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What Government Job
is Right For You?

Select your degree → check eligibility → explore every career path → let our AI guide you to the right govt exam. 100% free, no coaching needed.

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📊 11.6 lakh applicants for SSC CGL every year 💰 IAS officers get ₹2.5L+/month + bungalow + car 🎯 GATE score valid for 3 years for PSU applications 📅 UPSC Calendar released every January 🏆 Only 0.2% candidates clear UPSC IAS 🔬 50+ PSUs recruit through GATE score 📊 11.6 lakh applicants for SSC CGL every year 💰 IAS officers get ₹2.5L+/month + bungalow + car 🎯 GATE score valid for 3 years for PSU applications 📅 UPSC Calendar released every January 🏆 Only 0.2% candidates clear UPSC IAS 🔬 50+ PSUs recruit through GATE score
Am I Eligible?
Enter your details and instantly see which government exams you can apply for
📅 Exam Notification Calendar 2026
Stay updated on upcoming government exam dates and notifications
💰 Salary Comparison
Monthly in-hand salary ranges across top government exams (7th Pay Commission)

*Includes basic pay + DA. HRA, TA and other allowances not included. Figures approximate.

🧠 Daily Practice Quiz
Test your knowledge with questions from actual government exam papers
General Knowledge
Reasoning
Quantitative Aptitude
English
Current Affairs
📆 Study Planner Generator
Get a custom weekly study schedule based on your target exam and available hours
🌟 Success Stories
Real aspirants who cracked government exams — their strategy & journey
👨‍💼
Arjun Mehta
🏛️ UPSC IAS 2023 — AIR 47
"I cleared GATE first, worked at a PSU for 2 years, then switched to IAS prep. The salary from PSU funded my coaching. Optional: Geography. 3rd attempt."
📚 2.5 years prep • Self-study + test series • BE Civil, IIT Bombay
👩‍💻
Priya Sharma
🔬 GATE CSE 2024 — Score 847
"Scored 847 in GATE CSE and got placed in ONGC. Only used free resources — NPTEL, GO Platform, and YouTube. No coaching. 8 months of focused prep."
📚 8 months prep • 100% free resources • BTech CSE, NIT Trichy
👨‍⚕️
Rahul Nair
📋 SSC CGL 2023 — Income Tax Inspector
"BA graduate from a tier-3 college. Gave 3 attempts. Key was daily mock tests and analyzing errors — not just studying more. Scored 178 in Tier 1."
📚 1 year prep • Mock test strategy • BA History, Pune University
👩‍🔬
Sneha Patel
🏦 SBI PO 2024 — Selected
"BCom graduate, selected in SBI PO in 2nd attempt. DI and Puzzles were my weak areas. Solved 3000+ DI questions from Oliveboard. GD topic was digital banking."
📚 10 months prep • Free mock tests • BCom, Mumbai University
👨‍🚂
Vikram Singh
🚂 RRB JE 2023 — Mechanical
"Diploma in Mechanical. Many told me diploma holders can't crack government exams. Proved them wrong. Railway JE is a great option for diploma holders!"
📚 6 months prep • YouTube + books • Diploma, Govt Polytechnic Jaipur
👩‍⚖️
Ananya Roy
⚖️ UPSC CAPF AC 2023 — CRPF
"BSc graduate, cleared CAPF AC in first attempt. The key was consistent physical training alongside academics. Started running 5km daily from month 1."
📚 12 months prep • Physical + academic prep • BSc Physics, DU
Choose Your Qualification
Click on your degree to see all government job opportunities
⚙️
BE / BTech
Mech • Civil • ECE • CSE
12 Exams →
🎓
Any Graduate
BA • BCom • BCA • BSc
20+ Exams →
🏥
MBBS / Bio
Medical • Life Sciences
8 Exams →
🔬
BSc / MSc
Science • Research
10 Exams →
🔧
Diploma / ITI
Polytechnic • Technical
8 Exams →
⚖️
Law (LLB)
Judiciary • Legal Services
5 Exams →
📖 Exam-Specific Pages
Complete syllabus, eligibility, strategy and free resources for each exam
🏛️
UPSC CSE
IAS • IPS • IFS Guide
Full Guide →
📋
SSC CGL
Inspector • ASO • JSO
Full Guide →
🏦
IBPS Banking
PO • Clerk • SBI • RBI
Full Guide →
🚂
RRB Railway
NTPC • Group D • JE • ALP
Full Guide →
🗺️
State PSC
UPPSC • MPSC • KPSC
Full Guide →
🌊
APPSC
Group 1 • Group 2 • AEE
Full Guide →
🌸
TSPSC
Group 1 • Group 2 • AEE
Full Guide →
🎓
GATE 2026
PSU Jobs • IIT M.Tech
Full Guide →
Explore All Government Exam Paths
Filter by your qualification and click any exam to see full details
Everything You Need to Prepare
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Your Personal Exam Mentor 🤖
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After BE Mech?
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🛠️ Student Tools
Everything you need to plan, practice and succeed — all in one place
🎯 Attempt Calculator
Enter your details — see exactly how many attempts remain for each exam
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⚖️ Compare Any Two Exams
Select two exams and compare eligibility, salary, difficulty, vacancies and more
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📊 Exam Difficulty Meter
Visual breakdown across 5 axes: Competition, Syllabus Size, Time Required, Physical Fitness, Interview Weight
📈 Previous Year Cut-off Tracker
What score did candidates need to clear each stage? Plan accordingly.
⏱️ Mock Exam Timer
Simulate real exam conditions with a countdown timer and question counter
SELECT EXAM DURATION
UPSC Prelims
60 min
SSC CGL
120 min
GATE
180 min
SBI PO Pre
60 min
Custom
45 min
UPSC Prelims — 100 Questions
60:00
Attempt questions at a pace of 36 seconds per question
✅ Syllabus Topic Tracker
Check off topics as you complete them. Progress saved in your browser.
🃏 Revision Flashcards
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📝 Daily Vocabulary Builder
Master 10 new words daily — with meanings, antonyms, synonyms and example sentences
📐 Maths Formula Sheet
All important formulas for SSC, Banking, Railways, and GATE in one place
📥 Download Resources
Official PDFs, NCERT books, previous year papers — all free, all official sources
🗺️ State PSC Exams
Explore state-level government exam bodies — prefer home-state posting? Start here.
🏢 Govt vs Private Job — Real Comparison
Beyond just salary — total compensation, job security, work-life balance
🏛️ Government Job (IAS/SSC Level)
₹40k–₹2.5L
Basic Pay / Month
Housing✅ Free Govt Bungalow/HRA
Pension✅ NPS / Old Pension
Medical✅ CGHS / Free treatment
Job Security✅ Lifetime (can't be fired easily)
Leave✅ 30 CL + 20 EL + medical
Work Hours✅ 9-5, mostly fixed
Growth⚠️ Seniority-based, slower
Starting Salary⚠️ Lower than IT companies
💼 Private Sector (IT/Corporate)
₹3L–₹20L
Annual CTC (varies widely)
Housing⚠️ HRA taxable, self-arrange
Pension❌ EPF only (12% employer)
Medical⚠️ Insurance (limits apply)
Job Security❌ Layoffs possible anytime
Leave⚠️ 18-24 days typically
Work Hours❌ Often 10-12 hrs, weekends
Growth✅ Merit-based, faster possible
Starting Salary✅ Higher CTC at top companies
💡 Bottom line: A government officer earning ₹50k/month gets free housing (worth ₹20k), CGHS medical (worth ₹10k), pension (worth crores over lifetime), and lifetime job security. Effective total compensation is often 2–3x the basic salary. Many families feel this is worth more than a ₹1.5L private CTC with no stability.
💰 Coaching vs Self-Study
Is expensive coaching really worth it? Here's the honest breakdown.
🏫 Coaching (Offline/Online)
₹50k–₹3L
Total investment per year
✅ Structured syllabus coverage
✅ Test series included
✅ Peer group motivation
✅ Faculty doubt clearing
⚠️ Very expensive
⚠️ Quality varies widely
❌ Not needed for most exams
❌ Many toppers are self-study
📚 Self-Study (Free Resources)
₹0–₹5,000
Books + mock tests
✅ YouTube: GATE Wallah, StudyIQ, Abhinay Maths
✅ NCERT books: ncert.nic.in (free PDF)
✅ Previous papers: official websites (free)
✅ Testbook/Oliveboard free tier
✅ Many AIR 1 toppers self-studied
⚠️ Needs higher self-discipline
⚠️ No structured path
🏆 Our Recommendation: Start with FREE resources for 3 months. If you feel you need structure, opt for an affordable online test series (₹1k–₹3k). Only consider full coaching if you have money to spare AND you've genuinely tried self-study first. Most government exams can be cracked with free resources and discipline.
✅ Exam Day Checklist
Don't forget anything on exam day. Check off each item as you prepare.
📰 Newspaper Reading Guide
Which sections to read, what to note, and how to use it for UPSC, SSC and Banking
The Hindu
Indian Express
Economic Times
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📰 Current Affairs Digest
Weekly exam-focused current affairs — curated for UPSC, SSC, Banking & Railways

Built for Every Indian Student Who Is Confused About Their Career

GovtExamPath was created with one mission: to make government exam guidance free, clear, and accessible to every student in India — regardless of their background, city, or coaching budget.

We know how overwhelming it feels when you finish your degree and don't know where to start. There are hundreds of exams, dozens of eligibility criteria, and a flood of conflicting advice. We built this platform to cut through the noise and give you a clear, structured path forward.

All content on this platform is research-based and regularly updated. We are not affiliated with any coaching institute and do not promote paid courses.

👩‍💻 Meet the Creator

Hi! I'm Sanjana Sarvani — I built GovtExamPath completely on my own, from design to development to content. Every page, every feature, every exam detail was researched and crafted by me personally. My goal is to help every Indian student find their right career path in government jobs — for free, always.

✉️ govtexampath@gmail.com 📸 @govtexampath
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🏛️ UPSC Civil Services — Complete Free Knowledge Hub

Master the IAS Exam
From Zero to Interview

Everything you need to crack UPSC CSE: syllabus, strategy, books, PYQs, roadmaps and toppers' secrets — free, comprehensive, updated.

~11 Lakh
Applicants/Year
3 Stages
Prelims→Mains→PT
0.2%
Selection Rate
₹2.5L+
IAS Package/Month
IASIPSIFSIRS Prelims GSMainsInterviewFree Resources
Section 01

🏛️ Introduction to UPSC

Understand what UPSC is, why civil services are among India's most sought-after careers, and which prestigious services you can qualify for.

~11L
Apply Each Year
~14,000
Write Mains
~2,500
Called for Interview
~900
Finally Selected

🇮🇳 What is UPSC?

The Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) is a constitutional body under Article 315 of the Indian Constitution — India's central recruiting agency for All-India Services and Group A Central Services.

The Civil Services Examination (CSE) — popularly called the IAS exam — is its most prestigious test, selecting candidates for the highest administrative positions in the country through a three-stage process spanning 12–14 months.

  • Established 1926 as Federal Public Service Commission; renamed UPSC post-Independence 1950
  • Selects for IAS, IPS, IFS, IRS, and 20+ other Group A services through a single merit list
  • Notification released every February; Prelims in June; Final result by May–June next year
  • Less than 0.2% of applicants ultimately get selected — India's most competitive exam

⚡ Why Civil Services Matter

  • IAS officers directly administer districts of 10–30 lakh people — unmatched societal impact
  • Lifetime job security — removal only through a constitutional process, not at political will
  • Free bungalow, official car, domestic help, security, CGHS medical for the entire family
  • Rapid progression: Sub-Collector → DM → Secretary in 15–20 years
  • Deputation to UN, World Bank, PMO, NITI Aayog — national and global exposure
  • Pension, gratuity, post-retirement perks — unmatched financial security
  • Opportunity to implement landmark national schemes affecting crores of lives
💡
Scale of Impact
A district collector controls an annual budget of ₹500–1000 crore and is the last mile interface between the Government of India and its citizens. No private sector job compares at this scale.

