Complete guide for the Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission Combined State / Upper Subordinate Services Examination (PCS). UPPSC recruits for UP's top civil service posts - SDM, DSP, BDO, APO and other Group A and B posts. Three stages: Prelims (GS Paper I 200 marks merit + CSAT Paper II 200 marks qualifying), Mains (8 descriptive papers, 1350 merit marks, no optional subject - replaced by two UP-specific GS papers), and Interview (100 marks). Strong Uttar Pradesh GK and answer writing are the decisive differentiators. Free chapter-wise mock tests, topic-wise syllabus, cut-offs and expert strategy - all in one place.
🏛️ Subject note: GS and GK mock tests cover Prelims GS Paper I and all 6 Mains GS papers. Reasoning, Numeracy and English mock tests cover CSAT Paper II (qualifying). The two UP-specific Mains papers (GS V and GS VI) require dedicated UP GK preparation - see the UP GK section below.
🔍 UPPSC PCS 2026 - At a Glance
Key facts about the Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission Combined State / Upper Subordinate Services Examination
Parameter
Details
Conducting Body
Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission (UPPSC), Prayagraj
Exam Name
Combined State / Upper Subordinate Services Examination (PCS)
GS Paper I (200 marks, shortlisting) + CSAT Paper II (200 marks, qualifying 33%)
Mains Papers
8 descriptive papers - General Hindi + Essay + GS I to GS VI (no optional subject)
Mains Merit Marks
1350 marks (Essay 150 + GS I to GS VI at 200 each)
Interview Marks
100 marks
Total Merit Marks
1450 marks (Mains 1350 + Interview 100)
Negative Marking
1/3 mark deducted per wrong answer in BOTH Prelims papers
Medium
Bilingual - Hindi and English for Prelims; Mains descriptive can be in Hindi or English
Key Change (2023 onwards)
Optional subjects completely removed from Mains. Replaced by GS Paper V and GS Paper VI - dedicated UP-specific knowledge papers. No optional subject in UPPSC Mains.
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Uttar Pradesh's Premier State Civil Service - Gateway to SDM, DSP and BDO
UPPSC PCS is the Uttar Pradesh equivalent of UPSC Civil Services - selecting candidates for Sub-Divisional Magistrate (SDM), Deputy SP (DSP), Block Development Officer (BDO), Assistant Prosecution Officer (APO) and other prestigious Group A and B administrative posts in India's most populous state. With over 200 crore population in UP and a vast administrative machinery, PCS officers wield significant administrative authority. Competition is intense but the reward is direct state administrative power in the world's fifth-most-populous region.
✅ Eligibility Criteria
Age, education and domicile requirements for UPPSC PCS 2026
Criteria
Details
Nationality
Indian Citizens
Education
Graduate degree from a recognised university (any stream). Final year students may apply subject to conditions in official notification.
Age - General
21 to 40 years
Age - OBC (UP domicile)
21 to 43 years (3-year relaxation)
Age - SC/ST (UP domicile)
21 to 45 years (5-year relaxation)
Age - Ex-Servicemen
Upper age relaxation as per UP government rules
Age - Disabled
21 to 55 years (15-year relaxation)
Domicile
UP domicile required for reserved category benefits; open category posts open to all Indians
Attempts
No formal limit on attempts - candidates can appear until they exceed the age limit
📊 Prelims Exam Pattern - Two Papers, Same Day
GS Paper I decides shortlisting. CSAT Paper II is qualifying at 33%. Both have 1/3 negative marking. Both conducted on the same day in bilingual mode.
📄 Prelims - GS Paper I (Merit Paper)
200 marks - 150 questions - 2 hours - decides Prelims cut-off and shortlisting
Topic Area
Approx. Questions
History of India and Indian National Movement
25-30
Indian and World Geography (Physical, Social, Economic)
20-25
Indian Polity and Governance - Constitution, Panchayati Raj
15-20
Economic and Social Development - Sustainable Development, Poverty
15-20
General Science - Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Environment
15-20
Current Events - National and International
20-25
UP-specific topics - History, Culture, Economy, Current Affairs
15-20
Total
150 Qs / 200 marks
Shortlisting paper - marks NOT counted in final merit. Negative marking: 1/3 mark per wrong answer. Each question = 4/3 marks correct, -1/3 marks wrong. General category cut-off: approximately 100-120 marks out of 200.
