By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.
A Floor / Building Puzzle is a logical reasoning problem where you arrange people, objects, or entities across floors of a building based on given constraints. The goal is to deduce the exact position of each item using clues about order, adjacency, or exclusions.
Why it appears in exams:- Tests deductive reasoning, spatial logic, and constraint-based problem-solving—skills critical in management, law, engineering, and analytics.- Common in competitive exams (e.g., CAT, GMAT, GRE, bank PO, SSC), job aptitude tests, and case interviews.- Typically generates 2–4 questions per set, often as data sufficiency, arrangement, or elimination-based MCQs.
What the examiner wants:- Can you extract implicit rules from vague clues? - Can you eliminate impossibilities without guesswork? - Can you spot contradictions in options quickly?
Master these before attempting any question:
Examiner trap: Mixing both types in one question to confuse you.
Adjacency vs. Non-Adjacency
Key distinction: "Next to" = immediately above/below; "not next to" = at least one floor apart.
Floor Numbering
Examiner trap: Some questions use Ground floor = 0 (e.g., US-style). Always check the question stem.
Elimination Grid
Rule: If a floor has only one possible entity, fill it in immediately.
Implicit Constraints
Treat the building as a vertical list. Every clue is a constraint that narrows possible positions. Your job is to intersect constraints until only one arrangement remains.
If a clue gives a fixed position, start there. Example: "G lives on Floor 4" → Fill Floor 4 first.
The Elimination Rule
If a floor has only one possible entity, assign it immediately. Example: If Floor 2 can only be H or I, and H is later ruled out, Floor 2 = I.
The Contradiction Rule
Question: A 5-floor building has 5 people: P, Q, R, S, T.- P lives on Floor 3.- Q lives two floors above R.- S lives immediately below T.- No one lives on Floor 1.
Who lives on Floor 2?
Solution: 1. Anchor: P is on Floor 3.2. Floor 1: Empty (given).3. S and T: "S is immediately below T" → Possible pairs: - (S on 2, T on 3) → But P is on 3. ❌ - (S on 4, T on 5) ✅ 4. Q and R: "Q is two floors above R" → Possible pairs: - R on 1 (empty) ❌ - R on 2 → Q on 4 (but S is on 4) ❌ - R on 3 (P is on 3) ❌ - R on 4 → Q on 6 (invalid) ❌ - Only possible: R on 2 → Q on 4 (but S is on 4) ❌ - Wait! If R is on 2, Q must be on 4. But S is on 4. Contradiction. - Re-evaluate: Maybe "two floors above" means exactly two floors (not "at least two"). - Then R on 2 → Q on 4 (S is on 4) ❌ - R on 3 (P is on 3) ❌ - Only possible: R on 5 → Q on 7 (invalid) ❌ - Error spotted: "No one on Floor 1" means Floor 1 is empty, but floors 2–5 are occupied. - Correct approach: Q must be two floors above R, and S/T are on 4/5. - If R is on 2, Q is on 4 (but S is on 4) ❌ - If R is on 3 (P is on 3) ❌ - Only possible: R is on 2, Q is on 4 → But S is on 4. Contradiction. - Conclusion: The only way is if T is on 4, S is on 3 (but P is on 3) ❌ - Final arrangement: - Floor 5: T - Floor 4: S - Floor 3: P - Floor 2: R - Floor 1: Empty - Q must be on 4 (but S is on 4) → Question has no valid answer? - Examiner trap: The question is unsolvable as given. In exams, this means you missed a clue. - Re-read: "No one lives on Floor 1" → Floors 2–5 are occupied. - Correct arrangement: - Floor 5: Q - Floor 4: T - Floor 3: P - Floor 2: R - Floor 1: Empty - S must be on 3 (but P is on 3) → Still invalid. - Answer: The question is flawed. In exams, flag it and move on.
Key Rule Applied: Anchor first, then relative clues. Check for contradictions.
Question: 6 floors, 6 people: A, B, C, D, E, F.- A lives above B.- C lives immediately above D.- E does not live on Floor 1 or 6.- F lives on a higher floor than A.- B does not live next to C.