🎖️ Services Recruited via UPSC CSE

🏛️ IAS — Indian Administrative Service

India's most coveted civil service
  • Sub-Collector, DM, Commissioner, Chief Secretary, Cabinet Secretary
  • Revenue, development, law & order — runs the district machinery
  • Deputed to Union Ministries, PSUs, international bodies
  • Salary: ₹56,100–₹2,50,000/month + free official residence + car + staff

👮 IPS — Indian Police Service

Commanding law enforcement nationwide
  • SP, DIG, DGP — state police forces and central paramilitary
  • Heads CBI, NIA, Intelligence Bureau at senior levels
  • CRPF, BSF, CISF, SSB, ITBP commandants and DGs
  • Salary: ₹56,100–₹2,25,000/month + official residence + security

🌍 IFS — Indian Foreign Service

India's diplomatic corps
  • Ambassador, High Commissioner, Consul General in 188+ countries
  • Foreign policy, trade negotiations, bilateral relations
  • Postings abroad with generous foreign allowances
  • Salary: ₹56,100 base + substantial foreign posting allowances

💰 IRS — Indian Revenue Service

Tax & Customs administration
  • IRS (IT): Income Tax officers, CBDT — tax enforcement
  • IRS (C&IT): Customs, GST, Central Excise — CBIC
  • Fights tax evasion, smuggling, financial crimes, hawala
  • Salary: ₹56,100–₹2,25,000/month + city compensatory allowance

📡 IIS + IAAS + IRTS

Media, Audit & Railway services
  • IIS: Doordarshan, AIR, PIB — government communication
  • IAAS: CAG's audit function — public expenditure watchdog
  • IRTS: Railway Traffic Service — train operations management
  • Salary range: ₹56,100–₹1,77,500 across these services

📦 20+ Group A Services

Complete CSE service list
  • IPoS (Indian Postal Service) — managing India Post nationwide
  • ICAS (Civil Accounts), ICLS (Corporate Law)
  • IOFS (Ordnance Factories), IRPS (Railway Personnel)
  • Service allocated by rank + preference + vacancies available
🎯
Service Allocation — How It Works
After the final merit list, all selected candidates fill a preference form listing services in order of choice. Allocation depends on rank × category × vacancies. Typically ranks 1–80 get IAS, 81–150 IPS/IFS/IRS-IT, onwards for other services. Higher rank = better service + better state cadre (home state possible for top ranks).
Section 02

📝 UPSC Exam Structure — 3 Stages

UPSC CSE has three sequential stages. You must clear each to proceed. Here is an in-depth breakdown of every stage, paper, marks and strategy.

Stage 1
Prelims (June)
2 objective papers — screening only
Stage 2
Mains (September)
9 descriptive papers — merit decides
Stage 3
Interview (Feb–May)
275-mark personality test

📋 Stage 1: Preliminary Examination (Prelims)

Objective MCQs • Held every June • ~5 lakh appear • ~14,000 qualify
Paper I — General Studies (Merit-counting)
ParameterDetails
Questions100 MCQs (4 options each)
Total Marks200 marks
Duration2 hours
Negative Marking–0.66 per wrong answer
RoleCut-off marks decide Prelims qualification
Topics: Current Affairs, History, Geography, Polity, Economy, Environment, Science & Technology, General Science
Paper II — CSAT (Qualifying only)
ParameterDetails
Questions80 MCQs
Total Marks200 marks
Duration2 hours
Negative Marking–0.833 per wrong answer
RoleMust score 33% (66 marks) to qualify
Topics: Reading Comprehension, Logical Reasoning, Analytical Ability, Basic Numeracy (Class 10 level), Data Interpretation, English Comprehension
⚠️
Critical Prelims Rules
• Only Paper I marks count for cut-off — Paper II is just qualifying
• Unattempted questions carry ZERO penalty — never guess randomly
• Prelims marks are NOT added to final merit — purely a screening filter
• Typical General category cut-off: 95–112/200 (varies year to year)

📖 Stage 2: Main Examination (Mains)

Descriptive/Essay • Held in September • ~14,000 appear • ~2,500 qualify
PaperSubjectMarksDurationNature
Paper AIndian Language (any 8th Schedule language)3003 hrsQualifying — 33% needed
Paper BEnglish Language3003 hrsQualifying — 33% needed
EssayEssay Paper — 2 essays from 2 sections2503 hrsMerit-counting
GS IHistory, Geography, Art & Culture, Society2503 hrsMerit-counting
GS IIPolity, Governance, International Relations2503 hrsMerit-counting
GS IIIEconomy, S&T, Environment, Security2503 hrsMerit-counting
GS IVEthics, Integrity and Aptitude2503 hrsMerit-counting
Opt IOptional Subject — Paper I2503 hrsMerit-counting
Opt IIOptional Subject — Paper II2503 hrsMerit-counting
1750
Mains (7 papers)
+
275
Personality Test
=
2025
Total Merit Marks
Final rank is decided on these 2025 marks. Topper typically scores 1070–1150 out of 2025.
📝
Mains Answer Writing — What Examiners Reward
Structure: Introduction → Multiple dimensions (social/economic/political/environmental/historical) → Conclusion with way forward. Use keywords, subheadings, diagrams, flowcharts. GS IV case studies need moral reasoning. Strict word limits (150 or 250 words) must be followed. Quality over quantity — always.

🎙️ Stage 3: Personality Test (Interview)

275 marks • UPSC Bhawan, New Delhi • ~2,500 called • 25–45 minutes per candidate
  • Board of 5 members (Chairman + 4) — expert panel, not politicians
  • NOT a test of bookish knowledge — tests mental alertness, critical reasoning, personality
  • Questions on your DAF: hometown, hobbies, education, work experience, optional subject
  • Current affairs, national/international issues, ethical dilemmas, hypothetical scenarios
  • Average scores: 140–175; exceptional candidates score 190–220+
  • Final merit = Mains 1750 + Interview 275 = 2025 total
How to Prepare for the Interview
  • Fill DAF thoughtfully — every single line becomes a question
  • Know your home state, district, local issues inside out
  • Deep-dive into your optional subject — specific questions expected
  • At least 8–12 mock interviews at reputed coaching centres
  • Practice calm, confident body language — sit straight, eye contact
  • Honesty is rewarded — UPSC board respects authentic answers over rehearsed ones
  • Current affairs for 6 months before interview season
📅
Typical Annual UPSC CSE Timeline
Feb: Notification → Mar: Application closes → Jun: Prelims → Jul: Prelims result → Sep–Oct: Mains (9 days) → Dec: Mains result → Feb–May: Interviews → May–Jun: Final merit list + allocation
Section 03

✅ UPSC Eligibility Criteria

Before starting preparation, verify you meet all eligibility conditions. Age limits, educational qualifications, attempt limits and category relaxations — all covered here.

🎓 Educational Qualification

  • Any Bachelor's degree from a UGC-recognised university — any stream (BA/BSc/BCom/BTech/MBBS/LLB etc.)
  • Final year students can apply provisionally — degree proof must be submitted before Mains
  • Distance learning degrees also valid if university is UGC-recognised
  • No minimum percentage — even a simple pass class degree is eligible
  • Professional qualifications (CA, ICWA, CS) alone are NOT sufficient — you need a university degree
💡
Final Year Students
Apply with provisional certificate. If you do not complete the degree before Mains, your candidature gets cancelled. Ensure degree completion timeline is in sync.

🌐 Nationality & Other Conditions

  • For IAS/IPS/IFS: Must be an Indian Citizen (compulsory)
  • For other services: Nepal/Bhutan citizens and persons of Indian origin from certain countries may be eligible
  • Physical fitness: medical standards must be cleared at time of appointment
  • No criminal conviction that bars government service
  • No previous dismissal from Government of India service
  • Marital status: no restriction; married candidates fully eligible

🎂 Age Limits and Attempt Limits by Category

CategoryMin AgeMax AgeAge RelaxationMax Attempts
General / UR21 yrs32 yrs6 attempts
OBC (NCL)21 yrs35 yrs+3 years9 attempts
SC / ST21 yrs37 yrs+5 yearsUnlimited (till age limit)
PwBD — General21 yrs42 yrs+10 years9 attempts
PwBD — OBC21 yrs45 yrs+13 years9 attempts
PwBD — SC/ST21 yrs47 yrs+15 yearsUnlimited
Ex-Servicemen (Gen)21 yrs37 yrs+5 yearsAs per category
J&K Domicile (Gen)21 yrs37 yrs+5 yearsAs per category
⚠️
Attempt Counting Rule
An attempt is counted if you appear in Prelims Paper I even for one question. If you are absent from the exam hall (do not appear), it does NOT count as an attempt. Once all attempts are exhausted, ineligible regardless of age remaining.
📅
Age Calculation Rule
Age is calculated as on 1st August of the exam year. Example: For CSE 2026, upper age of 32 for General means born on or after 2nd August 1994. OBC certificate must be current year Non-Creamy Layer format as per UPSC's prescribed format.

🏃 Physical Standards (IPS Specific)

IPS MaleHeight: 165 cm (Gen/OBC), 160 cm (SC/ST/Hill) | Chest: 84–89 cm
IPS FemaleHeight: 150 cm (Gen/OBC), 145 cm (SC/ST/Hill) | Relaxed chest standards
Vision (Both)Distant Vision 6/6 in good eye; Near Vision N5 — checked at medical
IASNo height/chest requirement; general fitness and medical check

📋 Category Certificate Tips

  • OBC (NCL) certificate must be in Central Government format — not state format
  • SC/ST certificates: must be from competent authority in your home district
  • EWS certificates: income-based, must be issued for relevant financial year
  • PwBD: disability certificate from government hospital — minimum 40% disability
  • Always check UPSC notification for exact certificate formats every year
Section 04

📚 Detailed UPSC Syllabus

A structured breakdown of every paper — Prelims GS, CSAT, Mains GS 1–4, Essay and Optional subjects. Know exactly what to study and how deep to go.

🔵 Prelims — GS Paper I Syllabus (100 Qs, 200 marks)

  • Current Events: National and International — last 18 months; 25–30 Qs typically
  • History of India: Ancient (Harappa to Gupta), Medieval (Delhi Sultanate, Mughals), Modern (1757–1947) + Art & Culture
  • Indian & World Geography: Physical, social, economic geography; rivers, forests, climate, mineral resources
  • Indian Polity & Governance: Constitution, Parliament, President, Judiciary, Panchayati Raj, Public Policy, Rights Issues
  • Economic & Social Development: Sustainable Development, Poverty, Inclusion, Demographics, Social Sector Initiatives
  • Environmental Ecology & Biodiversity: Ecosystems, climate change, environmental conventions, National Parks, species
  • General Science: Physics, Chemistry, Biology — everyday applications and recent developments
  • Science & Technology: Space, biotechnology, computer science, defence technology
🎯
Prelims Topic Weightage (Analysis 2014–2024)
Current Affairs ~28–32 Qs | Polity ~14–18 Qs | History & Culture ~16–20 Qs | Environment ~12–15 Qs | Geography ~10–12 Qs | Economy ~10–14 Qs | Science & Tech ~8–12 Qs | General Science ~4–6 Qs
📙 GS Paper I — History, Geography, Art & Culture, Society (250 marks)
🏛️ History & Culture
  • Indian culture: art forms, literature, architecture — ancient to modern
  • Modern Indian history (1857–1947): key events, personalities, movements
  • Freedom struggle: various stages, Gandhian era, Subhas Chandra Bose
  • Post-independence consolidation: states reorganisation, integration of princely states
  • World History: colonisation, WW1, WW2, Cold War, decolonisation, political philosophies
🌍 Geography
  • Distribution of key natural resources across world and India
  • Factors responsible for industrial location — historical and geographical
  • Physical geography: earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, cyclones
  • Population distribution, urbanisation, migration
  • Globalisation impact — economic geography, trade routes, ports
👥 Society
  • Salient features of Indian society — diversity, pluralism
  • Role of women — empowerment, SHGs, legislation
  • Poverty, population and development linkages
  • Communalism, regionalism, secularism — constitutional framework
  • Social empowerment, social justice, vulnerable groups
📗 GS Paper II — Polity, Governance, International Relations (250 marks)
🏛️ Polity & Governance
  • Constitution: historical underpinnings, features, Preamble, amendments
  • Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, powers, functioning
  • Executive (President, PM, Cabinet), Judiciary — structure and powers
  • Federal structure: Centre-State relations, Governor's role, Inter-State Council
  • Transparency: RTI, CAG, CVC, Lokpal, e-governance
  • Statutory and regulatory bodies: TRAI, SEBI, NHRC, CCI etc.
⚖️ Social Justice
  • Welfare schemes for SC/ST, women, elderly, disabled, minorities
  • Health policy, National Health Mission, PMJAY
  • Education policy — NEP 2020, RTE, Samagra Shiksha
  • Mechanisms for protection of vulnerable sections
  • Poverty alleviation, hunger schemes, MGNREGA, PMAY
🌏 International Relations
  • India's foreign policy — Panchsheel, NAM, Act East, Neighbourhood First
  • India and its neighbours: Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka
  • Important international institutions: UN, WTO, IMF, World Bank, BRICS, G20, SCO
  • Bilateral & multilateral agreements affecting India's interests
📘 GS Paper III — Economy, Science, Environment, Security (250 marks)
💰 Indian Economy
  • Planning, resource mobilisation, growth — pre and post LPG 1991
  • Agriculture: e-technology, food security, MSP, marketing, reforms, land issues
  • Infrastructure: energy, ports, roads, airports, railways, urban development
  • Fiscal Policy: Union Budget, taxation, FRBM, deficit types
  • Monetary Policy: RBI, inflation, repo rate, NPA, banking reforms
  • Investment models: PPP, FDI, FII, start-up ecosystem, PLI schemes
🔬 Science & Technology
  • Developments in S&T: applications in everyday life
  • Achievements of Indians in science — indigenous tech development
  • Space: ISRO missions (Chandrayaan, Gaganyaan, PSLV, GSLV)
  • Defence tech: DRDO, Make in India defence, missile programmes
  • Biotechnology, Genomics, Cyber Security, AI, Nano-technology
  • IPR issues, digital economy, Open Source and Digital India
🌿 Environment & Security
  • Conservation, pollution, environmental degradation
  • Climate Change: Paris Agreement, NDCs, carbon markets
  • Biodiversity: CITES, Ramsar, biodiversity hotspots
  • Disaster management: NDMA, SDMA, disaster risk reduction
  • Internal Security: LWE, insurgency, cyber threats, border issues
  • Role of external actors in internal disturbances; organised crime linkages
📕 GS Paper IV — Ethics, Integrity & Aptitude (250 marks)
🧭 Theory Topics
  • Ethics and Human Interface — meaning, determinants, ethical dimensions
  • Attitude: content, structure, function — influence on behaviour
  • Emotional Intelligence — concepts, utility, application in governance
  • Moral thinkers: Gandhi, Kautilya, Plato, Aristotle, John Rawls
  • Public Service Values: integrity, impartiality, non-partisanship, objectivity
  • Probity in Governance: RTI, code of ethics, codes of conduct, citizen charter
  • Philosophical basis of governance: utilitarian, deontological, virtue ethics
📋 Case Studies (~100 marks)
  • Real-life administrative scenarios — 2–3 long case studies
  • Test ethical decision-making in government context
  • Common scenarios: bribery pressure, transfer threats, whistleblowing dilemmas
  • Multi-stakeholder analysis + ethical reasoning required
  • Topper tip: Always list all stakeholders, all options, then justify chosen course
  • Most underrated scoring paper — toppers regularly score 130–155+ here
💡
GS IV Scoring Tip
Many score 80–90 but toppers score 130–155. Use ethical keywords: probity, emotional intelligence, Gandhian values, constitutional morality. Structured case study answers win marks.
✍️ Essay Paper — 2 Essays in 3 Hours (250 marks)
  • 2 essays from 2 different sections: Section A (abstract/philosophical) and Section B (concrete/social-political)
  • 1000–1200 words per essay ideal; 125 marks each
  • Clear introduction + 3–5 well-developed dimensions + strong conclusion with way forward
  • Interdisciplinary approach rewarded — weave history, polity, economy, science together
  • Practice 2–3 essays per week from Month 6 of your preparation
Sample Essay Topics
  • "Forests are the lungs of the earth" — 2023
  • "Cooperative federalism: myth or reality?"
  • "Technology as the new colonialism"
  • "In India, the real challenge is not ensuring rights but ensuring duties"
  • "The most dangerous person is the one who has lost his sense of wonder"
Section 05

