SSC Stenographer Free Mock Tests & Preparation Material (2026-27)

⌨️ SSC Stenographer 2026 - Grade C and Grade D

SSC Stenographer 2026 Mock Tests, Syllabus and Exam Pattern

Staff Selection Commission - Stenographer Grade C and Grade D - central government stenographer posts across all major ministries, departments, and attached offices. 2-stage selection with a written CBT and a qualifying Stenography Skill Test. No interview. Free mock tests, chapter-wise practice, PYQs, and expert strategy - all in one place.

2 Selection Stages
2,000+ Vacancies
12th Pass Eligible
Free Mock Tests
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2026
Notification Expected
2,000+
Expected Vacancies
Rs.25,500+
Starting Basic Pay
18-27
Age Limit (Years)
🎯 Practice Mock Tests - Chapter-wise and Subject-wise
Click any subject to see all chapters, or click directly on a chapter to start practicing
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General Intelligence and Reasoning
600+ Mock Tests
⌨️ Stenography Skill Test: The written CBT determines shortlisting. The final qualifying stage is the Stenography Skill Test - 100 wpm dictation for Grade C and 80 wpm for Grade D. This is a pass/fail test but it is the unique skill that separates this exam from all others. Start stenography practice from Day 1 alongside your written exam preparation.
🔍 SSC Stenographer 2026 - At a Glance
Everything you need to know before you start preparing
ParameterDetails
Exam Full NameStaff Selection Commission - Stenographer Grade C and Grade D Examination 2026
Conducting BodyStaff Selection Commission (SSC)
Posts OfferedStenographer Grade C (Group B, Non-Gazetted) and Stenographer Grade D (Group C) in central government ministries, departments, and offices
Expected Vacancies2,000+ across all central government organisations
Notification Status🕐 Expected Soon - 2026
Eligibility12th pass (Higher Secondary) from a recognised board for both Grade C and Grade D. No minimum percentage required.
Age LimitGrade C: 18-30 years | Grade D: 18-27 years (relaxation for SC/ST/OBC/PwD/Ex-servicemen as per government rules)
Selection ProcessStage 1: Computer Based Test (CBT) - Stage 2: Stenography Skill Test (qualifying)
Starting SalaryGrade C: Rs.25,500/month Basic Pay (Level 4) | Grade D: Rs.19,900/month Basic Pay (Level 2) | Gross salary varies with city and allowances
Stenography SpeedGrade C: 100 words per minute dictation | Grade D: 80 words per minute dictation
Negative Marking0.25 marks deducted per wrong answer in the CBT
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SSC Stenographer - A Specialised Skill Earns a Premium Government Post
SSC Stenographer is unique among all SSC exams - it is the only exam where a specialised skill (shorthand stenography) directly determines eligibility for selection. Stenographers are in high demand across Parliament, Supreme Court, High Courts, Ministries, and Commissions. Grade C is a Group B post - a level above the CHSL LDC and comparable to Postal Assistant - while Grade D is Group C. Both posts come with full central government benefits, a defined promotion ladder, and the prestige of working directly with senior government officers.
📊 Written Exam Pattern - Computer Based Test
The CBT is Stage 1. Marks determine your shortlisting for the Skill Test. Final merit is based on CBT marks.
1
Stage 1 - Computer Based Test (2 Hours)
SubjectQuestionsMarksDuration
General Intelligence and Reasoning50502 Hours (Combined)
General Awareness5050
English Language and Comprehension100100
Total2002002 Hours
⚠️ English carries 50% of CBT marks (100 out of 200). No other SSC exam gives English this high a weightage in a single written test. Negative marking is 0.25 marks per wrong answer. The CBT has no sectional time limit - all 200 questions share 2 hours. CBT marks form the final merit list - the Skill Test is qualifying only.
💡 English is half the exam. With 100 questions and 100 marks in English Language and Comprehension, SSC Stenographer rewards candidates who invest heavily in English. A 10-mark difference in English has double the impact of a 10-mark difference in Reasoning or GK. English mastery is the single most important factor in your CBT rank.
⌨️ Stenography Skill Test - The Unique Qualifying Stage
Stage 2 is qualifying only - marks are not counted in merit. But failing the Skill Test ends your selection immediately regardless of your CBT score.