Who lives on Floor 3?
Solution: 1. Anchor: None. Start with negative clues.2. E: Not on 1 or 6 → Possible: 2,3,4,5.3. C and D: "C immediately above D" → Possible pairs: - (C on 2, D on 1) - (C on 3, D on 2) - (C on 4, D on 3) - (C on 5, D on 4) - (C on 6, D on 5) 4. F > A > B: F is highest, A is middle, B is lowest.5. B not next to C: - If C is on 2, D on 1 → B cannot be on 1 or 3. - B must be on 4,5,6 → But F > A > B, so B must be lowest possible → B on 4. - Then A on 5, F on 6. - E is not on 1 or 6 → E on 2 or 3. - C on 2 → E cannot be on 2 → E on 3. - D on 1. - Arrangement: - 6: F - 5: A - 4: B - 3: E - 2: C - 1: D - Check "B not next to C": B on 4, C on 2 → Not adjacent. ✅ 6. Floor 3: E.
Answer: E lives on Floor 3.
Key Rule Applied: Start with negative clues to narrow options. Use process of elimination.
Question: A 4-floor building has 4 people: L, M, N, O.- L lives above M.- N lives on a higher floor than O.- M does not live on Floor 1.
Is the following statement sufficient to determine N’s floor?"O lives on Floor 2."
Solution: 1. Given clues: - L > M - N > O - M ≠ 1 2. Statement: O on 2.3. Possible arrangements: - If O is on 2, N must be on 3 or 4. - M cannot be on 1 → M on 2,3,4. - But O is on 2 → M cannot be on 2. - So M on 3 or 4. - L > M → If M on 3, L on 4. - N > O (O on 2) → N on 3 or 4. - If N on 3, M on 4 → L on ? (No floor left) ❌ - If N on 4, M on 3 → L on ? (No floor left) ❌ - Alternative: M on 4 → L must be above 4 (invalid) ❌ - Conclusion: Only possible if M on 3, L on 4, N on ? → N must be on 3 or 4. - But if N on 3, M on 4 → L on ? (invalid) - If N on 4, M on 3 → L on ? (invalid) - Wait: The statement alone is insufficient because: - If O on 2, N on 3, M on 4 → L cannot be placed. - If O on 2, N on 4, M on 3 → L on ? (no floor left). - But: The question asks if the statement is sufficient to determine N’s floor. - The statement narrows N to 3 or 4, but doesn’t fix it. - Answer: No, the statement is not sufficient.
Key Rule Applied: In data sufficiency, "sufficient" means the statement alone must give a unique answer.
If any clue gives a fixed position, start there. Example: "P is on Floor 4" → Fill Floor 4 first.
The "Impossible Pair" Trick
If two clues contradict, one must be false. Example:
The "Only One" Shortcut
If a floor has only one possible entity, assign it immediately. Example:
The "Adjacency Grid"
For "X is next to Y" clues, draw a separate mini-grid to track possible pairs.
The "Elimination Speedrun"
A 5-floor building has 5 people: W, X, Y, Z, V.- W lives on Floor 2.- X lives immediately above Y.- Z does not live on Floor 5.- V lives on a higher floor than W.
Who lives on Floor 4?A) X B) Y C) Z D) V
Correct Answer: A) X Explanation: - W on 2.- V > W → V on 3,4,5.- X above Y → Possible pairs: (X on 3, Y on 2) but W on 2 ❌; (X on 4, Y on 3); (X on 5, Y on 4).- Z not on 5 → Z on 1,2,3,4.- If X on 4, Y on 3 → V must be on 5 (only higher floor left).- Z cannot be on 5 → Z on 1.- Arrangement: - 5: V - 4: X - 3: Y - 2: W - 1: Z Why Distractors Are Tempting: - B) Y: You might think Y is on 4 if you misread "above" as "below." - C) Z: You might forget Z cannot be on 5.- D) V: You might assume V is on 4 without checking other constraints.
6 floors, 6 people: A, B, C, D, E, F.- A lives above B.- C lives two floors below D.- E lives on Floor 1.- F does not live next to D.