📄 Prelims - CSAT Paper II (Qualifying)
200 marks - 100 questions - 2 hours - minimum 33% (66 marks) to qualify
Topic Area
Approx. Questions
Comprehension - Hindi and English passages
25-30
General Mental Ability and Logical Reasoning
20-25
General Intelligence - Analogy, Series, Coding
15-20
Basic Numeracy - Class 10 level Maths
20-25
Data Interpretation - Tables, Charts, Graphs
10-15
Total
100 Qs / 200 marks
Qualifying only - marks NOT counted in shortlisting or final merit. Minimum 33% = 66 marks required to have Paper I evaluated. Negative marking: 1/3 mark per wrong answer. CSAT has negative marking unlike UPSC where CSAT has no negative marking.
⚠️ UPPSC-specific CSAT trap: Unlike UPSC where CSAT has no negative marking, UPPSC CSAT Paper II has 1/3 negative marking. Many candidates assume CSAT is a free attempt and guess randomly - this can reduce their CSAT score below 66 and get them disqualified even with an excellent GS Paper I score. Prepare CSAT seriously enough to score 80-90 comfortably, then focus energy on GS Paper I.
📝 Mains Exam Pattern - 8 Papers, No Optional Subject
Optional subjects completely removed. Replaced by GS Paper V and GS Paper VI - dedicated Uttar Pradesh knowledge papers. Total Mains merit = 1350 marks.
Paper
Subject
Marks
Type
Counted in Merit?
Paper I
General Hindi
150
Descriptive - 3 hours
Qualifying only
Paper II
Essay - Three essays
150
Descriptive - 3 hours
Yes - counts in merit
Paper III
GS I - History, Culture, Geography
200
Descriptive - 3 hours
Yes - counts in merit
Paper IV
GS II - Economy, Constitution, Governance, Polity
200
Descriptive - 3 hours
Yes - counts in merit
Paper V
GS III - Science, Technology, Environment, Disaster Management
200
Descriptive - 3 hours
Yes - counts in merit
Paper VI
GS IV - Ethics, Integrity, Aptitude and Case Studies
200
Descriptive - 3 hours
Yes - counts in merit
Paper VII
GS V - UP Specific: History, Art, Culture, Architecture, Governance of Uttar Pradesh
200
Descriptive - 3 hours
Yes - counts in merit
Paper VIII
GS VI - UP Specific: Economy, Governance, Geography, Demography and Natural Resources of Uttar Pradesh
200
Descriptive - 3 hours
Yes - counts in merit
Mains Total
Essay + GS I to GS VI
1350
-
All 7 papers count
Interview
Personality Test
100
-
Yes - counts in merit
⚠️ Key change: GS Paper V and GS Paper VI (Papers VII and VIII) are entirely Uttar Pradesh-specific - History, Art, Culture, Architecture, Economy, Governance, Geography and Demography of UP. These 400 marks (out of 1350) cannot be covered from UPSC or general GS preparation. They require dedicated UP-specific preparation that most non-UP coaching institutes do not cover adequately.
📚 Prelims Syllabus - GS Paper I and CSAT
GS Paper I is at graduate level with UP-specific integration throughout. CSAT is at Class 10-12 level for numeracy and graduate level for comprehension.
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History and Freedom Movement
GS Paper I - highest weight topic
Ancient India - Indus Valley, Vedic period, Mauryas, Guptas, Harsha
Medieval India - Delhi Sultanate, Mughal Empire, Bhakti and Sufi movements
Modern India - British expansion, socio-religious reform movements
Freedom Struggle - moderates, extremists, revolutionary movement, Gandhi era
UP in the Freedom Movement - role of UP leaders, 1857 Uprising centres in UP
Important events - Non-Cooperation, Civil Disobedience, Quit India
Post-Independence - Constitution making, early political history
General mental ability - puzzles, blood relations, directions
Basic numeracy - Number system, percentage, ratio, SI/CI (Class 10)
Data interpretation - tables, bar charts, pie charts, line graphs
Decision making and problem solving
💡 Target 90-100 marks in CSAT to have a comfortable buffer above the 66-mark qualifying minimum. Avoid guessing - the 1/3 negative marking makes random attempts expensive.
📝 Mains Syllabus - All 8 Papers
GS Papers I-IV cover national topics at UPSC-equivalent depth. GS Papers V and VI (400 marks) cover Uttar Pradesh exclusively. Essay and General Hindi complete the set.