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Stenography Skill Test - Speed and Transcription Standards
GradeDictation SpeedDictation DurationTranscription Time (English)Transcription Time (Hindi)
Grade C100 words per minute10 minutes40 minutes55 minutes
Grade D80 words per minute10 minutes50 minutes65 minutes
📋 How the Skill Test Works
  • An examiner reads out a passage in English or Hindi at the specified speed (100 or 80 wpm)
  • Candidates write the dictated passage in shorthand on paper
  • After dictation, candidates transcribe their shorthand notes on a computer
  • The transcribed text is compared to the original passage for accuracy
  • Candidates must achieve the required accuracy within the allotted transcription time
⌨️ Shorthand Systems Accepted
  • English Shorthand: Pitman shorthand system (standard)
  • Hindi Shorthand: Kailash Chandra system (standard)
  • Candidates choose either English or Hindi medium for the Skill Test
  • The choice of language for Skill Test is made during application
  • PwBD candidates may be given additional transcription time as per guidelines
📈 How Long to Learn Stenography
  • From zero to 80 wpm (Grade D): 6-9 months of daily practice
  • From zero to 100 wpm (Grade C): 9-12 months of daily practice
  • First 3 months: Learn shorthand outlines and basic strokes
  • Months 3-6: Build speed from 40 wpm to 60 wpm through dictation practice
  • Months 6-12: Push speed from 60 wpm to target speed with consistent daily dictation
  • Daily practice of minimum 2 hours is essential throughout
⚠️ Key Points to Remember
  • The Skill Test is pass/fail - no marks are awarded
  • Failing the Skill Test disqualifies you regardless of CBT rank
  • Candidates who clear CBT but fail Skill Test cannot be selected
  • Accuracy in transcription is as important as speed - errors count against you
  • Typing speed on a computer also matters for the transcription phase
  • The passage dictated is usually from news, government reports, or general content
Start stenography training before you even start CBT preparation. The CBT can be prepared in 3-4 months. Reaching 80 or 100 wpm in shorthand takes 6-12 months. If you start both together on the day of the notification, you will not have enough time to reach the required speed before the Skill Test. Enroll in a shorthand course or use online resources immediately.
⚖️ Stenographer Grade C vs Grade D - Key Differences
Both posts are recruited through the same exam but differ significantly in pay, age limit, posting level, and stenography speed requirement.
Parameter⌨️ Grade C⌨️ Grade D
GroupGroup B - Non-GazettedGroup C
Pay LevelLevel 4 - Rs.25,500/month Basic PayLevel 2 - Rs.19,900/month Basic Pay
Age Limit18-30 years18-27 years
Stenography Speed100 words per minute80 words per minute
Transcription Time (English)40 minutes50 minutes
Typical PostingMinistries, Supreme Court, High Courts, Parliament, CommissionsMinistries, Departments, Attached and Subordinate offices
Work WithSenior officers - Joint Secretary level and aboveMiddle-level officers - Deputy Secretary and Section Officers
CBT Cut-offHigher - smaller vacancy pool, more competition per seatSlightly lower - larger vacancy pool
Best ForCandidates with 100 wpm shorthand speed and strong English - higher pay and prestigeCandidates targeting their first government post with 80 wpm shorthand speed
🎯 Our Recommendation: Always apply for both Grade C and Grade D in the same notification. The written CBT is identical for both - you take one exam and your score is considered for both grades. The only difference in selection is the Skill Test speed requirement. If you can achieve 100 wpm, you qualify for both. If you can achieve only 80 wpm, you qualify for Grade D. Never limit yourself to just one grade when applying.
💼 Posting Locations and Salary Details
SSC Stenographers are posted across all central government ministries, courts, commissions, and departments in India.
🏛️ Most Sought-After Postings
  • Parliament Secretariat - Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha
  • Supreme Court of India
  • High Courts across states
  • Cabinet Secretariat
  • PMO - Prime Minister's Office
  • National Commissions - Human Rights, Women, SC/ST
  • CAG - Comptroller and Auditor General
  • CBI, CVC, IB - Intelligence and Investigation
💰 Salary Breakdown
  • Grade C Basic Pay: Rs.25,500/month (Level 4)
  • Grade D Basic Pay: Rs.19,900/month (Level 2)
  • DA at 46% of Basic Pay (currently)
  • HRA: 8% to 27% depending on posting city
  • Transport Allowance as per city classification
  • Grade C Gross: Rs.38,000 - Rs.46,000+/month
  • Grade D Gross: Rs.29,000 - Rs.36,000+/month
🎁 Benefits and Perks
  • CGHS medical coverage for self and family
  • Pension under New Pension Scheme (NPS)
  • Leave Travel Concession (LTC)
  • Central Government Housing (GPRA) or HRA
  • Children's Education Allowance
  • Group Insurance
  • 7th Pay Commission increments annually
📈 Promotion Path
  • Grade D: Steno Grade D - Steno Grade C - PA - PS
  • Grade C: Steno Grade C - Personal Assistant (PA) - Private Secretary (PS) - Senior PS
  • Grade D can be promoted to Grade C through departmental exams
  • PA and PS are officer-level posts with significant pay jumps
  • Private Secretary posts carry significant authority and prestige
📚 SSC Stenographer Syllabus - Chapter-wise Topics
English carries 50% of marks - the highest weightage of any single subject in this exam. Master it thoroughly.