📖 Study Materials & Recommended Books

Start with NCERTs (non-negotiable), then ONE good standard reference book per subject. Depth matters more than breadth — revise fewer books many times.

Golden Rule of UPSC Books
Complete NCERTs (Class 6–12) first — they are the unbeatable foundation. Then pick only one standard reference per subject. Never accumulate 4–5 books per topic. One book read 4 times beats 4 books read once.

📒 NCERTs — The Non-Negotiable Foundation

SubjectClassesKey NCERT Books
History6–12Our Pasts I/II/III (6–8), India & Contemporary World I/II (9–10), Themes in Indian History I/II/III (12)
Geography6–12The Earth Our Habitat (6), Our Environment (7), Resources & Dev (8), Contemporary India I/II (9–10), Fundamentals of Phys. Geo + India Phys (11–12)
Polity9, 11–12Democratic Politics I & II (9–10), Political Theory (11), Indian Constitution at Work (11)
Economy9–12Understanding Eco Dev (10), Indian Economic Development (11), Macro + Micro (12)
Science6–10Science textbooks 6–10 — for Prelims General Science questions
Environment11–12Biology NCERT Class 12 (ecosystem, biodiversity chapters)
Sociology11–12Introducing Sociology (11), Social Change & Development in India (12)

📚 Standard Reference Books (Subject-wise)

🏛️ History & Culture

📖
India's Struggle for Independence — Bipin Chandra
Best book for Modern History. Comprehensive freedom movement coverage. Read fully for both Prelims and Mains. ⭐ MUST READ
📖
India After Independence — Bipin Chandra
Post-1947 political & economic history. Integration, planning, Emergency. Essential for GS1 Mains answers.
📖
A Brief History of Modern India — Spectrum (Rajiv Ahir)
Compact Prelims-focused Modern History revision. Highly popular. Read after Bipin Chandra for consolidation.
📖
Facets of Indian Culture — Spectrum
Art, architecture, classical music, dance, sculpture — 5–8 culture questions in Prelims every year.

🏛️ Polity & Governance

📖
Indian Polity — M. Laxmikanth
The single most important UPSC book. Read 4–5 times. Every constitutional provision explained. Non-negotiable. ❤️ MOST CRITICAL
📖
Introduction to Constitution of India — D.D. Basu
For deeper constitutional understanding. Read for Mains answer quality improvement.
📖
Governance in India — M. Laxmikanth
Covers e-governance, RTI, Lokpal, transparency — directly relevant for GS2 Mains questions.

🌍 Geography

📖
Certificate Physical & Human Geography — G.C. Leong
Classic reference for physical geography: climate, soils, rocks, landforms. Very clear explanations. ⭐ Highly Recommended
📖
Geography of India — Majid Husain
Comprehensive Indian geography — rivers, agriculture, minerals, industries. Read for GS1 Mains.
📖
Oxford Student Atlas / Orient Blackswan Atlas
Daily map practice is essential. Mark rivers, mountains, passes, national parks, straits weekly.

💰 Economy & Environment

📖
Indian Economy — Ramesh Singh
Standard economy book. Planning, agriculture, industry, fiscal & monetary policy, poverty. Read fully. ⭐ Essential
📖
Economic Survey (Annual) — Ministry of Finance
Volume II for economic data. Updated every year. Critical data source for Mains answers. Free download.
🌐
Shankar IAS Environment — Free PDF
Ecology, biodiversity, climate change, international conventions. Best environment resource. Completely free download. 🆓 FREE

🧭 Ethics, Essay & Current Affairs

📖
Ethics, Integrity & Aptitude — G Subba Rao & P N Roy Chowdhury
Most popular ethics book. Theory + case study practice. Read cover to cover for GS IV.
📖
Lexicon for Ethics — Niraj Kumar
Key ethical terms clearly defined. Use in answers — examiners reward proper terminology.
📰
The Hindu / Indian Express — Daily Reading
Non-negotiable from Day 1. 45–60 minutes/day. Skip sports, entertainment. Focus: governance, economy, environment, international, S&T.

🆓 Free Digital Resources

🌐
ncert.nic.in — Official NCERT PDFs
All NCERTs free as PDF. Download every class 6–12 textbook immediately.
🌐
insightsonindia.com — Free Mains Material
Daily current affairs, answer writing practice, comprehensive notes. Best free resource online.
🌐
drishtiias.com — Bilingual Resource
Best for Hindi-medium aspirants. Current affairs, articles, daily MCQs, editorials. Full free access.
🌐
iasparliament.com — Prelims Mapping
Maps every news item to UPSC syllabus topic. Best tool for Prelims current affairs preparation.
Section 06

📰 Current Affairs for UPSC

Current affairs is the most dynamic component — it touches every GS paper, Prelims and Mains. It's the differentiator between toppers and average scorers. Start from Day 1.

🎯
Why Current Affairs is Critical
Prelims: ~28–32 out of 100 questions are directly from current affairs (last 12–18 months). Mains: Every GS paper requires connecting current events with static knowledge — examiners explicitly reward candidates who cite recent examples and data. Starting from Day 1 is non-negotiable.

📰 Newspapers to Read

📰
The Hindu — Most Preferred
Deep analytical editorials. Read Science, National, International sections daily. Editorial page is gold for Mains keywords and dimensions. ~45 minutes/day.
📰
Indian Express — Strong Alternative
'Explained' section is excellent for complex topics. 'Ideas' page for diverse opinions. Good Economy, Polity and International coverage.
📰
Business Standard — Economy Focus
For economy current affairs: RBI policy, Budget, banking, trade. Read 2–3 pages if weak in economy topics.
💡
Reading Strategy
Skip: sports, entertainment, crime, local politics. Read: governance, economy, environment, S&T, international affairs, social issues. Max 45–60 min/day.

🌐 Online Current Affairs Platforms

  • Insights on India: insightsonindia.com — free daily summary, MCQs, Mains questions mapped to syllabus
  • Drishti IAS: drishtiias.com — bilingual, comprehensive monthly magazine format, very popular
  • IAS Parliament: iasparliament.com — maps daily news to UPSC syllabus topics — best for Prelims
  • ForumIAS: forumias.com — community discussion + daily MCQ + free tests from current affairs
  • PIB (pib.gov.in): Official government press releases — schemes, policy, official data
  • PRS India (prsindia.org): Bills, Parliament sessions, committee reports — must read before Mains
  • RSTV/Sansad TV (YouTube): Budget discussions, policy debates, expert talks — great for in-depth understanding
  • Ministry Annual Reports: Contain scheme performance data — cite these in Mains for extra marks

📋 Key Monthly Current Affairs Themes

🏛️ POLITY & GOVERNANCE
  • SC/HC landmark judgments — constitutional interpretation
  • Parliamentary Bills passed and in progress
  • CAG, CVC, Lokpal — accountability mechanisms
  • Electoral reforms, delimitation, ECI rulings
  • State vs Centre conflicts, Governor controversies
💰 ECONOMY
  • Union Budget key highlights + Economic Survey
  • RBI MPC decisions — repo rate, inflation, CRR
  • GST Council meetings — slab changes
  • FDI data, forex reserves, trade balance
  • PLI scheme updates, startup unicorns, IPOs
🌿 ENVIRONMENT
  • COP summits outcomes — NDCs, climate finance
  • IPCC reports — warming projections
  • Species discovery, extinction concerns, WPA amendments
  • New Ramsar sites, Biosphere Reserves, Tiger Reserves
  • Air quality, water contamination, microplastics
🔬 SCIENCE & TECH
  • ISRO missions — Gaganyaan, Chandrayaan-4, NISAR
  • DRDO defence developments, Make in India defence
  • India's AI Policy framework and regulations
  • Semiconductor Mission, chip fab updates
  • Health: vaccines, genomics, CRISPR, WHO guidelines
🌏 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
  • India-China border normalisation — Depsang, Demchok
  • India-Pakistan LoC, diplomatic exchanges
  • India-US AUKUS, Quad, iCET updates
  • BRICS expansion, G20 India outcomes
  • UN Security Council reforms — India's permanent seat push
🏆 AWARDS & REPORTS
  • Nobel Prizes — Science, Peace, Economics
  • Bharat Ratna, Padma awards — recipients' contributions
  • HDI, Global Hunger Index, WEF GCI — India's rankings
  • World Bank, UNICEF, WHO flagship reports
  • NITI Aayog reports — SDG progress, State rankings
📝
How to Make Current Affairs Notes
For each news item note: (1) What happened, (2) Why it matters, (3) UPSC paper it connects to, (4) Key data/statistics. Maintain dated notes — digital or notebook. Revise monthly. By exam day you should have 200–300 pages of consolidated, well-organised notes ready for a 48-hour revision.
Section 07

📂 Previous Year Question Papers (PYQs)

PYQs are the single most effective preparation tool. They reveal UPSC's thinking, recurring themes, expected depth and the art of framing answers.

💡
Why PYQs Are Non-Negotiable
UPSC repeats topics (not exact questions) cyclically every 5–7 years. Solving Prelims PYQs 2013–2024 exposes you to ~65–70% of themes that future exams will test. For Mains, PYQs reveal exactly what dimensions and depth examiners expect. Toppers solve PYQs from the very first month of preparation.

📋 Prelims PYQs — How to Use

  • Start early: Solve 2013–2024 PYQs subject-wise (not year-wise) — builds topic-level pattern recognition
  • Analyse every wrong answer: Don't just check answer — understand why and the source
  • Identify repeat themes: Ancient history, biodiversity, constitutional articles repeat often
  • 50 PYQs daily drill: From Month 6 onwards — builds speed and confidence
  • Topic gap analysis: Track accuracy per topic — the red ones need immediate attention
  • Don't memorise: Understand — questions change wording every year
🆓 Free Prelims PYQ Sources
upsc.gov.ininsightsonindia.comforumias.comiasparliament.com

📝 Mains PYQs — How to Use

  • Analyse question styles: "Critically examine" vs "Discuss" vs "Analyse" — each demands different approach
  • Map dimensions: What dimensions do toppers cover? Social, economic, political, historical, environmental
  • Track topic frequency: High-frequency topics get more preparation time
  • Write actual answers: Don't just read PYQs — write timed 150/250-word answers
  • Compare with model answers: Identify missing dimensions, better structuring, keyword use
  • Cover 2011–2024: 14 years of Mains PYQs is the ideal dataset to analyse
📥 Mains PYQ Sources
insightsonindia.comcivilsdaily.comVision IAS bookletsupsc.gov.in

📊 High-Frequency Prelims Topics (2014–2024 Analysis)

Current Affairs28–32 Qs
History & Culture16–20 Qs
Polity & Constitution14–18 Qs
Environment & Ecology12–15 Qs
Economy10–14 Qs
Geography10–12 Qs
Science & Technology8–12 Qs
General Science4–6 Qs
Section 08

🧪 Mock Tests & Practice Questions

Mock tests transform knowledge into exam performance. Regular testing exposes gaps, builds speed and develops the mental stamina for 9 days of Mains.

