Last updated for the SSC CGL 2026 cycle. This guide is for graduate aspirants targeting Group B and Group C posts in central government ministries and departments.
What is SSC CGL?
The Staff Selection Commission — Combined Graduate Level (SSC CGL) is India's largest central government recruitment exam for graduate-level posts. Conducted annually by the SSC, it fills thousands of vacancies across more than 30 ministries and departments — Income Tax, CBDT, CBIC (Customs), Audit, Statistics, Railways, Ministry of External Affairs, and many others.
Roughly 30+ lakh candidates apply each year for around 15,000–25,000 vacancies, making SSC CGL one of the most competitive yet most desirable graduate-level government job exams in India. The job security, central pay scales, work-life balance, and career growth attract aspirants from every state.
SSC CGL — The 4 Tier Structure
The full SSC CGL selection process has 4 stages:
| Tier | Type | Marks | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Computer-based MCQ (4 sections) | 200 | 60 min |
| Tier 2 | Computer-based descriptive + objective (Quant, Reasoning, English, Statistics, GS for some posts) | ~450 | 2.5 hours per session |
| Tier 3 | Descriptive Paper (Pen + Paper) — Essay, Letter, Précis | 100 | 60 min |
| Tier 4 | Skill test / Computer Proficiency Test (post-specific) | Qualifying | — |
Final merit comes from Tier 1 + Tier 2 + Tier 3 marks. Tier 1 acts as the screening filter — clearing it is the first major hurdle for every candidate. This guide focuses on Tier 1.
SSC CGL Tier 1 — Detailed Pattern
| Section | Questions | Marks |
|---|---|---|
| General Intelligence & Reasoning | 25 | 50 |
| General Awareness | 25 | 50 |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 25 | 50 |
| English Comprehension | 25 | 50 |
| Total | 100 | 200 |
Eligibility Criteria
- Nationality: Indian citizen (with separate provisions for Nepali, Bhutanese, and certain Tibetan refugees).
- Educational qualification: Bachelor's degree from a recognised university by the cut-off date in the notification.
- Post-specific extras: Some posts (e.g., Statistical Investigator, Junior Statistical Officer) require Maths/Statistics in graduation. Assistant Audit/Accounts Officer requires CA/CS/MBA-Finance/CFA-equivalent for direct entry to that post.
- Age limit (typically): 18 to 32 years, varies by post. Different upper limits for SC (+5), ST (+5), OBC (+3), PwD (+10), Ex-Servicemen, Departmental candidates (+5).
- Number of attempts: No upper cap on attempts within the age window for general category. Reserved categories effectively have age-based caps.
SSC CGL Tier 1 — Detailed Syllabus
Section 1: General Intelligence & Reasoning (25 Q × 2 = 50 marks)
Both verbal and non-verbal reasoning. Topics:
- Verbal: Analogy, classification (odd one out), series (number, alphabet, mixed), coding-decoding, mathematical operations puzzles, blood relations, direction sense, syllogism, statement-conclusion, ranking and ordering, calendar/clock problems.
- Non-verbal: Mirror image, water image, paper folding, paper cutting, embedded figures, figure series, completion of figures, cubes and dice, counting figures.
This is the most scoreable section if practised well — most questions are pattern-based and have unique correct answers.
Section 2: General Awareness (25 Q × 2 = 50 marks)
Broad-based static GK + current affairs. Distribution across:
- History: Ancient (Indus Valley, Vedic, Mauryas, Guptas), Medieval (Delhi Sultanate, Mughals, Marathas, Vijaynagara), Modern (British rule, freedom struggle, Independence).
- Geography: India (rivers, mountains, soils, climate, agriculture), World (continents, oceans, capitals, important geographical features).
- Polity: Indian Constitution (Preamble, Fundamental Rights, DPSP, key articles), Parliament, judiciary, important amendments, Panchayati Raj.