📄 GS I - History, Culture, Geography (200 marks)
Indian history, world history, culture, heritage and geography in depth
Indian culture - art forms, architecture, music, literature
Modern Indian history and Freedom Struggle phases
Post-independence consolidation and reorganisation
World History - colonialism, world wars, cold war
Indian Society - social change, diversity, communalism, regionalism
Environment - ecology, biodiversity, climate change, environmental law
Conservation - national parks, protected areas, wildlife
📄 GS IV - Ethics, Integrity and Aptitude (200 marks)
Conceptual understanding of ethics, case studies and public service values
Ethics - essence, determinants and consequences of ethics in human actions
Attitude - content, structure, function, moral and political attitudes
Aptitude and foundational values for civil service - integrity, impartiality
Emotional intelligence - concepts, utilities and application in administration
Contributions of moral thinkers and philosophers
Public/Civil service values - ethical issues and conflicts
Probity in governance - concept, information sharing, RTI
Case Studies on the above issues - practical analysis and ethical resolution
⚠️ Ethics (GS IV) is unique - it cannot be prepared like factual GS papers. Start GS IV 4-6 months before Mains with case study writing practice. Many candidates lose 30-40 marks here from poor case study presentation.
🏛️ GS V - UP History, Art, Culture, Architecture, Governance (200 marks)
UP-SPECIFIC PAPER - replaces old Optional Paper I
History of Uttar Pradesh - Ancient, Medieval and Modern periods
UP in the Freedom Movement - Meerut Conspiracy, Kakori Case, Chauri Chaura
Art and Culture of UP - classical dance (Kathak), folk arts, music traditions
Literature of UP - Hindi and Urdu literary traditions, famous writers
Languages spoken in UP - Hindi, Urdu, Braj, Awadhi, Bhojpuri
Religious heritage - Kumbh Mela, Varanasi ghats, Buddhist circuit
Governance of UP - administrative structure, districts, commissioners
UP Panchayati Raj - structure, elections, functioning, challenges
🏛️ GS VI - UP Economy, Geography, Demography and Natural Resources (200 marks)
UP-SPECIFIC PAPER - replaces old Optional Paper II
UP economy - GSDP, sectoral composition, growth, challenges
Agriculture in UP - crops (sugarcane, wheat, rice), irrigation, land holdings
Industries in UP - ODOP (One District One Product), MSMEs, textile, leather
UP Budget and economic survey highlights
Expressways - Purvanchal, Bundelkhand, Gorakhpur Link Expressways
Geography of UP - regions (Doab, Awadh, Bundelkhand, Purvanchal), rivers
Demography - population size, density, growth rate, literacy, sex ratio
Natural Resources - forests, minerals, water bodies, wildlife sanctuaries
UP government flagship schemes - Kanya Sumangala, Mukhyamantri Abhyudaya
Smart Cities, industrial corridors passing through UP
📋 General Hindi - 150 marks (Qualifying)
Descriptive - 3 hours - qualifying only - UP secondary board level Hindi
Hindi Grammar - Sandhi, Samas, Karak, Alankar, Ras
Vocabulary - Synonyms, Antonyms, Idioms and Proverbs in Hindi
Passage comprehension and precise writing
Letter writing - official letters in Hindi
Translation from English to Hindi
Essay writing in Hindi - short format
✍️ Essay - 150 marks
Three essays from different sections - 3 hours - fully counted in merit
Three essays typically from: social issues, governance/economy, science/environment
UP-centric angle expected in at least one essay
Each essay approximately 600-700 words in about 55-60 minutes
Structure - clear introduction, logical body with examples, conclusion
Can write in Hindi or English (declare in form)
Contemporary topics from current affairs are regularly chosen
Essay is 150 of 1350 merit marks. Write 2-3 practice essays per week from 3 months before Mains. A 20-mark gap between a prepared and unprepared candidate in Essay is common.
🏛️ Uttar Pradesh GK - The Decisive Differentiator
UP-specific content appears in Prelims GS Paper I and occupies 400 of 1350 Mains merit marks (GS V + GS VI). Candidates who master UP GK outperform those who focus only on national topics.
🏺 UP History and Freedom Movement
UP's role in 1857 - Meerut, Lucknow, Kanpur, Jhansi centres
State prosecution services, legal representation in courts
Level 8 - Rs.47,600+
District Minority Welfare Officer
Group B
Minority welfare scheme implementation at district level
Level 8 - Rs.47,600+
Executive Officer - UP Municipalities
Group B
Urban local body management and development
Level 7 - Rs.44,900+
District Commandant Homeguards
Group B
Home Guard organisation management at district level
Level 7 - Rs.44,900+
Note: UPPSC PCS fills 30+ posts per cycle. Complete list published in official notification. Pay as per 7th Pay Commission UP pay matrix plus state-specific allowances.