📋 Prelims Mock Strategy

  • Start at Month 6+: Only after 60–70% syllabus is complete — partial preparation leads to wrong patterns
  • Minimum 25–30 mocks: Before actual Prelims — include sectional + full length
  • 3-hour analysis rule: Spend 3 hours analysing for every 2-hour mock taken
  • Track topic accuracy: Build a spreadsheet — accuracy by topic per mock
  • Attempt strategy: Attempt only if 60%+ confident — negative marking is real
  • Time target: Complete 80–85 questions in 2 hours; leave 10 minutes for review
🆓 Free Mock Test Platforms
ForumIASInsightsIAS MCQClearIASiasparliamentGKToday UPSC

📝 Mains Answer Writing Practice

  • Start Month 6: Write 2–3 Mains-quality answers daily from GS or Essay
  • Structure every answer: Intro (2–3 lines) → 3–5 dimensions → Conclusion with way forward
  • Word limits are a test: 150-word answers must be precisely 140–155 words — practice daily
  • Use diagrams freely: Flowcharts, tables, maps — examiners reward visual elements
  • Get evaluated: Submit on InsightsIAS or ForumIAS for community peer evaluation
  • Review model answers: Always compare — track missing dimensions over time
📝 Answer Writing Platforms
Insights AWPForumIAS AWPiasparliament DailyCivilsDaily

🎯 Self-Assessment Framework

📊 Monthly Self-Audit (15 min)

  • Topics covered vs planned — what's behind schedule?
  • Mock test accuracy trends by subject
  • Number of Mains answers written this month
  • Current affairs retention — spot quiz yourself
  • Adjust next month's study schedule accordingly

✅ Prelims Readiness Checklist

  • All NCERTs 6–12 completed
  • Standard books (core subjects) read
  • PYQs 2013–2024 solved with analysis
  • Current affairs 18 months consolidated
  • 25+ full-length mocks with 3-hour analysis each

📝 Mains Readiness Checklist

  • GS 1–4 all topics covered with notes
  • Optional Paper 1 & 2 completed
  • 20+ essays written and evaluated
  • 200+ timed Mains answers written
  • 3 full integrated Mains mock tests done
Section 09

📐 Optional Subjects Guide

The optional subject contributes 500 marks out of 1750 — nearly 29% of your merit. Choosing and preparing your optional well can make or break your rank.

⚠️
How Optional Impacts Your Rank
Optional = 500 marks (2 papers × 250). Toppers regularly score 310–360 in well-chosen optionals. A bad optional choice at 200–230 marks can push you below the cut-off even with great GS scores. Your optional choice is the single most strategic decision in your UPSC journey.

📋 Complete List of Optional Subjects (48 subjects)

AgricultureAnimal Husbandry & Veterinary ScienceAnthropologyBotanyChemistryCivil EngineeringCommerce & AccountancyEconomicsElectrical EngineeringGeographyGeologyHistoryLawManagementMathematicsMechanical EngineeringMedical SciencePhilosophyPhysicsPolitical Science & IRPsychologyPublic AdministrationSociologyStatisticsZoologyAssameseBengaliBodoDogriGujaratiHindiKannadaKashmiriKonkaniMaithiliMalayalamManipuriMarathiNepaliOdiaPunjabiSanskritSantaliSindhiTamilTeluguUrduEnglish

🏆 Most Popular Optionals & Their Profiles

Optional SubjectPopularityOverlap with GSScoring PotentialBest For
SociologyVery HighGS1 (Society), GS2 (Welfare)High — scoring, consistentAll backgrounds; humanities advantage
Public AdministrationHighGS2 (Governance), GS4 (Ethics)Moderate — good with right coachingNon-tech background; governance interest
GeographyHighGS1 (Geography), GS3 (Environment)High — factual, well-defined syllabusAll backgrounds; strong Prelims overlap
HistoryHighGS1 (History, Culture)Moderate-High — evaluator-dependentHumanities background; culture interest
Political Science & IRHighGS2 (Polity, IR)High — strong GS2 synergyBA Political Science graduates
AnthropologyVery HighGS1 (Society), GS4 (Ethics)Very High — short, well-defined syllabusAny background; most recommended for non-engineers
MathematicsModerateMinimal GS overlapVery High — if strong in MathsEngineering/Math graduates only
Medical ScienceModerateGS3 (Health, S&T)High — MBBS graduates onlyMBBS/BDS doctors only
EconomicsModerateGS3 (Economy)Moderate-High — analytical, dynamicEconomics graduates; current affairs intensive
LawModerateGS2 (Polity, Rights)Moderate — law graduates advantageLLB/LLM graduates

🎯 How to Choose Your Optional — 5-Step Framework

Step 1
Genuine Interest Test
You'll read the optional for 12–18 months. If you don't enjoy the subject even moderately, you will burnout. Interest is the #1 selection criterion.
Step 2
Academic Background Match
Your graduation subject gives you a head start. Engineer? Consider Maths, Geography, Anthropology. Humanities? History, Political Science, Sociology. MBBS? Medical Science.
Step 3
GS Overlap Analysis
Subjects like Geography, Sociology, Political Science, Anthropology have heavy GS overlap — every hour spent on optional also improves GS. This multiplier effect is crucial.
Step 4
Study the Success Data
Look at the past 5 years — how many people selected with this optional? What are average marks? Community forums have this data. ForumIAS optional threads are gold.
Step 5
Test for 3–4 Weeks
Before finalising, study the optional for 3–4 weeks. If you can write 1000 words freely on a topic and it doesn't feel like a chore — that's your optional.

📚 Optional Preparation Tips

  • Start optional preparation in Month 3–4 of overall preparation
  • Get previous year question papers for your optional — analyse 10 years minimum
  • Join optional-specific test series — most toppers credit specific test series for their optional score
  • Find a good mentor or coaching for optional — specialised guidance makes 50+ mark difference
  • Optional answer writing is different from GS — more technical, more citations required
  • Revise optional notes every 30–45 days — forgetting in a 12-month journey is the biggest risk
🏆
Anthropology — The Topper's Secret
Anthropology has become the most recommended optional for aspirants without a specific background advantage. Short, well-defined syllabus; high overlap with GS1 (Society section); consistent scoring; less competition from experts. Many AIR 1–50 rankers have chosen it.
Section 10

🗺️ Preparation Roadmaps

Structured, battle-tested roadmaps for every stage — whether you're a beginner, on a 6-month sprint, or doing a full 1-year preparation with daily and weekly plans.

🌱 Beginner's Roadmap — First Steps (Month 1–2)

Just starting? Here's the exact order for your first 60 days. Don't deviate — sequence matters.

Week 1
Understand the Battlefield
Read UPSC notification + last 3 years' Prelims PYQs (don't attempt — just observe the style and difficulty). Watch 2–3 topper interviews on YouTube. Set realistic expectations: this is a 12–18 month journey, not a sprint.
Week 2–4
Start NCERTs — History & Polity First
Read Class 6–8 History NCERTs. Then Class 9–10 Polity (Democratic Politics). These are fast reads. Start The Hindu or Indian Express from today — 45 minutes every morning without fail. Don't make notes yet.
Month 2 — Part 1
Complete NCERTs (Geography, Economy, Science)
Geography NCERT 6–12 (2 weeks). Economy NCERT 9–12 (1 week). Science NCERT 6–10 (3–4 days). Now start making brief bullet-point notes. Don't write essays — just capture key facts.
Month 2 — Part 2
Choose Your Optional + Explore It
Using the 5-step framework in Section 9, trial your top 2 optional choices for 2 weeks each. By end of Month 2, you must have chosen your optional. Don't postpone this — it haunts aspirants who delay.
🎯
Beginner's Most Common Mistake
Starting with coaching materials or coaching notes without completing NCERTs first. NCERT is the language UPSC speaks. All standard books will feel confusing without NCERT foundation. Always NCERTs first, no exceptions.

📅 1-Year Preparation Roadmap

The gold-standard UPSC preparation plan. 12 months, structured phase by phase.

PhaseMonthsFocusKey Activities
Phase 1: FoundationMonth 1–3NCERTs + Optional StartComplete all NCERTs 6–12 | Start optional subject (Paper 1) | Begin newspaper reading daily | Visit upsc.gov.in — download syllabus + last 5 PYQs
Phase 2: Standard BooksMonth 3–6Core Reference BooksLaxmikanth (Polity) | Bipin Chandra (History) | Ramesh Singh (Economy) | G.C. Leong (Geography) | Shankar IAS (Environment) | Complete Optional Paper 1 + start Paper 2
Phase 3: Current AffairsMonth 5–8Consolidate + CA NotesOngoing newspaper reading with notes | IASParliament daily mapping | Consolidate 18 months current affairs | Revise NCERTs + standard books first time
Phase 4: PracticeMonth 6–10Mocks + Answer WritingStart full-length Prelims mocks (25–30 total) | Write 2 Mains answers daily | Start Essay writing (2/week) | Solve PYQs subject-wise | Complete Optional Paper 2
Phase 5: RevisionMonth 10–12Intensive Revision3× revision of all notes | PYQ analysis final round | Last 30 days mock blitz (1/day) | Current affairs consolidation | Integrated Mains mock tests (3 full sets)

⚡ 6-Month Accelerated Roadmap (For Repeat Aspirants / Quick Prelims Preparation)

Ideal for aspirants with prior UPSC exposure or targeting only Prelims in the next attempt.

Month 1–2: Rapid NCERT + Core Books

  • NCERTs: 2 chapters/day — complete all 6–12 in 45 days
  • Polity: Laxmikanth (Chapters 1–30 in Month 1)
  • History: Spectrum Modern India (Month 2)
  • Newspaper reading from Day 1 — 45 min/day non-negotiable

Month 3–4: Economy + Environment + Current Affairs

  • Economy: Ramesh Singh (complete in 3 weeks)
  • Environment: Shankar IAS PDF (2 weeks)
  • Current Affairs: Last 18 months consolidated consolidation
  • Geography: NCERT + GC Leong key chapters

Month 5–6: Mocks, PYQs & Intensive Revision

  • 15+ full-length Prelims mocks with deep analysis
  • PYQs 2013–2024 subject-wise solving
  • 3× revision of all notes
  • Final 15 days: 1 mock/day + current affairs revision only
⚠️
6-Month Reality Check
6 months is enough to clear Prelims but NOT enough for Mains if you're starting fresh. If this is your first attempt, use 6 months for Prelims, then start 12-month Mains preparation cycle. Don't compromise depth for speed.

⏱️ 6-Month Daily Schedule

6:00–7:00 AMNewspaper reading (The Hindu/IE) — notes
7:00–10:00 AMPrimary subject study (3 hours — deep focus)
10:00–10:30Break + walk
10:30 AM–1:30Secondary subject / Current Affairs notes
1:30–3:00 PMLunch + rest
3:00–5:30 PMPYQ solving / Mock tests / Analysis
5:30–7:30 PMOptional subject (Month 5–6: Mains AWP here)
8:30–10:00 PMRevision of day's notes — no new content

📆 Weekly Study Plan (12-Month Preparation)

A structured 7-day rotation to cover all GS papers, optional, current affairs and revision without burnout.

MON
GS I
History & Geography
TUE
GS II
Polity & Governance
WED
GS III
Economy & S&T
THU
GS IV + Essay
Ethics Writing
FRI
Optional
Both Papers
SAT
Current Affairs
+ Mock Test
SUN
Full Revision
+ Self-Assessment

Every day: 45 min newspaper reading (morning) + 30 min revision of previous day notes (evening). Total study: 8–10 hours/day including newspaper. Sunday is revision + reset, not a holiday.

🔄 Revision & Mock Test Strategy

📋 The 3-Revision Rule

  • Revision 1 (Month 4–5): Complete first revision of all notes — cover every topic once. Focus on breadth.
  • Revision 2 (Month 8–9): Second revision — faster, focus on weak areas identified from mocks. Integrate current affairs.
  • Revision 3 (Month 11–12): Final blitz revision — only your condensed notes, not full books. 1 topic/hour.
  • Pre-Prelims (Last 15 days): Only revision + 1 mock/day. Zero new content. Sleep 7–8 hours.

⚡ Mock Test Integration Strategy

  • Month 6–7: 1 sectional mock/week per subject — identify weak topics
  • Month 8–9: 1 full-length Prelims mock/week — build stamina and consistency
  • Month 10–11: 2 full-length mocks/week — acceleration phase
  • Last 30 days: 1 mock/day + 3-hour deep analysis + weak topic revision
  • For Mains: 3 integrated sets covering all 7 papers — simulate actual 9-day exam
Section 11

🏆 UPSC Toppers Strategy

What separates rank 1–50 from rank 500–1000? Studied strategies, proven techniques and mindset shifts from India's top civil servants.