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General Intelligence and Reasoning
50 Questions - 50 Marks
  • Analogy - Semantic and Figural
  • Classification - Odd One Out
  • Series - Number, Letter and Figure
  • Coding-Decoding
  • Blood Relations
  • Direction and Distance
  • Venn Diagrams and Syllogism
  • Non-verbal Reasoning - Mirror Images, Paper Folding, Embedded Figures, Pattern Completion
  • Space Visualization
  • Arithmetic Reasoning
  • Statement and Conclusions (basic)
💡 Pro Tip: SSC Stenographer Reasoning is at the same level as SSC CHSL - moderate difficulty. Non-verbal topics are the quickest marks. Aim for 42+ out of 50 to stay competitive.
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General Awareness
50 Questions - 50 Marks
Static GK
  • History - Ancient, Medieval, Modern India and Freedom Struggle
  • Geography - India and World Physical Geography
  • Polity - Constitution, Parliament, Fundamental Rights, Judiciary
  • General Science - Physics, Chemistry, Biology (Class 10 level)
  • Culture - Art, Music, UNESCO Heritage, Festivals
Current Affairs
  • National and International Current Affairs (Last 6 months)
  • Awards, Books and Authors, Sports
  • Government Schemes and Policies
  • Important Appointments
💡 Pro Tip: GK in SSC Stenographer is similar to SSC CHSL in difficulty and topic distribution. Static GK (History, Polity, Science) carries higher weightage than current affairs. Build a strong static GK base using NCERT books.
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English Language and Comprehension
🔥 100 Questions - 100 Marks - 50% of Total CBT Score
  • Reading Comprehension (multiple passages - highest marks)
  • Cloze Test
  • Active and Passive Voice
  • Direct and Indirect Speech
  • Synonyms and Antonyms
  • One Word Substitution
  • Idioms and Phrases
  • Spelling Correction
  • Error Detection and Sentence Improvement
  • Fill in the Blanks
  • Para Jumbles
  • Sentence Completion
💡 Pro Tip: With 100 questions in English, Reading Comprehension passages typically account for 25-35 questions - the single largest topic. Practice RC passages daily under timed conditions. Active-Passive and Direct-Indirect Speech together contribute another 15-20 questions and are fully rule-based - master these for guaranteed marks.
📈 SSC Stenographer Previous Year Cut-off Marks
Indicative CBT cut-offs from recent cycles - use as your target benchmark
YearCategoryGrade C Cut-off (Out of 200)Grade D Cut-off (Out of 200)
2023General134.50121.75
OBC128.25116.50
SC119.00107.25
ST107.7596.00
2022General131.25118.50
OBC125.75113.25
SC116.50104.00
ST105.0093.25
ℹ️ Grade C cut-offs are consistently higher than Grade D by 12-15 marks. Data is indicative - always refer to official SSC score cards for exact figures. Target 150+ for Grade C and 135+ for Grade D in General category for a comfortable margin.
💡 Expert Tips - Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
From our faculty who have trained thousands of SSC Stenographer successful candidates
1
Start shorthand training immediately - this is the most time-critical preparation task - The single biggest mistake SSC Stenographer aspirants make is focusing entirely on the CBT first and planning to learn shorthand after clearing it. The CBT can be prepared in 3-4 months. Reaching 80 wpm (Grade D) takes 6-9 months of daily practice, and 100 wpm (Grade C) takes 9-12 months. If you start shorthand only after the CBT result, you will have 2-3 months at most before the Skill Test - nowhere near enough time to reach the required speed from scratch. Enroll in a shorthand institute or start self-study using Pitman or Kailash Chandra textbooks from Day 1.
2
English is half the exam - invest 50% of your CBT study time in it - SSC Stenographer gives English 100 out of 200 CBT marks - the highest English weightage of any SSC exam. Yet many candidates, especially from Hindi-medium or science backgrounds, spend equal time on all three subjects and lose the exam in English. A 15-mark difference in English is equivalent to a 15-mark difference in the entire Reasoning section. Reading Comprehension alone can account for 30-35 marks. Daily RC practice - one passage every morning under a 12-minute timer - is the single most impactful study habit you can build for this exam.