📈 Previous Year Cut-off Marks
Prelims GS Paper I cut-offs for shortlisting. Mains and final merit cut-offs vary by post and category.
Exam Cycle
Prelims GS I Cut-off GEN (out of 200)
OBC Cut-off
SC/ST Cut-off
Remark
PCS 2020
96 - 102
84 - 90
74 - 80
Pre-negative marking era
PCS 2021
100 - 108
88 - 94
76 - 82
Increased competition post-COVID backlog
PCS 2022
103 - 112
90 - 96
78 - 84
Negative marking introduced in Prelims
PCS 2023
105 - 114
92 - 98
80 - 86
Optional removed; new Mains pattern debut
PCS 2025 (12 Oct 2025)
108 - 118 (Est.)
94 - 100 (Est.)
82 - 88 (Est.)
200 vacancies; result awaited
ℹ️ Cut-offs are indicative estimates from coaching institute data. UPPSC does not officially release Prelims cut-off marks separately. With 1/3 negative marking on a 200-mark paper, target 115-125 confident attempts aiming for 120+ net score for a safe General category Prelims clearance.
💡 Expert Preparation Tips
From our faculty who have guided hundreds of UPPSC PCS successful candidates to SDM, DSP and BDO posts
1
GS Papers V and VI are 400 of 1350 Mains marks - they cannot be prepared from UPSC material alone - The removal of optional subjects and their replacement with two dedicated UP papers (GS V and GS VI) is the most structurally important change in UPPSC Mains. These 400 marks cover UP History, Art, Culture, Architecture, Governance (GS V) and UP Economy, Geography, Demography, Natural Resources and Government Schemes (GS VI). National GS preparation gives you essentially zero marks here. You must separately study UP-specific sources: UP State Gazetteer, UP textbooks, UPPSC previous year papers for UP-specific questions, Prabhat Khabar and Hindustan (UP editions) for current affairs, and UP government scheme notifications. Candidates who invest 2-3 hours daily in dedicated UP preparation over 6 months consistently outrank those who treat UP as a minor add-on.
2
CSAT negative marking is a trap - unlike UPSC, guessing in CSAT costs you marks - UPSC CSAT has no negative marking, so candidates from UPSC preparation backgrounds are conditioned to attempt all CSAT questions. UPPSC CSAT has 1/3 negative marking on both papers. A candidate who attempts 80 CSAT questions and gets 55 right and 25 wrong scores: 55 - (25 x 0.33) = 55 - 8.25 = 46.75 marks - dangerously close to the 66-mark qualifying minimum. Prepare CSAT well enough to confidently attempt 75-80 questions targeting a score of 90-100, which gives you a 25-30 mark buffer above the qualifying minimum. Never treat CSAT as a free attempt.
3
GS IV Ethics is not a GS subject - it needs a fundamentally different preparation approach - Many UPPSC candidates prepare Ethics (GS IV, 200 marks) as if it were a factual knowledge paper - reading ethics books and memorising philosophers. Ethics in UPPSC Mains is primarily assessed through case studies where you must demonstrate moral reasoning, weighing competing values, identifying ethical conflicts, and articulating principled administrative responses. You cannot score well by reproducing definitions of virtue ethics or Kantian philosophy. You must practice writing case study responses regularly from 4-6 months before Mains. Each case study answer requires identifying stakeholders, ethical dilemmas, possible courses of action, and your recommended approach with justification. Practice 2-3 case studies per week minimum.
4
UPPSC preparation significantly overlaps with UPSC - target both if you meet UPSC age criteria - The GS preparation for UPPSC Prelims GS Paper I is approximately 80-85% identical to UPSC Prelims GS Paper I. UPPSC Mains GS I through GS IV mirror UPSC Mains GS papers closely in depth and breadth. Candidates preparing for UPSC CSE who meet the age criteria should also apply for UPPSC PCS - the marginal additional effort (UP-specific GS V and GS VI) yields a dramatically higher probability of selection. UPPSC competition is purely state-level (lakhs vs crores for UPSC), cut-offs are lower, and the selection ratio is significantly better. Many IAS aspirants who clear UPPSC first use the PCS posting experience to strengthen their UPSC Interview performance in subsequent years.
