever substitution or a neat proof idea. This personal log matters more than any book.
- After two weeks, revise the questions again where you went wrong and repeat this every time. Repetition is what makes you prepared for this exam.
How to Prepare for RMO Olympiad: A Step-by-Step Strategy
This is the area that most students jump directly to, and since we are going through it all in detail. The RMO Olympiad preparations can be done in the following 5 clear stages:
- Build theory pillar by pillar. Do not jump into mixed problem sets before your basics in a topic are solid. One pillar at a time, properly.
- Solve topic-wise problems right after each theory section, and always write out full proofs, not just final answers.
- Once all five pillars (main syllabus areas) are covered, switch to mixed practice sets where questions from different topics appear together, just like the real RMO paper.
- Treat proofreading as its own skill. Plenty of strong solvers lose marks simply because their written explanation is incomplete. Practise writing the way you would explain a solution to your teacher.
- Solve the RMO previous year papers as soon as you have covered enough topics and don’t wait for the last month to begin solving the papers.
- Take at least four to five full mock tests under real exam conditions, six questions, three hours, no breaks, before the actual RMO Olympiad.
- Review the errors made in every mock or PYQ attempt for as much time as you took in the solving process. This is where the majority of the real improvement will be achieved.
- Join a study group or discuss tricky problems with peers preparing for IOQM and RMO together. Explaining a proof out loud often reveals gaps you missed while solving alone.
- Keep a small formula and theorem sheet (Fermat’s Little Theorem, Pigeonhole Principle, AM-GM, Ceva’s theorem) and revise it weekly instead of cramming it all at the end.
Time Management Tips for RMO Preparation
The key is how you manage your remaining time, but it’s equally important as how you study. Here’s a realistic breakdown based on the number of months remaining:
| Time Left | Focus Area |
| Months 1-2 (of 6) | Theory and foundational reading across all five pillars (Main syllabus topics). |
| Months 3-4 (of 6) | Topic-wise problem solving, extra hours on Number Theory and Geometry. |
| Month 5 (of 6) | Mixed practice sets, RMO and INMO previous year questions under timed conditions. |
| Month 6 (of 6) | Full-length mock tests, error analysis, and revisiting weak topics. |
| Weeks 1-3 (of 2-3 months) | High-weightage topics only: Number Theory, Geometry, Pigeonhole Combinatorics. |
| Middle weeks (of 2-3 months) | As many previous year questions (PYQs) as possible, pattern exposure over fresh theory. |
| Final 2 weeks (of 2-3 months) | Three to four full mocks under strict 3-hour conditions, with equal time on review. |
Common Mistakes to Avoid During RMO Preparation
There are many students who are extremely talented and yet do not perform very well in RMO and it is almost always due to some few avoidable habits:
- Skipping proof-writing practice. Solving a problem in your head and writing an examiner-ready proof are two different skills.
- Relying only on school-level problems, which look nothing like RMO’s non-routine questions.
- Never practising under a strict clock, then freezing during the real three-hour window.
- Buying too many books and finishing none properly. One book done well beats five done halfway.
- Ignoring RMO previous year papers, which are honestly the clearest window into what examiners actually expect.
All the information has been carefully curated from reliable, official sources such as the HBCSE Olympiad portal, and only the latest information has been provided for 2026. Many a time, there are some changes in the Olympiad schedule, so please check the exact dates near the exam date from the official website (idioms website) of the HBCSE.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs): RMO 2026 Exam
Q1. What is the RMO exam pattern 2026?
RMO 2026 is a three-hour offline exam with six subjective questions worth 17 marks each, totalling 102 marks, covering Algebra, Geometry, Number Theory and Combinatorics.
Q2. What are the RMO eligibility criteria 2026?
To be eligible for RMO students should score at least 10 per cent in IOQM and get their names in the top 200 for classes 8-11 and top 40 for class 12 in their region.
Q3. When is the RMO 2026 exam date?
RMO 2026 is expected around November 15, 2026, though the official date will be confirmed by HBCSE closer to the exam.
Q4. Is Calculus part of the RMO syllabus 2026?
No. Calculus and Statistics are both explicitly excluded from the RMO syllabus, which focuses on Algebra, Geometry, Number Theory, Combinatorics and Inequalities.
Q5. Which books are best for RMO preparation?
Challenge and Thrill of Pre-College Mathematics, An Excursion in Mathematics, and Problem-Solving Strategies by Arthur Engel are the most recommended starting points, followed by topic-specific books for each pillar.
Q6. Where can I find the RMO previous year papers?
The HBCSE official Olympiad portal hosts free RMO previous year papers and INMO papers along with answer keys, the most reliable source for genuine PYQs.
Written By: Saumya Sarin (Content Writer at Motion Education)
Reviewed By: Motion Education Academic Team
Last Updated: July, 2026