🥇
Srushti Jayant Deshmukh
AIR 5, CSE 2018 — IFS (First attempt)
"I never studied more than 8 hours a day. Quality of study matters far more than quantity. I focused intensely on fewer sources and revised them repeatedly."
  • Optional: Sociology — chose for GS1 overlap
  • Newspaper: 30 min/day only — selective reading
  • Self-study exclusively — no classroom coaching
  • Completed entire syllabus 3 times before exam
🥈
Gaurav Agarwal
AIR 1, CSE 2013 — IAS
"Current affairs integration with static knowledge is the real art of UPSC preparation. Every newspaper article should remind you of a chapter from your book."
  • Optional: Economics — graduation background advantage
  • Wrote 10–15 answer writing practices per week
  • Read Economic Survey from cover to cover
  • Followed only 2–3 sources per subject — no source hopping
🥉
Tina Dabi
AIR 1, CSE 2015 — IAS (Record score)
"I prepared for Mains from the very first day. Even while studying for Prelims, I was making notes in an answer-writing friendly format. Both stages were prepared simultaneously."
  • Optional: Political Science & IR
  • Integrated Prelims + Mains preparation from Day 1
  • Scored 1063/2025 — highest in the batch
  • Heavy focus on Ethics paper — scored 148/250

📌 Proven Preparation Methods from Toppers

📚 Study Methods

  • The 3S Method: Study → Summarise (in your own words) → Self-test. Every topic must pass all 3 steps before you move on.
  • Active Recall: Close the book, write down everything you remember. Then check. More effective than re-reading by 3–4×.
  • Spaced Repetition: Revise after 1 day → 3 days → 1 week → 2 weeks → 1 month. Hardwires information permanently.
  • Interconnected Learning: When reading about a scheme, simultaneously note: history, geography, polity, economics and ethics angles. Train your brain to see all 5 dimensions.
  • Answer Writing from Day 1: 90% of toppers state they started writing answers much earlier than most aspirants. Writing reveals gaps that reading hides.
  • Mind Mapping: Create visual mind maps for complex topics like Fiscal Policy, Constitutional Provisions, International Relations frameworks.

🎯 Study Techniques That Work

  • Pomodoro for Deep Work: 25 min intense focus → 5 min break → repeat 4 times → 30 min break. UPSC requires 8–10 hours of this quality, not 12 hours of distracted reading.
  • Source Consistency: Never change your source mid-preparation. Pick ONE book per topic and stick with it till the exam.
  • Revision Notes Format: Maintain one A4 page per topic as final revision note — only keywords, data, key names. By Month 10 you should have ~200 such pages.
  • Current Affairs Integration: While reading news, immediately write: "This connects to [topic] in [GS Paper]." Train this habit from Day 1.
  • Eliminate Social Media: Every topper reports complete or near-complete elimination of social media during UPSC prep. Replace with educational YouTube (Study IQ, Drishti).
  • Study Group with 2–3 peers: Weekly discussions for 1–2 hours — explaining topics to each other hardens knowledge.

🧠 What Toppers Do That Most Aspirants Don't

📝 Integrated Note-Making

Static + dynamic in one place
  • One notebook per GS paper — not per book/source
  • Add current affairs to relevant static notes in real-time
  • By exam time: GS notebook = complete self-revision manual
  • No need to juggle multiple resources in last 2 months

🎙️ Interview Preparation from Year 1

Build the personality, not just knowledge
  • Develop an opinion on all major national issues — with reasoned argument
  • Deep knowledge of your home state — district, economy, culture, problems
  • Keep a "position paper" on 10 major current debates
  • Hobbies in DAF must be genuine — with specific experiences to share

⚖️ Balance Prelims & Mains

Most aspirants neglect this
  • Study everything from Mains perspective — depth and dimensions
  • Prelims MCQ practice is different from Mains — both need separate drilling
  • Don't over-focus on Prelims at cost of Mains — both need daily attention
  • Essay writing practice from Month 4 — don't leave it for last 3 months

💪 Motivation & Mental Health — The Untold Battle

🌟 Staying Motivated Through 2–3 Years

  • Define your 'Why': Write down in 3 sentences exactly why you want to be a civil servant. Read it every morning. Vague motivation fades; concrete purpose sustains.
  • Celebrate small wins: Completed NCERT history? Celebrate. Scored 70%+ in mock? Celebrate. Progress recognition prevents burnout.
  • Topper videos when low: Watch topper interviews on YouTube — not for information, but for inspiration. Their struggles are your struggles.
  • Peer group of serious aspirants: 2–3 study partners who are equally serious. Mutual accountability is powerful.
  • Physical exercise daily: 30 minutes walking/running every single day. Every topper reports this as non-negotiable — it directly improves memory and mood.

🧘 Mental Health Strategies

  • Accept failure cycles: Almost every successful IAS officer failed 1–3 attempts. Failure is data — it shows what needs more work, not that you're incapable.
  • Separate self-worth from results: A bad mock score is NOT a verdict on your worth or intelligence. It's information about preparation gaps.
  • 7–8 hours sleep strictly: Sleep deprivation reduces memory consolidation by 40%. No toppers report sleeping 4–5 hours — those who do, often fail.
  • One day off per month: A complete mental reset day — no UPSC, no guilt. Returns 2× productivity the next week.
  • Talk about your struggles: With family, friends, counsellors. Keeping frustration bottled leads to sudden burnout. Express it, reset, return.
🔑
The Ultimate Topper's Secret
The candidates who clear UPSC are not the most intelligent or the most hard-working in absolute terms. They are the ones who sustained consistent effort over 12–18 months without losing direction. Consistency beats intensity every single time in this exam. Show up every day, study well, sleep enough, revise regularly — that's the complete formula.

Start Your UPSC Journey Today

Use our free eligibility checker, AI Guide and study tools on the homepage to plan your personal preparation strategy.

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📋 SSC CGL — Complete Free Knowledge Hub

Crack SSC CGL
Inspector to Auditor

Everything you need to crack SSC CGL: exam structure, syllabus, books, strategy and post details — free and comprehensive.

~30 Lakh
Applicants/Year
2 Tiers
CBT Exams
~15,000
Selected/Year
₹1.51L
Max Package/Month
Income Tax InspectorCBI Sub-InspectorAuditorCSS ASOTier ITier IIFree Resources
Section 01

📋 Introduction to SSC CGL

SSC CGL is the gateway to prestigious Central Government Group B and C posts — Income Tax Inspector, CBI Sub-Inspector, Auditor and 20+ more roles.

~30L
Apply Each Year
~1.5L
Appear Tier II
~15,000
Selected Annually
₹1.51L
Max CTC/Month

📋 What is SSC CGL?

The Staff Selection Commission Combined Graduate Level (SSC CGL) examination is conducted annually to recruit Group B and Group C officers for various Central Government Ministries, Departments and Organisations.

  • Conducted by Staff Selection Commission (SSC) — India's largest govt recruiter
  • Notification released around April; Tier I in July–August; Final result by March next year
  • Single application, multiple posts — candidates shortlisted based on post preference
  • One of the most sought-after exams for graduates — job security + good salary + transfers

⚡ Top SSC CGL Posts

  • Income Tax Inspector (CBDT) — ₹44,900–₹1,42,400/month
  • CBI Sub-Inspector — ₹44,900–₹1,42,400/month + elite investigation work
  • Preventive Officer (Customs) — ₹44,900 + uniform + authority
  • Auditor (CAG/CGDA) — ₹29,200–₹92,300/month + stability
  • Assistant Section Officer (CSS/MEA) — ₹44,900 + policy work
  • Junior Statistical Investigator — ₹44,900 for Stats graduates
  • Tax Assistant / Divisional Accountant — ₹25,500–₹81,100
Section 02

📝 Exam Structure — 2 Tiers

SSC CGL has two tiers. Tier I is a screening exam; Tier II decides your final rank and post allocation.

📋 Tier I — Computer Based Test

100 questions • 200 marks • 60 minutes • Qualifying + marks counted
SectionQuestionsMarks
General Intelligence & Reasoning2550
General Awareness2550
Quantitative Aptitude2550
English Comprehension2550
⚠️
Negative Marking
–0.5 marks per wrong answer in Tier I. Attempt only if 70%+ confident. Speed + accuracy is the key.

📖 Tier II — Computer Based Test

3 papers • Merit-based • Decides final rank
PaperTopicsMarks
Paper I (All posts)Math + Reasoning + English + GK390
Paper II (JSO)Statistics200
Paper III (AAO)Finance & Economics200
💡
Tier II Strategy
Paper I is compulsory for all. Paper II only for JSO post. Paper III only for AAO post. Focus on Paper I — it determines 90% of candidates' ranks.
Section 03

✅ Eligibility Criteria

Check if you qualify for SSC CGL — age, education and nationality requirements.

NationalityIndian Citizen (or eligible as per Citizenship Act)
EducationBachelor's Degree in any discipline from a recognised university. Final year students can also apply (proof required at document verification).
Age (General)18–32 years for most posts | 20–30 years for Inspector/SI posts | 18–27 years for Auditor/UDC posts
Age RelaxationOBC: +3 years | SC/ST: +5 years | PwD: +10 years | Ex-Serviceman: as per rules
AttemptsNo restriction on number of attempts — can appear till upper age limit
PhysicalHeight/chest requirements only for Inspector (Central Excise), Sub-Inspector (CBI/CBN) posts
Section 04

📚 Syllabus & Key Topics

Detailed topic-wise syllabus for Tier I and Tier II with weightage guidance.

🔢 Quantitative Aptitude

Number SystemSimplificationRatio & Proportion PercentageProfit & LossSI & CI Time & WorkTime Speed DistanceMensuration TrigonometryGeometryAlgebra Data InterpretationStatistics (Tier II)

🧠 Reasoning & GA

AnalogySeriesCoding-Decoding Blood RelationsDirection SensePuzzles SyllogismMatrixVenn Diagrams HistoryGeographyPolity EconomyScience & TechCurrent Affairs
Section 05

📖 Best Books & Resources

Standard books recommended by toppers and coaching institutes for SSC CGL preparation.

📘
Quantitative Aptitude — R.S. Aggarwal
The gold standard for SSC Maths. Cover every chapter, solve all exercises.
📗
Reasoning — Arihant / BS Sijwali
Covers all reasoning topics asked in SSC with practice sets.
📙
English — Plinth to Paramount (KD Campus)
Best English grammar and vocabulary book for SSC exams.
📕
GK — Lucent's General Knowledge
Static GK bible — History, Geography, Polity, Science all in one.
📗
Previous Year Papers — Kiran Publication
20+ years of SSC CGL solved papers — must for pattern analysis.
💻
Free: Testbook / Adda247 / SSC Adda
Free mock tests, daily quizzes and current affairs capsules.
Section 06

🗓️ Preparation Strategy

A proven 4-month preparation plan for working and fresh graduates targeting SSC CGL.

Month 1
Foundation — Maths & Reasoning
Complete R.S. Aggarwal (basic chapters). Solve 50 Reasoning questions daily. Build speed — target 20 questions in 15 minutes for each section.
Month 2
English + GK Intensive
Complete Plinth to Paramount grammar. Read Lucent GK (History + Polity + Science). Start reading 1 daily current affairs capsule every morning.
Month 3
Advanced Topics + Full Mocks Begin
Advanced Maths (Geometry, Trigonometry, DI). Start Tier I full mocks — 1 daily. Review mistakes religiously. Target 140+/200 in Tier I mocks.
Month 4
Tier II Preparation + Revision
Complete Tier II Paper I (390 marks). Revise all formulas, grammar rules, static GK. Attempt 30+ mocks. Analyse previous year cut-offs and plan attempts.
🎯
SSC CGL Success Formula
Speed + Accuracy + GK. You need to attempt 85–90 questions in 60 minutes in Tier I. Practice timed mocks from day 1. Never miss current affairs — 10–12 questions come from last 6 months' news.

Start Your SSC CGL Journey Today

Use our free eligibility checker, AI Guide and study tools on the homepage to plan your preparation strategy.

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🏦 IBPS Banking — Complete Free Knowledge Hub

Crack IBPS PO
Your Banking Career Starts Here

Complete guide for IBPS PO, Clerk, SBI PO, RRB — exam pattern, syllabus, books and a proven strategy. Free and updated.

~1 Crore
Applicants/Year
11 Banks
IBPS Member Banks
~50,000
Vacancies/Year
₹85K
PO Starting CTC
IBPS POIBPS ClerkSBI PORRB OfficerSpecialist OfficerFree Resources
Section 01

🏦 Introduction to IBPS Banking Exams

IBPS conducts banking exams for 11 Public Sector Banks including PNB, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank — recruiting PO, Clerk and Specialist Officers.

~1 Cr
Apply Each Year
11 Banks
IBPS Member Banks
~50,000
Vacancies/Year
₹85K
PO Starting CTC

🏦 IBPS Exams Overview

  • IBPS PO — Probationary Officer in 11 PSBs | ₹42,000–₹85,000/month
  • IBPS Clerk — Clerical Cadre in 11 PSBs | ₹29,000–₹45,000/month
  • IBPS SO — Specialist Officer (IT, Law, HR, Agriculture) | ₹42,000–₹85,000
  • IBPS RRB PO — Regional Rural Bank Officer Scale I | ₹36,000–₹64,000
  • IBPS RRB Clerk — Office Assistant in RRBs | ₹22,000–₹42,000
  • SBI PO / SBI Clerk — India's largest bank | ₹42,000–₹85,000

⚡ Why Banking Jobs?

  • Job security equal to government — virtually impossible to be fired
  • Medical insurance for entire family under bipartite settlement
  • Home loan at concessional rates (2–3% below market)
  • Promotion to Assistant Manager in 3–4 years based on performance
  • Saturday–Sunday off in most banks (5-day week)
  • Pension under NPS + gratuity + leave encashment on retirement
  • Transfer mostly within state or zone — good work-life balance
Section 02

📝 Exam Structure — IBPS PO & Clerk

IBPS PO has 3 stages; IBPS Clerk has 2 stages. Both test Reasoning, Quant, English, GK and Computer Knowledge.