3
Apply for both Grade C and Grade D - the CBT is identical for both - SSC Stenographer Grade C and Grade D share the same CBT paper. You take one exam and your score is evaluated against cut-offs for both grades simultaneously. The only additional requirement for Grade C is achieving 100 wpm in the Skill Test vs 80 wpm for Grade D. If you are practising shorthand diligently and reach 100 wpm, you become eligible for the better-paying Grade C post. Never apply for only one grade - always select both in the application form. It costs nothing extra and gives you two chances of selection from the same preparation effort.
4
Accuracy in shorthand transcription matters as much as speed - Many candidates reach the required wpm speed in practice but fail the Skill Test because their transcription accuracy is poor. A passage dictated at 80 wpm generates approximately 800 words. Errors in transcribing these shorthand outlines - missed words, wrong outlines, incorrect spellings - are counted against you. A transcript with more than a certain percentage of errors fails even if completed within time. Practise shorthand transcription with real news passages and proofread carefully. Speed and accuracy must both be developed simultaneously - practising only speed drills without transcription practice is a common and costly mistake.
5
No Quantitative Aptitude in SSC Stenographer - do not waste time on it - Unlike SSC CGL, CHSL, and most other SSC exams, SSC Stenographer has no Mathematics or Quantitative Aptitude section. The CBT is only Reasoning (50 marks), GK (50 marks), and English (100 marks). Candidates who are preparing for multiple SSC exams simultaneously sometimes practise Quant out of habit - this is wasted time for SSC Stenographer specifically. Redirect all your Math study hours to English and shorthand practice. This is one of the few exams where being weak in Math is not a disadvantage.
6
Parliament and Supreme Court postings are the most coveted - preference matters - SSC Stenographers posted in Parliament Secretariat (Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha) and the Supreme Court of India work in the most prestigious government offices in India. These postings come with unique professional exposure, direct interaction with the highest levels of government and judiciary, and specific additional allowances. However, these are not guaranteed - final posting depends on vacancy, merit rank, and preference filled during document verification. Research each posting location before filling preferences. Parliament and Supreme Court postings should typically be ranked first unless you have strong personal reasons to prefer a specific city or region.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions - SSC Stenographer 2026
Most searched questions about SSC Stenographer answered by our experts
SSC Stenographer Grade C joins at Pay Level 4 with a Basic Pay of Rs.25,500 per month. Grade D joins at Pay Level 2 with a Basic Pay of Rs.19,900 per month. The gross salary including DA (currently 46%), HRA (8% to 27% depending on city), and Transport Allowance is approximately Rs.38,000 - Rs.46,000+ per month for Grade C and Rs.29,000 - Rs.36,000+ per month for Grade D at metro city postings. Both grades receive CGHS medical coverage, NPS pension, LTC, Children's Education Allowance, and Central Government Housing or HRA. Grade C also receives the benefit of Group B non-gazetted officer status which carries additional privileges in government dealings.
No - prior stenography knowledge is not required at the time of application. The eligibility criteria are only 12th pass and being within the age limit. You can apply without knowing shorthand. However, you must pass the Stenography Skill Test after clearing the CBT - and reaching 80 or 100 wpm in shorthand requires 6-12 months of training. The practical reality is that candidates who begin shorthand training only after applying or after clearing the CBT will likely not have enough time to reach the required speed before the Skill Test. The correct approach is to start shorthand training as soon as you decide to target this exam - ideally 9-12 months before the expected Skill Test date.
Pitman Shorthand is used for English medium stenography and Kailash Chandra is used for Hindi medium stenography. Pitman Shorthand is a phonetic system developed in England that represents sounds rather than letters - it uses light and heavy strokes, curves, and hooks to represent consonants and vowels. It is the most widely taught English shorthand system in India. Kailash Chandra is India's standard Hindi shorthand system, adapted for Devanagari script. Both systems use paper-and-pen shorthand outlines during the dictation phase and then computer-based transcription. Candidates choose which medium (English or Hindi) to attempt the Skill Test in at the time of application. Choose the medium in which you are more fluent - both systems have approximately equal difficulty at the same speed level.
Yes - graduates can apply for SSC Stenographer. The minimum eligibility is 12th pass - there is no upper educational qualification bar. Both 12th pass candidates and graduates can apply on equal footing. The same exam, same cut-offs, and same selection process apply to all. Graduates who are eligible for SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, and SSC Stenographer often apply for all three simultaneously since the written exam preparation overlaps significantly (Reasoning and GK are common subjects). For graduates, SSC Stenographer is worth targeting if they have shorthand skills or are willing to invest time in learning shorthand - the Grade C post at Pay Level 4 is comparable to CHSL Postal Assistant in pay but with a more specialised and often more prestigious posting profile.