5
Answer writing practice for Mains must begin at least 6 months before the exam - not after Prelims - UPPSC Mains is entirely descriptive with 8 papers. Candidates who only start answer writing after Prelims results (typically 3-4 months before Mains) are significantly disadvantaged against those who practiced writing throughout. Structured answer writing for UPPSC requires: 150-200 word answers for 5-mark questions in 5-6 minutes, 300-400 word answers for 10-mark questions in 10-12 minutes, clear headings, UP-relevant examples wherever possible, and a mix of factual points with analytical commentary. Write 4-6 answers daily across different subjects. Get your answers evaluated by a mentor or peer who knows UPPSC's expectation level. Answer writing quality at Mains separates ranks more than knowledge level.
6
Follow UP-specific current affairs through local sources - national magazines miss 60% of what UPPSC tests - UP GK in both Prelims and GS V/GS VI Mains draws heavily from UP government news that does not appear in Pratiyogita Darpan, Yojana, or other national competitive exam magazines. UPPSC regularly asks about UP Budget allocations, Yogi government scheme launches, UP Assembly session decisions, UP Investment Summit outcomes, appointments of UP government officials, UP Sports achievements, and development projects like the Ganga Expressway and defence corridor. Read one UP edition Hindi newspaper (Hindustan or Amar Ujala) daily for 20-30 minutes. Maintain a monthly UP current affairs diary. This habit, built consistently over 6-12 months, is irreplaceable by any coaching material or short-term cramming.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions - UPPSC PCS 2026
Most searched questions about UPPSC PCS exam, syllabus and preparation answered by our experts
UPPSC PCS recruits for Uttar Pradesh state services (SDM, DSP, BDO) while UPSC CSE recruits for All India Services (IAS, IPS, IFS). Both are three-stage exams (Prelims, Mains, Interview) with very similar GS syllabi - approximately 80-85% common content in GS Papers I-IV. Key differences: UPPSC has two dedicated UP-specific Mains papers (GS V and GS VI, 400 marks) with no equivalent in UPSC. UPPSC CSAT has negative marking while UPSC CSAT does not. UPPSC Interview is 100 marks while UPSC is 275. UPPSC competition is state-level with significantly better selection ratios. Simultaneous preparation is highly recommended - candidates targeting UPSC should add UP-specific material for GS V and GS VI and apply for UPPSC as a parallel strong opportunity with much higher success probability.
UPPSC removed optional subjects from the Mains examination to create a more level playing field and to better test state-specific knowledge relevant to UP administration. The two optional subject papers (previously 300 marks each = 600 marks total) were replaced by two compulsory UP-specific General Studies papers - GS Paper V (History, Art, Culture, Architecture, Governance of UP) and GS Paper VI (Economy, Governance, Geography, Demography and Natural Resources of UP), each carrying 200 marks. This change means candidates can no longer boost their scores by choosing scoring optional subjects - all 1350 Mains merit marks are now from common compulsory papers, and 400 of those marks require deep UP knowledge. This levels the field between candidates from different academic backgrounds and makes UP expertise the true differentiator.
UPPSC PCS vacancy numbers vary significantly by cycle. The PCS 2025 cycle had 200 vacancies, while some earlier cycles had 300-400+ vacancies depending on the state government's administrative needs. The selection ratio - applicants to selections - is typically around 300:1 to 500:1 at the application stage, but improves dramatically at each stage. Among candidates who clear Prelims, approximately 10-15 candidates compete per Mains seat. Among Mains qualifiers, the Interview shortlist is usually 2-3 times the vacancy count. For serious, well-prepared candidates who make it to Mains, the effective selection probability from Mains is around 30-50% - much better than the application-stage numbers suggest. UPPSC announced OTR (One Time Registration) as mandatory for all applications from recent cycles.
Yes, General Hindi (Paper I, 150 marks) is a compulsory Mains paper for all UPPSC PCS candidates regardless of their chosen answer-writing medium. It is a qualifying paper - candidates must clear the minimum qualifying marks (typically around 30-35% depending on the notification) to have their other Mains papers evaluated. The paper tests Hindi grammar, vocabulary, comprehension, letter writing, translation and essay writing at UP secondary board level. For candidates from Hindi-medium backgrounds, this is typically straightforward. English-medium candidates should dedicate 3-4 weeks specifically to Hindi grammar rules, letter formats and translation practice to comfortably clear this qualifier. The marks of General Hindi are NOT added to the merit total.