🏦 IBPS PO — 3 Stage Process

Prelims → Mains → Interview
StagePatternMarks
PrelimsEnglish(30) + Quant(35) + Reasoning(35)100 marks, 60 min
MainsReasoning+CA+GK+English+Computer+Data200 marks, 3 hrs
InterviewPersonality & Communication100 marks
⚠️
Sectional Cut-offs
IBPS PO has sectional cut-offs in both Prelims and Mains — you must clear EACH section's minimum marks, not just total.

📋 IBPS Clerk — 2 Stage Process

Prelims → Mains (No Interview)
StagePatternMarks
PrelimsEnglish(30) + Quant(35) + Reasoning(35)100 marks, 60 min
MainsReasoning+English+Quant+GK+Computer190 marks, 160 min
💡
Clerk Advantage
No interview = lower stress. Final merit = Mains marks only. Good for introverts. Promotion to PO possible via internal exam after 2–3 years.
Section 03

✅ Eligibility Criteria

Age, education and other requirements for IBPS PO and Clerk exams.

Education (PO)Graduation in any discipline from a recognised university. Final year students eligible to apply.
Education (Clerk)Graduation in any discipline. Also must have passed local language of the state applied for.
Age (PO)20–30 years | OBC: +3 yrs | SC/ST: +5 yrs | PwD: +10 yrs
Age (Clerk)20–28 years | OBC: +3 yrs | SC/ST: +5 yrs | PwD: +10 yrs
Computer SkillsBasic computer knowledge required — MS Office, internet. Certificate preferred but not mandatory.
Section 04

📚 Syllabus & Books

Key topics and best books for IBPS PO and Clerk preparation.

📚 Key Topics

Puzzles & SeatingSyllogismData Interpretation Number SeriesQuadratic EquationsRC Passages Error SpottingBanking AwarenessCurrent Affairs Computer FundamentalsBlood RelationsInequality

📖 Best Books

📘
Quant — Arun Sharma (TMH)
Best for Data Interpretation and Arithmetic — banking focused.
📗
Reasoning — MK Pandey
Puzzles, Seating Arrangement, Syllogism — all SSC/Bank topics.
📙
Banking Awareness — Arihant
RBI, SEBI, financial terms, monetary policy — essential for Mains.
Section 05

🗓️ 3-Month Strategy

Proven 3-month plan to crack IBPS PO Prelims and Mains together.

Month 1
Quant + Reasoning Foundation
Arithmetic, DI basics, Puzzles, Seating Arrangement. 40 questions daily per subject. Target accuracy over speed first.
Month 2
English + Banking Awareness
RC daily, grammar rules, cloze test. Read Banking/Finance news daily — RBI policy, mergers, schemes. Start Prelims mocks every 3 days.
Month 3
Full Mocks + Weak Area Fix
1 full Prelims mock daily. 3 Mains mocks per week. Deep analysis of every wrong answer. Current affairs revision — last 6 months.

Start Your Banking Career Today

Use our free eligibility checker and AI Guide on the homepage to build your personal preparation strategy.

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🚂 RRB Railway — Complete Free Knowledge Hub

Crack RRB Railway
NTPC to Group D

Complete guide for RRB NTPC, Group D, JE and ALP — exam structure, eligibility, books and preparation strategy. Free and updated.

1.4 Crore
Railway Employees
~1.5 Lakh
Vacancies/Year
21 RRBs
Across India
₹35K+
NTPC Starting Pay
RRB NTPCRRB Group DRRB JERRB ALPRPFStation MasterFree Resources
Section 01

🚂 Introduction to RRB Railway Exams

Indian Railways is the world's 4th largest employer. RRB (Railway Recruitment Board) conducts exams for NTPC, Group D, JE and ALP — lakhs of vacancies every year.

1.4 Cr
Railway Employees
~1.5L
Vacancies/Year
21 RRBs
Across India
₹35K+
NTPC Starting Pay

🚆 RRB Exams Overview

  • RRB NTPC — Station Master, Goods Guard, Commercial Apprentice | ₹19,900–₹35,400
  • RRB Group D — Track Maintainer, Helper, Pointsman | ₹18,000–₹56,900
  • RRB JE — Junior Engineer Civil/Electrical/Mechanical | ₹35,400–₹1,12,400
  • RRB ALP — Assistant Loco Pilot (Train Driver track) | ₹19,900–₹60,000
  • RPF Constable/SI — Railway Protection Force | ₹21,700–₹69,100

⚡ Why Railway Jobs?

  • Free railway passes — travel anywhere in India with family for free
  • Subsidised railway colony accommodation (₹500–₹2000/month rent)
  • 7th Pay Commission — regular salary revision every 10 years
  • Free medical treatment at Railway hospitals for self and family
  • Promotion opportunities from Group D to Group C over years
  • Pension under NPS + gratuity + provident fund
  • One of the highest job security in India — confirmed after 2 year probation
Section 02

📝 Exam Structure

RRB NTPC and Group D are the two most popular exams. Here is the detailed structure for both.

🚆 RRB NTPC — CBT 1 + CBT 2 + Skill Test

Graduate + 12th Pass posts | 3 stages
StageSubjectsQuestions/Marks
CBT 1Maths + Reasoning + GS/GA100 Qs / 100 marks, 90 min
CBT 2Maths + Reasoning + GS/GA (Advanced)120 Qs / 120 marks, 90 min
Skill/TypingTyping test for clerical posts; CBAT for Traffic postsQualifying only

🔩 RRB Group D — CBT + PET + Medical

10th Pass | ~1 Lakh vacancies per cycle
StageDetailsMarks
CBTMaths + Reasoning + GS + Science100 Qs / 100 marks, 90 min
PETPhysical Efficiency Test — running, weight liftingQualifying
MedicalVision, hearing, fitness standardsQualifying
⚠️
Negative Marking
1/3 mark deducted per wrong answer in all RRB CBT exams. Never guess randomly — skip if unsure.
Section 03

✅ Eligibility Criteria

Age and qualification requirements for different RRB posts.

ExamQualificationAge LimitPay Scale
NTPC Graduate PostsAny Degree18–33 years₹29,200–₹74,800
NTPC 12th Pass Posts12th Pass18–33 years₹19,900–₹35,400
Group D10th Pass + ITI / 12th Pass18–36 years₹18,000–₹56,900
RRB JEDiploma / BE / BTech18–33 years₹35,400–₹1,12,400
RRB ALP10th + ITI / Diploma (Mech/Elec)18–28 years₹19,900–₹60,000
💡
Age Relaxation
OBC-NCL: +3 years | SC/ST: +5 years | PwD: +10 years | Ex-serviceman: as per Ministry of Railways rules.
Section 04

📚 Syllabus & Books

Topic-wise syllabus and best books for RRB NTPC and Group D preparation.

📋 Key Topics

Number SystemRatio & ProportionTime & Work Coding-DecodingSeries CompletionIndian History Geography of IndiaIndian PolityPhysics Basics Chemistry BasicsBiology BasicsRailway GK Current AffairsComputer Basics

📖 Best Books

📙
RRB NTPC — Arihant / Kiran Publication
Complete guide with previous year papers for all RRB exams.
📘
General Science — Lucent's GK
Physics, Chemistry, Biology — all Class 10 level science topics.
💻
Free: RailwayRecruitment.in / Testbook
Free mock tests with RRB-specific questions and current affairs.
Section 05

🗓️ 2-Month Preparation Strategy

A focused 2-month plan to clear RRB NTPC CBT 1 with a good score.

Week 1–2
Maths Foundation
Arithmetic — Number System, Percentage, Ratio, TSD, Time & Work. 50 questions daily. Use R.S. Aggarwal basic chapters.
Week 3–4
GS + Reasoning
Indian History (NCERT 6–10), Geography, Polity basics. Reasoning — Series, Analogy, Coding. 30 questions each daily.
Week 5–6
General Science + Railway GK
Class 8–10 Science (NCERT). Railway terminology, history, key facts. Current affairs — last 3 months capsule daily.
Week 7–8
Full Mocks + Revision
1 full mock daily (100 questions in 90 min). Review every wrong answer. Target 75+/100 consistently before exam.
🎯
RRB Success Key
Railway exams have a huge aspirant base but the syllabus is Class 10 level. Speed is king — practice completing 100 questions in 70 minutes, leaving 20 minutes for review. GS and Science questions are easiest marks — never skip them.

Start Your Railway Career Today

Use our free eligibility checker and AI Guide on the homepage to plan your personal railway exam strategy.

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⚙️ GATE 2026 — Complete Free Knowledge Hub

Crack GATE 2026
PSU Jobs + IIT M.Tech

Your complete roadmap to GATE 2026 — PSU jobs worth ₹80,000+/month, IIT M.Tech admission, branch-wise strategy and free resources. For BTech students from Visakhapatnam and across India.

~10 Lakh
Appear Each Year
50+
PSUs via GATE
₹80K–₹2L
PSU Salary/Month
3 Years
Score Validity
⚙️ CSE📡 ECE🔧 Mechanical🏗️ Civil⚡ EEE🧪 Chemical🎓 IIT M.Tech🏭 50+ PSU Jobs
Section 01

⚙️ What is GATE?

GATE (Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering) is conducted by IITs jointly. A high GATE score opens 3 powerful doors — PSU jobs, IIT M.Tech, and Central Govt engineering roles.

~10 Lakh
Appear Each Year
50+
PSUs Hiring via GATE
₹80K–₹2L
PSU Salary/Month
3 Years
Score Valid Period

🏭 PSU Jobs (Most Popular)

No separate written exam — GATE score used directly
  • ONGC, NTPC, BHEL, IOCL, GAIL, BPCL, Power Grid, DRDO
  • Salary: ₹80,000 – ₹2,00,000/month + perks
  • Score cutoff: 600+ for top PSUs, 500+ for others
  • Apply separately to each PSU during their notification period

🎓 IIT / IISc M.Tech

World-class research + ₹12,400 stipend/month
  • Admission to M.Tech/M.E./MS/PhD at IITs, NITs, IIITs
  • GATE scholarship: ₹12,400/month during M.Tech
  • IIT alumni network = premium placement opportunities
  • Score 750+ for IIT Bombay/Delhi/Madras; 650+ for other IITs

🏛️ Central Govt Engineering

UPSC Engineering Services via GATE
  • UPSC IES/ESE — Group A Central Services engineer
  • Junior Engineer in PWD, CPWD, MES, BRO, Railways
  • DRDO Scientist B, BARC Scientific Officer, AAI JE
  • Salary: ₹56,100 – ₹2,50,000 (IES officers)
💡
GATE Score vs GATE Rank
PSUs mostly use your GATE Score (out of 1000). IIT admissions use GATE Rank. A score of 650/1000 = roughly top 5,000 rank in CSE/ECE. Focus on score for PSU, rank for M.Tech.
Section 02

🏭 Top PSU Jobs Through GATE 2026

These companies hire engineers directly using GATE score — no separate written exam needed.

PSU CompanyPostBranchesCTC/MonthGATE Score Needed
ONGCGraduate Trainee (Engineer)CivilMechEEEECE₹80K–₹1.2L600+
NTPCExecutive TraineeMechEEEECECivil₹60K–₹90K550+
BHELEngineer TraineeMechEEEECECivilCSE₹60K–₹80K500+
IOCLEngineer / OfficerMechChemEEECivil₹80K–₹1.8L600+
Power GridExecutive TraineeEEECivilECE₹70K–₹1.4L550+
GAILExecutive TraineeMechChemEEECSE₹70K–₹1.6L580+
BPCLEngineer ApprenticeMechChemEEECivil₹60K–₹1.2L500+
DRDOScientist BECECSEMechEEE₹56K–₹1.42L600+
⚠️
Important Note
PSU notifications come at different times throughout the year. Bookmark each PSU's careers page. A valid GATE 2026 score can be used for PSU applications in 2026, 2027 and 2028 (3-year validity).
Section 03

📐 Branch-wise GATE Guide

GATE is conducted for 30 papers. Here are the 6 most popular engineering branches with their key PSUs, typical scores and strategy.