Which statement is true?A) B lives on Floor 2.B) D lives on Floor 5.C) C lives on Floor 3.D) A lives on Floor 6.
Correct Answer: C) C lives on Floor 3.Explanation: - E on 1.- C two floors below D → Possible pairs: (C on 1, D on 3) but E on 1 ❌; (C on 2, D on 4); (C on 3, D on 5); (C on 4, D on 6).- F not next to D → If D on 4, F cannot be on 3 or 5.- A > B → A on higher floor than B.- Try C on 3, D on 5: - F not next to D → F cannot be on 4 or 6. - Possible F on 1 (E on 1) ❌ or 2. - F on 2. - A > B → A on 4 or 6, B on 1 or 2. - E on 1, F on 2 → B on 3 or 4. - But C on 3 → B on 4. - A > B → A on 6. - Arrangement: - 6: A - 5: D - 4: B - 3: C - 2: F - 1: E - Check "F not next to D": F on 2, D on 5 → Not adjacent. ✅ Why Distractors Are Tempting: - A) B on 2: You might forget F is on 2.- B) D on 5: Correct in this arrangement, but the question asks for a true statement, and C is also true.- D) A on 6: True, but the question asks for which statement is true, and C is explicitly correct.
A 4-floor building has 4 people: P, Q, R, S.- P lives above Q.- R lives on a higher floor than S.
Is the following statement sufficient to determine R’s floor?"Q lives on Floor 2."
A) Yes B) No
Correct Answer: B) No Explanation: - Q on 2.- P > Q → P on 3 or 4.- R > S → R on higher floor than S.- Possible arrangements: 1. S on 1, R on 3, P on 4, Q on 2. 2. S on 1, R on 4, P on 3, Q on 2. 3. S on 3, R on 4, P on ? (P must be > Q on 2 → P on 3 or 4). - If P on 3, Q on 2, S on 1, R on 4. - If P on 4, Q on 2, S on 1, R on 3.- Statement does not fix R’s floor uniquely → Not sufficient.Why Distractors Are Tempting: - You might think Q on 2 narrows R to 3 or 4, but it doesn’t fix R’s position.
5 floors, 5 people: J, K, L, M, N.- J lives on Floor 3.- K lives immediately below L.- M does not live on Floor 1.- N lives on a higher floor than K.
Which of these is impossible?A) L lives on Floor 4.B) M lives on Floor 5.C) K lives on Floor 1.D) N lives on Floor 2.
Correct Answer: D) N lives on Floor 2.Explanation: - J on 3.- K immediately below L → Possible pairs: (K on 1, L on 2); (K on 2, L on 3) but J on 3 ❌; (K on 4, L on 5).- M ≠ 1 → M on 2,3,4,5.- N > K.- Check options: - A) L on 4 → K on 3 (J on 3) ❌ → Possible if K on 1, L on 2. - B) M on 5 → Possible. - C) K on 1 → L on 2, N > K → N on 3,4,5. Possible. - D) N on 2 → N > K → K must be on 1. But if K on 1, L on 2, N on 2 → L and N cannot both be on 2. ❌ Why Distractors Are Tempting: - A) You might think L on 4 forces K on 3, but K can be on 1.- B) You might assume M cannot be on 5, but it’s possible.- C) You might think K on 1 violates "N > K," but N can be on 3,4,5.
3 floors, 3 people: X, Y, Z.- X does not live on Floor 1.- Y lives above Z.
How many possible arrangements are there?A) 1 B) 2 C) 3 D) 4
Correct Answer: B) 2 Explanation: - X ≠ 1 → X on 2 or 3.- Y > Z.- Possible arrangements: 1. X on 2, Y on 3, Z on 1. 2. X on 3, Y on 2, Z on 1.- Cannot have X on 2, Y on 1, Z on 3 (Y > Z violated).- Cannot have X on 3, Y on 1, Z on 2 (Y > Z violated).Why Distractors Are Tempting: - A) You might think only one arrangement fits.- C/D) You might overcount by ignoring "Y > Z."
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