If you fail the Skill Test, you are disqualified from the current cycle regardless of your CBT score. The Skill Test is a mandatory qualifying stage - there is no merit exemption for high CBT scorers. Your CBT rank and score are preserved only until the Skill Test result. Candidates who fail the Skill Test must reapply in the next notification cycle and clear the CBT again - there is no carry-forward of CBT scores. This is why the Skill Test must be treated with the same seriousness as the written exam. A CBT rank of 1 means nothing if you fail the Skill Test. Practise shorthand to a speed comfortably above the required 80 or 100 wpm - aim for 90 wpm for Grade D and 110 wpm for Grade C to ensure you have a buffer on the actual Skill Test day.
SSC Stenographer has no official attempt limit. You can appear every time a notification is released as long as you are within the age limit - 18-27 years for Grade D (General category) and 18-30 years for Grade C (General category). The wider age window for Grade C (up to 30) gives additional years of attempts. SSC Stenographer notifications are released roughly once a year. The complete cycle from notification to final posting takes approximately 12-18 months. Given the Skill Test requirement, candidates who do not reach the required shorthand speed in time may appear in subsequent cycles after improving their speed - there is no penalty for previous attempts.
SSC Stenographer Grade C is a better post than SSC CHSL LDC but comparable to CHSL Postal Assistant. Grade C (Pay Level 4, Rs.25,500 Basic Pay) is at the same pay level as Postal Assistant from CHSL - but Grade C is a Group B post while PA is Group C. Grade C Stenographers work with senior officers at ministries and courts, which gives better professional exposure than typical LDC or DEO duties. The promotion path for Stenographers - from Grade D to Grade C to Personal Assistant to Private Secretary - is one of the more attractive clerical progression paths in central government. The unique advantage is the posting quality - Parliament and Supreme Court postings are available only to Stenographers, not to CHSL selected candidates.
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Written and Reviewed by Our SSC Exam Expert Faculty
SSC Stenographer Specialist | 12+ Years SSC and Government Exam Coaching Experience
This page has been prepared by our senior SSC faculty with over a decade of experience coaching SSC Stenographer aspirants. Our faculty has guided thousands of students who have cleared SSC Stenographer Grade C and Grade D to work in Parliament, Supreme Court, Cabinet Secretariat, and central government ministries. All exam pattern tables, Skill Test standards, syllabus breakdowns, and study strategies are verified against official SSC notifications and updated for the 2026 cycle.
✅ SSC Stenographer Specialist ✅ Shorthand Skill Test Expert ✅ 15,000+ Students Trained

SSC Stenographer 2026 - Complete Guide: Grade C and Grade D, Eligibility, Exam Pattern, Skill Test and Free Mock Tests

The SSC Stenographer Grade C and Grade D exam 2026 is conducted by the Staff Selection Commission to recruit stenographers across all central government ministries, departments, Parliament Secretariat, Supreme Court, and national commissions. Open to candidates who have passed Class 12, SSC Stenographer is unique among all SSC exams in requiring a specialised skill - shorthand stenography - as a qualifying condition. With 2,000+ vacancies, Grade C at Pay Level 4 (Rs.25,500 Basic Pay) and Grade D at Pay Level 2 (Rs.19,900 Basic Pay), and prestigious posting locations including Parliament and Supreme Court, SSC Stenographer offers one of the best posting profiles among 12th-pass level central government jobs.

The SSC Stenographer selection has 2 stages: Stage 1 is a Computer Based Test (200 questions, 200 marks, 2 hours) covering General Intelligence and Reasoning (50 marks), General Awareness (50 marks), and English Language and Comprehension (100 marks - 50% of total marks, the highest English weightage in any SSC exam). Stage 2 is the Stenography Skill Test - a 10-minute dictation at 100 wpm (Grade C) or 80 wpm (Grade D) followed by computer transcription within 40-50 minutes (English) or 55-65 minutes (Hindi). The Skill Test is qualifying only - CBT marks form the final merit list. Candidates must pass the Skill Test to be selected regardless of their CBT rank.

Our free SSC Stenographer mock tests cover all 3 CBT subjects - General Intelligence and Reasoning (Analogy, Classification, Series, Non-verbal Reasoning), General Awareness (History, Geography, Polity, General Science, Current Affairs), and English Language and Comprehension (Reading Comprehension, Cloze Test, Active-Passive Voice, Direct-Indirect Speech, Synonyms, Antonyms, One Word Substitution, Error Detection, Spelling) - with chapter-wise tests and full-length 200-question timed CBT mock tests - at zero cost, with no login required.