💻 CSE / IT / Data Science

Most competitive — highest PSU demand in tech sector
Key PSUsDRDO, NIC, ISRO, BSNL, AAI (IT posts)
Cutoff (IIT)750+ for IIT Bombay/Delhi | 650+ for other IITs
Key TopicsOS, DBMS, Networks, Algorithms, COA, Compiler Design
Free ResourceNPTEL + GO Platform (goprocce.in) — best for CSE GATE

📡 ECE / Electronics

Best for DRDO, ISRO, BSNL, Power Grid
Key PSUsDRDO, ISRO, BSNL, BEL, ECIL, Power Grid
Cutoff (IIT)700+ for IIT Madras/Kharagpur | 620+ for NITs
Key TopicsSignals & Systems, Control, Analog, Digital, EMT, Communications
Free ResourceNPTEL IIT Madras lectures + Ravindrababu Ravula YouTube

⚙️ Mechanical Engineering

Most PSU opportunities — ONGC, NTPC, BHEL, IOCL
Key PSUsONGC, NTPC, BHEL, IOCL, BPCL, GAIL, Coal India
Cutoff (IIT)720+ for top IITs | 580+ for PSU shortlisting
Key TopicsTOM, FM, HT, Manufacturing, Thermodynamics, SOM, Industrial Engg
Free ResourceNPTEL + Khan Sir Maths + Made Easy YouTube

🏗️ Civil Engineering

Best for ONGC, NHAI, CPWD, APPSC AEE
Key PSUsONGC, NHAI, Power Grid, NTPC, CPWD, APPSC/TSPSC AEE
Cutoff (IIT)680+ for IIT Roorkee | 550+ for PSU shortlisting
Key TopicsStructural Analysis, Soil Mechanics, Hydraulics, Transportation, Env Engg
Free ResourceNPTEL Civil + IIT Kharagpur OpenCourseWare (free)

⚡ EEE / Electrical

Power sector king — Power Grid, NTPC, ONGC
Key PSUsPower Grid, NTPC, ONGC, BHEL, BPCL, Coal India, APPSC AEE
Cutoff (IIT)700+ for IIT Roorkee/KGP | 580+ for PSU shortlisting
Key TopicsPower Systems, Machines, Control Systems, Circuits, Power Electronics
Free ResourceNPTEL IIT Madras Electrical lectures + Previous Year GATE papers

🧪 Chemical Engineering

IOCL, GAIL, BPCL — oil & gas sector
Key PSUsIOCL, GAIL, BPCL, ONGC, HPCL, CPCL, BARC
Cutoff (IIT)650+ for IIT Bombay/Madras | 550+ for PSU shortlisting
Key TopicsProcess Calc, Thermodynamics, Fluid Mechanics, HMT, Chemical Reaction Engg
Free ResourceNPTEL Chemical Engineering courses (IIT Bombay/Madras)
Section 04

✅ Eligibility Criteria

Who can appear for GATE 2026 — qualification, age and other requirements.

EducationCurrently in 3rd year / final year of BE/BTech/B.Arch OR completed. Also ME/MTech/PhD students. Even MSc/MCA students in relevant subjects.
Age LimitNo age limit for GATE exam itself. Each PSU and university sets its own age limit (usually 25–28 for PSUs, no limit for M.Tech admission).
AttemptsUnlimited attempts — you can appear every year till you're satisfied with your score.
Score Validity3 years from the year of qualification. GATE 2026 score valid for 2026, 2027, 2028.
Papers30 papers available. You can appear for up to 2 papers if combinations are allowed by IIT. Most students appear for their branch paper only.
ModeOnline CBT (Computer Based Test) with virtual calculator. Held in February every year. Results in March.
Section 05

📚 Syllabus Overview

Every GATE paper has General Aptitude (15 marks) + Engineering Mathematics (13 marks) + Core Subject (72 marks).

15 marks
General Aptitude
(All papers — same for everyone)
13 marks
Engineering Mathematics
(Calculus, Linear Algebra, Prob)
72 marks
Core Branch Subject
(Your specific engineering branch)
🎯
Smart Strategy
General Aptitude (15 marks) is the easiest section — students who score full marks here gain a 15-mark head start over those who ignore it. Never skip GA preparation. Engineering Maths is common across branches — master it once, benefits all papers.

📐 General Aptitude Topics

Verbal AbilityReading ComprehensionSentence Completion Numerical AbilityData InterpretationAnalytical Aptitude Spatial Aptitude

📊 Engineering Mathematics

Linear AlgebraCalculusDifferential Equations Complex VariablesProbability & StatisticsNumerical Methods Transform Theory
Section 06

📖 Best Free Resources

You don't need costly coaching for GATE. These free resources are used by rank-1 holders.

🎓
NPTEL (nptel.ac.in)
Free IIT professor lectures for every GATE subject. Best quality — same faculty that sets GATE papers teach here. 100% free.
💻
GO Platform (gateoverflow.in)
Best for CSE — community solved GATE previous year questions with explanations. Free forever.
📺
GATE Wallah (YouTube)
Free lectures by PhysicsWallah for GATE — all branches covered with practice problems.
📱
Testbook / Unacademy (free tier)
Free GATE mock tests and topic tests. Practice with real exam interface and timer.
📄
Previous Year Papers (IIT official)
Download all GATE papers 2007–2025 from gate.iitb.ac.in — free. Solve all before exam.
📖
Standard Textbooks (recommended)
For CSE: Cormen (Algorithms), Galvin (OS). For ECE: Haykin (Signals). Free PDF versions widely available.
Section 07

🗓️ 6-Month Preparation Roadmap

A proven month-by-month plan to go from basics to a 600+ GATE score.

Month 1–2
Engineering Mathematics + GA Foundation
Complete all EM topics: Linear Algebra, Calculus, Probability. Solve 200+ PYQ maths questions. Start GA verbal and numerical simultaneously — 30 min/day.
Month 3–4
Core Subject — Unit 1 to 4
Cover first half of your branch syllabus using NPTEL. After each unit, solve all GATE PYQs for that unit. Don't move to next unit till current is 80% clear.
Month 5
Core Subject — Unit 5 to End + Mock Tests Begin
Complete remaining branch topics. Attempt 1 full GATE mock per week. Analyse every wrong answer — pattern recognition is key to scoring above 600.
Month 6
Intensive Revision + Daily Mocks
2 full mocks per week. Revise all formula sheets and shortcuts. Focus 40% time on weak topics identified from mock analysis. Target: 3 mocks above 600 before actual exam.
🎯
GATE Topper Secret — PYQ is Everything
Solving all GATE previous year questions from 2007–2025 is the single most impactful activity. About 30–40% of GATE questions each year are either repeated directly or are slight variations of past questions. Students who solve 2000+ PYQs consistently score 600+.

Start Your GATE 2026 Journey Today

Use our free eligibility checker and AI Guide on the homepage to plan your GATE preparation strategy.

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🏛️ APPSC — Complete Free Knowledge Hub for AP Students

Crack APPSC
Serve Andhra Pradesh

Your complete guide to APPSC Group 1, Group 2, Group 4, AEE and Panchayat Secretary — syllabus, salary, eligibility and strategy. Telugu medium available. For students from Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, Tirupati and across AP.

8+
Exams per Year
~5,000
Vacancies/Year
Telugu
Medium Available
₹1.5L
Group 1 Max Pay
Group 1 — Deputy CollectorGroup 2 — Sub RegistrarAEE — EngineersPanchayat SecretaryTelugu Medium ✅Home District Posting ✅
Section 01

🏛️ What is APPSC?

The Andhra Pradesh Public Service Commission (APPSC) recruits officers for state government services — from the prestigious Group 1 (equivalent to IAS at state level) to entry-level Group 4 posts.

8+
Exams per Year
~5,000
Vacancies/Year
Telugu
Medium Available
Home
District Posting

🏛️ Why APPSC is Best for AP Students

  • Telugu medium available — write answers in your mother tongue
  • Home district posting — serve your own district, stay with family
  • Local knowledge advantage — 40-50% syllabus is AP-specific history, economy, geography
  • AP Reorganisation gives higher vacancies as new state builds its bureaucracy
  • Visakhapatnam students: Naval Base, DRDO, Steel Plant — AEE posts here are plentiful
  • Age limit up to 42 years (OBC: 45, SC/ST: 47) — very generous

📍 Special Note for Vizag Students

  • Andhra University, GITAM, JNTU Kakinada — degrees fully recognised for all APPSC posts
  • Visakhapatnam district quota in Group 1/2 allotment — home posting advantage
  • APPSC AEE (Civil/Mech/EEE) — high demand for Vizag Steel Plant, DRDO, Port Trust
  • APPSC Group 2 Sub Registrar — Vizag has highest property registrations in AP
  • Read Sakshi / Eenadu daily — 30% of AP Current Affairs come from these sources
  • Visakha exam centres — APPSC always has Vizag as an exam centre for all posts
Section 02

📋 All APPSC Exams — Complete List

Every APPSC exam with posts, salary, qualification and age limit at a glance.

ExamKey PostsQualificationAgeSalary
Group 1Deputy Collector, DSP, RTO, Commercial Tax Officer, AEEAny Degree18–42₹65K–₹1.5L
Group 2Sub Registrar, MPO, Municipal Commissioner, Mandal Revenue InspectorAny Degree18–42₹40K–₹85K
Group 3Junior Assistant, Typist, Junior Accountant in Govt Departments12th / Degree18–42₹25K–₹55K
Group 4Junior Assistant, Bill Collector, Record Assistant10th / 12th18–42₹20K–₹38K
AEEAsst. Executive Engineer — Civil, Mech, EEE, ECEBTech/BE18–42₹55K–₹1.1L
Panchayat SecretaryVillage Panchayat Secretary (Gr V) — rural administrationAny Degree18–42₹22K–₹38K
APPSC LecturersLecturer in Govt Degree CollegesPG + NET/SET preferred18–42₹44K–₹90K
💡
Age Relaxation
OBC: 18–45 years | SC/ST: 18–47 years | PwD: additional 10 years on top. APPSC's generous age limit means even 40-year-old graduates can attempt Group 1!
Section 03

📝 APPSC Group 1 — Exam Structure

APPSC Group 1 is the most prestigious state exam — 3 stages, Telugu medium option, state-focused syllabus.

Stage 1: Preliminary Exam

150 Qs • 150 marks • 150 minutes • Screening only
  • General Studies & Mental Ability
  • AP History, Culture, Geography
  • AP Economy, Governance, Current Affairs
  • Marks NOT counted in final merit

Stage 2: Main Examination

6 papers • 1200 marks • Descriptive • Merit-based
  • Paper 1: Essay + Translation (Telugu/Urdu/English)
  • Paper 2: History, Culture & Geography of AP
  • Paper 3: Indian Polity & Economy
  • Paper 4: Development & Social Justice in AP
  • Paper 5: General Science & Technology
  • Paper 6: Data Interpretation & Problem Solving

Stage 3: Oral Test (Interview)

75 marks • Personality test
  • Questions on AP current affairs and governance
  • District-specific knowledge expected
  • Telugu language communication tested
  • Final posting preference submitted here
⚠️
Telugu Medium Advantage
APPSC Group 1 Mains answers can be written in Telugu. Many toppers write in Telugu — it allows more fluent expression of complex ideas. Paper 1 has a translation component (English ↔ Telugu) — practice both directions daily.
Section 04

📚 APPSC Syllabus Breakdown

Key topics for Group 1 Prelims, Group 1 Mains, Group 2 and Panchayat Secretary.

📋 Group 1 Prelims Topics

AP History — Satavahanas to Modern AP Geography — Rivers, Districts, Resources AP Economy — YSR Schemes, Industries Indian Polity & Constitution Indian Economy & Budget General Science (Class 10 level) Current Affairs — AP + National Mental Ability & Reasoning Environmental Studies

📝 Group 2 / Panchayat Secretary Topics

General Studies (History, Geo, Polity) AP Specific GS (40% weightage) Current Affairs — AP State Rural Development & Panchayat Raj AP Government Schemes Arithmetic & Reasoning (Group 4) Computer Knowledge (Group 3/4) Telugu Language (Grammar basics)
Section 05

📖 Best Books & Study Materials

Standard reference books and free resources specifically for APPSC preparation.

📘
AP History — Singareni Books / Neelima Prasad
Best for AP-specific history from Satavahanas to Reorganisation. Available in Telugu and English.
📗
Indian Polity — M. Laxmikanth
Gold standard for Polity — covers Constitution, governance, amendments.
📙
Indian Economy — Ramesh Singh (TMH)
Standard economics book for all competitive exams including APPSC.
📰
Sakshi Education / Eenadu Pratibha (Daily)
Daily AP current affairs, new scheme notifications, exam updates. Must-read every morning.
💻
APPSC Official Website (psc.ap.gov.in)
Previous year papers, official syllabus, notifications — all free. Check weekly.
📺
Mana TV / T-SAT / Sakshi TV YouTube
Free APPSC lectures in Telugu — especially good for AP-specific topics.
Section 06

🗓️ 6-Month APPSC Group 1 Strategy

Proven month-by-month roadmap designed for AP students to crack Group 1 Prelims and Mains.

Month 1–2
NCERT + AP History & Culture Foundation
Complete NCERTs 6–12 (History, Geography, Polity, Economy). Simultaneously read AP History from Satavahanas → Vijayanagara → British Period → AP Reorganisation. This is 25% of Group 1 Prelims.
Month 3
AP Economy + YSR Schemes + AP Governance
Study AP budget, key industries (APSEZ, Vizag Steel, Aerospace Park), flagship schemes (YSR Aarogyasri, YSR Rythu Bharosa, Jagananna Chedodu). This alone is 15-20% of Prelims.
Month 4
Indian Polity + Economy (National)
Laxmikanth — read completely, make notes of amendments and important Articles. Ramesh Singh Economy — read Units 1-6. Link national policies to AP implementation for Mains.
Month 5
Mains Answer Writing Practice
Write 3 answers daily — mix of 250-word and 500-word. Read Sakshi editorial, write one-page summary in Telugu/English. Focus on linking AP local issues to national policy.
Month 6
Current Affairs + Full Prelims Mocks
Last 6 months AP current affairs revision. Daily Sakshi/Eenadu reading. 1 Prelims mock every 3 days. Target 100+/150 consistently. Review previous year APPSC papers — 40% pattern repeats.
🔑
The APPSC Topper's Secret
Local students who deeply know AP geography, culture and current affairs beat outsiders easily. A student from Visakhapatnam who reads Sakshi daily and knows Vizag Steel Plant, Bheemunipatnam, LEPCL, APSEZ inside-out has a natural advantage. Double down on your home state knowledge — that's your competitive edge.