The UPPSC Prelims GS Paper I cut-off for General category has been trending upward - estimated at approximately 108-118 out of 200 in recent cycles with negative marking. With 1/3 negative marking, your net score = (correct x 4/3) - (wrong x 1/3). To target a net score of 115 safely, you need approximately 95-105 correct attempts with very few wrong answers (under 10-15 wrong). The optimal attempt strategy is: attempt questions where you are confident OR where you can eliminate 2 of 4 options (expected value becomes positive). Leave blank any question where you cannot eliminate more than one option. Never guess randomly. Aiming for 110-120 attempts with 95-105 correct is safer than attempting 140 with 50-60 guesses. Prelims preparation goal should be achieving confident knowledge of 110+ topics - not maximising attempts.
UPPSC PCS has no formal limit on the number of attempts. Candidates can appear as many times as they are within the prescribed age limit. The general category upper age limit is 40 years, meaning a candidate starting at 21 has up to 19 years of potential attempts. For OBC candidates with UP domicile, the limit extends to 43 years. For SC/ST candidates with UP domicile, it extends to 45 years. This unlimited attempt policy makes UPPSC a longer preparation runway than UPSC (which has 6 attempts for General category). That said, serious candidates should approach each attempt with a complete preparation plan rather than treating early attempts as dry runs - each Prelims attempt provides valuable real-exam experience that improves strategy for subsequent cycles.
UPPSC Mains GS Papers (GS I through GS VI) and the Essay paper can be written in either Hindi or English - candidates declare their preferred medium in the application form. The General Hindi paper is always in Hindi regardless of chosen medium. Most UPPSC candidates write in Hindi as the examination is deeply rooted in UP's administrative and cultural context, and Hindi-medium answers may be evaluated by a larger pool of examiners who are more attuned to UP-specific content. However, there is no formal disadvantage to English medium - the quality and substance of your answers matter more than the language. Choose the language in which you can write more fluently, construct better analytical arguments, and express UP-specific examples naturally. Switching languages mid-preparation (after spending months in one medium) typically reduces quality significantly.
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Written and Reviewed by Our UPPSC PCS and UP Civil Services Expert Faculty
UPPSC PCS Specialist | 12+ Years UP State PSC Coaching Experience
This page has been prepared by our senior UPPSC faculty with extensive experience coaching PCS aspirants across Prelims, Mains and Interview stages. Our faculty has guided hundreds of students to UPPSC selection including SDM, DSP and BDO posts. All exam pattern tables, syllabus breakdowns, cut-off data and strategy guidance reflect the latest UPPSC exam pattern including the removal of optional subjects and introduction of GS V and GS VI UP-specific papers. Check uppsc.up.nic.in for official notification updates.
✅ UPPSC PCS Specialist✅ UP GK and Current Affairs Expert✅ 600+ Students Selected
UPPSC PCS 2026 - Complete Guide: Prelims and Mains Syllabus, Exam Pattern, Cut-offs and Free Mock Tests
The Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission Combined State / Upper Subordinate Services Examination (UPPSC PCS) is UP's most prestigious state civil service exam, recruiting candidates for Sub-Divisional Magistrate (SDM), Deputy SP (DSP), Block Development Officer (BDO), Assistant Prosecution Officer (APO) and 30+ Group A and B posts in India's most populous state. The UPPSC PCS 2025 cycle had Prelims on 12 October 2025 and Mains from 29 March to 1 April 2026. The selection is three-stage: Prelims (GS Paper I 200 marks for shortlisting + CSAT Paper II 200 marks qualifying at 33%), Mains (8 descriptive papers, 1350 merit marks) and Interview (100 marks) totalling 1450 merit marks.
A critical structural change from 2023 onwards: optional subjects completely removed from Mains and replaced by two compulsory UP-specific papers - GS Paper V (UP History, Art, Culture, Architecture, Governance - 200 marks) and GS Paper VI (UP Economy, Geography, Demography, Natural Resources - 200 marks). These 400 marks require dedicated UP-specific preparation beyond national GS content. The remaining Mains merit papers are Essay (150), GS I - History and Geography (200), GS II - Governance and Polity (200), GS III - Economy, Science and Environment (200), and GS IV - Ethics (200). Both Prelims papers carry 1/3 negative marking including CSAT - unlike UPSC where CSAT has no negative marking. CSAT qualifying minimum is 33% (66 marks).
Our free UPPSC PCS mock tests cover all relevant subjects - General Studies (History, Geography, Polity, Economy, Science at UPPSC level), General Knowledge and Awareness (national and UP-specific current affairs), General Intelligence and Reasoning (CSAT Paper II), Numerical and Mathematical Ability (CSAT numeracy) and English Language (CSAT comprehension) - available topic-wise at zero cost at StudiesToday.com.