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How to Pass the Rabobank Matrigma Test First Try (2026)

If you have a Rabobank assessment coming up and your invite mentions the Matrigma intelligence test, this guide shows you what to expect and how to prepare. You will also get 3 Matrigma-style practice questions with full answers and explanations.

Rabobank Matrigma test at a glance

What you will see: 3×3 visual matrices, one tile missing, and multiple answer options.

What the test rewards: accurate pattern detection under time pressure and fast elimination of wrong options.

What to do first:

  • Use a fixed scan order: Row 1, Row 2, then columns to confirm.
  • Lock two variables early (example: shape type plus dot count) and eliminate aggressively.
  • Prefer the simplest rule that fits both a row and a column.

Does Rabobank use Matrigma?

For some Rabobank hiring tracks, Rabobank states that the assessment includes a Matrigma intelligence test focused on problem solving skills. Your exact test battery can vary by role, country, and year, so your invite email is always the final source of truth.

What Matrigma measures and why it matters

Matrigma is a non verbal cognitive ability assessment built around matrix reasoning. Employers use it to estimate how quickly you can learn unfamiliar rules, spot patterns, and make accurate decisions when time is limited.

Rule types that solve most items
  • Counting: dots, sides, lines, or objects increase or decrease.
  • Rotation: a shape turns by a fixed step.
  • Movement: an element shifts position across tiles.
  • Overlay or cancellation: tile 3 is a combination of tiles 1 and 2, sometimes with cancellation.
  • Alternation: features flip on and off or alternate by column.

How to prepare for the Rabobank Matrigma test

The biggest improvements come from a consistent solving routine and realistic timing. You do not need to memorise dozens of patterns. You need a repeatable checklist and fast elimination.

A fast routine you can reuse on every question
  1. Scan Row 1: compare tile 1 to tile 2 to tile 3. Write a one line hypothesis.
  2. Confirm in Row 2: if it fails, switch to a simpler variable (count, rotation, movement).
  3. Check columns: confirm the same rule works vertically or identify the second rule.
  4. Lock two features: cross out options that violate either feature.
  5. Decide and move: avoid freezing. Use elimination and commit.

Tip: most matrices are solved with one main rule plus one marker rule (dots, shading, direction, position).

Rabobank Matrigma practice questions (3)

Treat these like the real test: set a timer, commit to a rule, then review the explanation. Each puzzle is a 3×3 matrix with the missing tile in the bottom right cell.

Practice Question 1

Choose the option that completes the 3×3 matrix. Track which shapes are present in each tile.

3×3 Matrix
?
Options
A
B
C
D
E
F

Tip: confirm your rule using both a row and a column.

Answer: C

Explanation

This matrix uses a cancellation rule. In each row, the third tile shows the shapes that appear in exactly one of the first two tiles. If a shape appears in both, it cancels out.

  • Row 1: triangle XOR (circle plus square) becomes triangle plus circle plus square.
  • Row 2: (circle plus plus) XOR (circle plus square plus plus) becomes square.
  • Row 3: (triangle plus circle plus plus) XOR (plus) becomes triangle plus circle.
Practice Question 2

Choose the option that completes the 3×3 matrix. Track the shape type, arrow direction, and dot count.

3×3 Matrix
?
Options
A
B
C
D
E
F

Tip: lock the shape first, then direction, then dot count.

Answer: A

Explanation

  • Shape rule: circle and square alternate like a checkerboard. Bottom right is a blue circle.
  • Arrow rule: arrows rotate 90 degrees clockwise as you move right and also as you move down. Bottom right points up.
  • Dot rule: dot count increases by 1 each step right and each step down. Bottom right is 5.

Only option A matches circle plus up arrow plus 5 dots.

Practice Question 3

Choose the option that completes the 3×3 matrix. Track the filled area, the diagonal direction, and the corner dot.

3×3 Matrix
?
Options
A
B
C
D
E
F

Tip: treat fill, diagonal, and dot as separate rules.

Answer: A

Explanation

  • Fill rule: moving right shifts the filled side one step clockwise (top to right to bottom). The missing fill is top.
  • Diagonal rule: Row 1 uses \, Row 2 uses /, Row 3 uses \. The missing diagonal is \.
  • Dot rule: in each row, the dot moves one corner clockwise as you move right. Row 3 goes BR, BL, then TL.

Why this matters for Rabobank applicants

In many high volume hiring tracks, online assessments help filter applicants early. That is why Matrigma preparation can make a difference. If your process includes additional tests, keep your prep balanced and do not rely on matrices alone.

FAQ

Rabobank states for some early career tracks that the assessment includes a Matrigma intelligence test. Your exact test battery can vary by role, location, and year, so always follow the details in your invite email.

The time limit depends on the version used for your role. The instructions page will show the timing. Prepare with strict timers so the time pressure feels normal.

Use a fixed scan order (rows then columns), learn common rule types (counting, rotation, movement, overlay), practise under time pressure, and review every mistake by rewriting the correct rule in one sentence.

Yes. Identify one reliable constraint (shape type, dot count, rotation direction), eliminate options that violate it, then choose from what remains. Under tight timing, elimination is essential.

The format is very similar: both use 3×3 visual matrices where you infer rules and choose the missing tile. Timed practice on common rule types and quick elimination is the most effective preparation.

Rules vary by provider and setting. If notes are allowed, keep them minimal and write only the variables you are tracking so you do not lose time.

Many processes combine matrix reasoning with numerical reasoning, verbal reasoning, situational judgement tests, and sometimes a video interview platform. Prepare broadly, not only for matrices.

Do a short timed warm up set, review only your most common error type, and stop heavy practice early enough to sleep well. On the day, use a strict scan order and confirm your rule using a second row or a column.

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