Start Your APPSC Journey Today

Use our free eligibility checker and AI Guide on the homepage to find which APPSC exam matches your qualification and plan your preparation.

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🏛️ TSPSC — Complete Free Knowledge Hub for Telangana Students

Crack TSPSC
Serve Telangana

Your complete guide to TSPSC Group 1, Group 2, Group 4, AEE and Junior Lecturer — syllabus, salary, eligibility and strategy. Telugu medium available. Designed for Telangana students.

6+
Exams per Year
~3,000
Vacancies/Year
Telugu
Medium Available
₹1.2L+
Group 1 Max Pay
Group 1 — Deputy CollectorGroup 2 — Sub RegistrarAEE — EngineersJunior LecturerTelugu Medium ✅Home District Posting ✅
Section 01

🏛️ What is TSPSC?

The Telangana State Public Service Commission (TSPSC) recruits officers for the Government of Telangana — from Group 1 (state IAS equivalent) to Group 4 and AEE posts.

6+
Exams per Year
~3,000
Vacancies/Year
Telugu
Medium Available
₹1.2L+
Group 1 Max Pay

🏛️ Why TSPSC for Telangana Students

  • Telugu medium available for all major exams — write in your mother tongue
  • Telangana-specific syllabus — Telangana history, culture, economy, movement (40% of paper)
  • Home district posting — Hyderabad, Warangal, Karimnagar, Nizamabad postings
  • New state = growing bureaucracy = more vacancies year after year
  • TSPSC age limit up to 44 years (OBC: 47, SC/ST: 49) — very generous
  • Read Eenadu / Namaste Telangana daily for Telangana current affairs

⚡ TSPSC vs APPSC — Key Differences

FeatureTSPSCAPPSC
StateTelanganaAndhra Pradesh
Age LimitUp to 44 yrsUp to 42 yrs
Group 1 Vacancies~50/yr~100/yr
State FocusTelangana history/cultureAP history/culture
LanguageTelugu (+ Urdu option)Telugu
AEE AvailableYes — Civil/Mech/EEEYes — Civil/Mech/EEE
Section 02

📋 All TSPSC Exams — Complete List

All major TSPSC exams with posts, salary, qualification and age limit.

ExamKey PostsQualificationAgeSalary
Group 1Deputy Collector, DSP, AEE, District Supply Officer, Commercial Tax OfficerAny Degree18–44₹60K–₹1.2L
Group 2Sub Registrar, MPDO, Extension Officer, Mandal Revenue InspectorAny Degree18–44₹38K–₹80K
Group 4Junior Assistant, Typist, Junior Accountant, Bill Collector10th / 12th18–44₹19K–₹40K
AEEAsst. Executive Engineer — Civil, Mechanical, EEE, ECEBTech/BE18–44₹52K–₹1.1L
Junior LecturerJL in Govt Junior Colleges — all subjectsPG in Subject18–44₹35K–₹75K
Forest Beat OfficerForest Beat Officer, Section Officer in TS Forest Dept12th / Degree18–28₹19K–₹52K
💡
Age Relaxation — TSPSC is generous
OBC: 18–47 years | SC/ST: 18–49 years | PwD: +10 years on top. This means a 47-year-old OBC candidate can still attempt TSPSC Group 1!
Section 03

📝 TSPSC Group 1 — Exam Structure

TSPSC Group 1 has 3 stages — Prelims (screening), Mains (merit), and Oral Test (interview).

Stage 1: Preliminary Exam

150 Qs • 150 marks • 150 min • Screening
  • General Studies — National level topics
  • Telangana History, Culture & Geography (heavy weightage)
  • Telangana Economy & Governance
  • Current Affairs — TS + National
  • Prelims marks NOT counted in final merit

Stage 2: Main Examination

6 papers • 1200 marks • Descriptive
  • Paper 1: Essay & Translation (Telugu/Urdu/English)
  • Paper 2: Telangana History, Culture & Geography
  • Paper 3: Indian Polity & Law
  • Paper 4: Economy & Development — Telangana Focus
  • Paper 5: Science & Technology, Environment
  • Paper 6: Data Analysis & Problem Solving

Stage 3: Oral Test

75 marks • Personality & Communication
  • Questions on Telangana current affairs
  • District-specific knowledge tested
  • Telugu communication assessed
  • Posting preference submitted post-interview
Section 04

📚 TSPSC Syllabus Breakdown

Key topics for Group 1 Prelims, Mains, Group 2 and Group 4 exams.

📋 Group 1 Prelims Topics

Telangana History — Kakatiyas to Statehood Telangana Geography — Rivers, Districts, Forests Telangana Economy — IT Hub, Industries Telangana Movement & Formation Mission Bhagiratha, Kaleshwaram Project Indian Polity & Constitution Current Affairs — TS + National General Science (Class 10 level) Mental Ability & Reasoning

📝 Group 4 Topics (Simplified)

General Studies — TS Focus Telangana Current Affairs Arithmetic & Basic Maths Reasoning & Mental Ability Telugu Language (Grammar) Computer Knowledge Basics TS Government Schemes Environmental Studies
Section 05

📖 Best Books & Free Resources

Reference books and free study materials specifically for TSPSC preparation.

📘
Telangana History — V. Ramakrishna Reddy / TSSCERT
State-published Telangana history books — covers Kakatiyas, Nizam era, Telangana Movement. Available in Telugu and English.
📗
Indian Polity — M. Laxmikanth
Gold standard for all PSC exams — Constitution, governance, amendments fully covered.
📙
Telangana Economy — Budget + YoY Reports
Annual TS Budget speech, Economic Survey of Telangana — must read for Paper 4.
📰
Eenadu / Namaste Telangana (Daily)
Daily TS current affairs, government scheme notifications, cabinet decisions. Read the editorial page daily.
💻
TSPSC Official Website (tspsc.gov.in)
Previous year papers, official syllabus, notifications. Check weekly for new exam announcements.
📺
T-SAT Nipuna (YouTube — Free)
Telangana government's free education channel — TSPSC lectures in Telugu for all subjects.
Section 06

🗓️ 6-Month TSPSC Group 1 Strategy

Month-by-month roadmap for Telangana students to crack Group 1 Prelims and Mains.

Month 1–2
NCERT + Telangana History Foundation
Complete NCERTs 6–12 for History, Geography, Polity, Economy basics. Simultaneously cover Telangana History: Kakatiyas → Qutb Shahi → Nizam → Hyderabad State → Telangana Movement → Formation 2014. This is 20-25% of Prelims.
Month 3
TS Economy + Irrigation Projects + Schemes
Study TS Economy: IT exports, agriculture, Kaleshwaram project, Mission Bhagiratha. Government schemes: Rythu Bandhu, KCR Kit, Double Bedroom Housing. These questions repeat every exam.
Month 4
Indian Polity + National Economy
Laxmikanth — complete reading with notes. Focus on Panchayat Raj, Urban Local Bodies (important for TS context). Ramesh Singh Economy — Units 1-6. Link to TS government's implementation.
Month 5
Mains Answer Writing Practice
Write 3 answers daily in Telugu or English. Read Eenadu editorial, write one-page summary. Practice Paper 2 (TS History) most — it has the highest scoring potential for local students.
Month 6
Current Affairs + Prelims Mocks + Revision
Last 6 months TS current affairs capsule revision. 1 full Prelims mock every 3 days. Target 100+/150. Analyse previous year TSPSC papers — topic patterns repeat every 3-4 years.
🔑
Telangana Student's Biggest Advantage
The Telangana Movement, Kakatiya dynasty, Nizam era, and TS irrigation projects (Kaleshwaram, Mission Bhagiratha, Palamuru-Rangareddy LIS) appear in EVERY TSPSC exam. A student who deeply knows these topics from their own lived experience and regional awareness beats any outsider. Your roots are your strength — study what you already know deeply.

Start Your TSPSC Journey Today

Use our free eligibility checker and AI Guide on the homepage to find which TSPSC exam suits you and build your preparation plan.

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🗺️ State PSC — Complete Free Knowledge Hub

Crack State PSC
Serve Your Home State

Complete guide for all State PSC exams — APPSC, TSPSC, UPPSC, MPSC and more. Exam pattern, eligibility, strategy and books. Free.

28+
State PSCs in India
~10,000
State PSC Posts/Year
Home
District Posting
₹1.2L+
Group A Pay
APPSCTSPSCUPPSCMPSCKPSCTNPSCBPSCRPSC
Section 01

🗺️ Introduction to State PSC Exams

Every state has its own Public Service Commission recruiting Class I and Class II officers for state government services — Deputy Collector, DSP, BDO and more.

28+
State PSCs in India
~10,000
State PSC Posts/Year
Home
District Posting
₹1.2L+
Group A Max Pay

🗺️ Major State PSCs

  • APPSC (Andhra Pradesh) — Group 1, 2, 3, 4, AEE, Panchayat Secretary
  • TSPSC (Telangana) — Group 1, 2, 4, Forest Beat Officer, AEE
  • UPPSC (Uttar Pradesh) — PCS, ACF, RO/ARO, Lecturer
  • MPSC (Maharashtra) — State Services, Engineering Services
  • KPSC (Karnataka) — KAS, FDA, SDA, PDO
  • TNPSC (Tamil Nadu) — Group 1, 2, 2A, 4, VAO
  • RPSC (Rajasthan) — RAS/RTS, School Lecturer, SI
  • BPSC (Bihar) — 67th/68th BPSC — SDO, Circle Officer

⚡ Why State PSC Jobs?

  • Home state posting — serve your own people, stay close to family
  • Equivalent prestige to IAS at state level — Deputy Collector is like local IAS
  • State Pay Commission revisions — salary equivalent to Central Govt levels
  • Exam in your own regional language — major advantage over UPSC
  • Less competition compared to Central exams — better selection chances
  • Pension, medical, housing allowance — full state government benefits
Section 02

📝 Exam Pattern — State PSC Format

Most state PSCs follow a 3-stage pattern similar to UPSC: Prelims → Mains → Interview. The syllabus emphasises state-specific content heavily.

Stage 1: Prelims

Objective MCQs • Screening
  • General Studies (History, Geography, Polity, Economy)
  • State-specific topics (40–50% weightage)
  • Mental Ability / Aptitude (some states)
  • Marks typically NOT counted in final merit

Stage 2: Mains

Descriptive papers • Merit-based
  • General Studies Papers I–IV (History, Polity, Economy, Ethics)
  • State-specific paper — economy, governance, geography
  • Optional subject paper (in some states)
  • Regional language paper (qualifying)

Stage 3: Interview

Personality test • Final merit
  • 100–150 marks depending on state
  • Questions on state current affairs, local governance
  • Knowledge of state language expected
  • District preference finalised after merit list
💡
State-Specific Advantage
Unlike UPSC, State PSC papers are 40–60% state-focused — AP history, AP economy, AP geography for APPSC. This is a huge advantage for local students who know their state deeply. Read state newspapers like Eenadu (AP/TS) or Maharashtra Times daily.
Section 03

✅ Eligibility & Age Limits

General eligibility criteria — varies slightly by state. Always verify with official notification.

PSCQualificationAge (General)Max Age (OBC/SC/ST)
APPSC Group 1/2Any Degree18–42 years42/47/47 years
TSPSC Group 1/2Any Degree18–44 years44/49/49 years
UPPSC PCSAny Degree21–40 years43/45/45 years
MPSC State ServicesAny Degree19–38 years41/43/43 years
KPSC KASAny Degree21–35 years38/40/40 years
TNPSC Group 1Any Degree21–32 years35/37/37 years
Section 04

🗓️ Preparation Strategy

How to prepare for State PSC exams while leveraging your local knowledge advantage.

Phase 1 — 2 months
NCERT + State History Foundation
Complete NCERTs 6–12 (History, Geography, Polity, Economy). Start your state-specific history. For AP — Satavahanas to Palnadu to Freedom Movement.
Phase 2 — 2 months
State Economy + Governance
State budget, flagship schemes (for AP — YSR schemes; for TS — Mission Bhagiratha etc.), state geography, industries, rivers, districts.
Phase 3 — 2 months
Mains Answer Writing
Write 3 answers daily. Practice 250-word and 500-word answers. Read state newspaper editorial daily and write one-page summary.
Phase 4 — Ongoing
Current Affairs + Mock Tests
Daily state newspaper reading. 1 Prelims mock per week. Previous year papers — last 10 years are gold for pattern recognition.
🎯
State PSC vs UPSC: Which to choose?
If you want to serve your home state, have good regional language skills, and want less competition — State PSC is ideal. If you want national-level posting and higher prestige — target UPSC. Many successful candidates attempt both simultaneously since the syllabus overlaps by 60–70%.

Find Your Right State PSC Exam

Use our free eligibility checker on the homepage to see which state and central exams match your qualification and age.

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