CLAT 2021 Question Paper
150 questions · passage-based (current pattern) · official answer key included.
Source: Consortium of NLUs official CLAT 2021 paper + provisional answer key. Used for educational practice.
CLAT 2021 paper: pattern and analysis
The CLAT 2021 paper carried 150 questions to be answered in 120 minutes, and it was fully passage-based: in every section you read a passage and answer the questions hanging off it. Marking was +1 for a correct answer, −0.25 for a wrong one and 0 for an unattempted one, and the exam was conducted by the Consortium of NLUs. 2021 was an early paper of the comprehension era — the longer, reading-led format that the Consortium first introduced in 2020 and ran through 2023 — so it gives you a clear feel for that 150-question structure. To see how each section is defined, read it alongside the CLAT syllabus.
| Section | Questions | Approx weight |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Reasoning | 40 | ~27% |
| Current Affairs & GK | 35 | ~23% |
| English Language | 30 | ~20% |
| Logical Reasoning | 30 | ~20% |
| Quantitative Techniques | 15 | ~10% |
What the 2021 paper demands
- ✓Legal Reasoning and Current Affairs & GK are the two biggest blocks — together they make up 75 of the 150 questions, exactly half the paper. Your score lives here more than anywhere else.
- ✓Speed under the clock — 150 questions in 120 minutes leaves under 50 seconds per question on average. With everything passage-based, that time is spent reading as much as answering.
- ✓Reading stamina across five sections — because every question hangs off a passage, comprehension and a steady pace matter just as much as subject knowledge. You are reasoning on the page, not recalling stray facts.
- ✓Quantitative Techniques is the smallest section at just 15 questions, about 10% of the paper — worth securing cleanly, but not where the bulk of your marks sit.
How to use the CLAT 2021 paper
- 1
Attempt it timed, in one blockSit all 150 questions in a single 120-minute window — no breaks, no peeking at answers. Take it as a timed mock so the on-screen navigation, flagging and pacing all feel familiar. The first honest attempt is the only true read of your speed and accuracy at this tempo.
- 2
Review with the answer keyGo through every wrong answer with the official key. Don't just note the right option — return to the passage, find the exact line that forces it, and the line that should have warned you off your choice. Name the cause each time: misread the passage, fell for a tempting option, or simply ran out of time.
- 3
Drill your weakest sectionYour error log will point at one or two weak spots — often Legal Reasoning or Quantitative Techniques. Spend the next days on targeted topic-wise practice there, then re-attempt the passages that beat you so the same type never costs you twice.
- 150 questions in 120 minutes, fully passage-based, conducted by the Consortium of NLUs.
- Marking is +1 for a correct answer, −0.25 for a wrong one and 0 for an unattempted one.
- Section split: Legal Reasoning 40, Current Affairs & GK 35, English 30, Logical Reasoning 30, Quantitative Techniques 15.
- An early comprehension-era paper, sharing the 150-question format used from 2020 to 2023.
- The pace is brisk — under 50 seconds per question — so 2021 is strong training for reading speed.