- Economy: Indian economy basics, banking (RBI, SEBI), budget terminology, government schemes, taxation (GST), financial inclusion.
- Science: Basic Physics, Chemistry, Biology (Class 8–10 NCERT level). Vitamin deficiencies, basic chemical formulas, scientific instruments, human body systems.
- Static GK: Awards, sports, books and authors, important days, currencies and capitals, organisations and HQs, dance forms, folk arts.
- Current affairs: Last 6–12 months — appointments, government schemes, sports events, awards, summits, defence/space updates.
Section 3: Quantitative Aptitude (25 Q × 2 = 50 marks)
- Number system, HCF/LCM, simplification, decimal-fraction conversion
- Percentages, profit-loss-discount, simple and compound interest
- Ratio & proportion, partnership, mixtures and alligations
- Time-work, time-distance, trains, boats and streams
- Geometry: triangles, circles, polygons, basic theorems
- Mensuration: area, perimeter, volume of 2D and 3D figures
- Trigonometry: ratios, identities, height-distance applications
- Algebra: linear and quadratic equations, polynomials, factorisation, algebraic identities
- Data Interpretation: tables, bar graphs, pie charts, line charts
- Average, age problems, number theory basics
Speed matters — you have ~36 seconds per question on average. Master shortcut techniques and Vedic Maths tricks alongside conceptual understanding.
Section 4: English Comprehension (25 Q × 2 = 50 marks)
- Spotting errors (subject-verb agreement, tenses, prepositions, articles, modifiers)
- Sentence improvement / sentence correction
- Synonyms and antonyms
- Idioms and phrases
- One-word substitutes
- Cloze test (fill-in-the-blanks within a passage)
- Para-jumbles (re-arranging shuffled sentences)
- Active/Passive voice transformation
- Direct/Indirect speech
- Reading comprehension (1–2 short passages with 5 questions each)
- Spelling corrections
Important Dates (Approximate)
- Notification: April–May
- Online application window: ~30 days after notification
- Tier 1 exam: June–July
- Tier 1 result: ~6 weeks after exam
- Tier 2 exam: September–October
- Tier 3 exam: December
- Final result: Following year — typically Feb–March
Preparation Strategy — A Realistic Roadmap
Phase 1: Foundation (Months 1–3)
Read NCERT Class 6–10 (History, Geography, Civics, Science) for static knowledge. Pick one standard reference book per section (suggestions below). Build the basics — don't rush. Solve topic-wise question sets after each chapter.
Phase 2: Concept + Sectional Practice (Months 4–6)
Move to subject-wise practice. Solve 50+ questions per topic. Maintain a 'mistakes notebook' — review weekly. Begin daily current affairs reading from The Hindu, Indian Express, or curated sources like StudyIQ, Affairs Cloud, or GK Today.
Phase 3: Mock Tests + Speed (Months 7–8)
Switch to full-length mocks. Aim for 4–6 mocks per week. Time pressure simulation matters as much as accuracy. After each mock: review every wrong answer, every guessed answer, every silly mistake. Track scores in a spreadsheet to spot improvement trends.
Phase 4: Revision + Strategy (Final Month)
Stop learning new topics. Revise the mistakes notebook end-to-end. Solve previous year SSC CGL papers (last 7 years minimum). Sleep well, eat right, manage stress — exam-day cognitive performance depends on rest.
Section-Wise Strategy in the Exam
You have 60 minutes total for 100 questions. Suggested allocation:
- General Awareness: 8–10 minutes (mostly recall — fast or skip)
- Reasoning: 12–15 minutes (high accuracy possible)
- English: 12–15 minutes (recall + comprehension)
- Quantitative Aptitude: 18–22 minutes (most time-consuming)
Most toppers attempt GA first (fast wins, builds confidence), then Reasoning, then English, then Quant. Skip difficult Quant questions on first pass and return if time permits.
Suggested Books
- Reasoning: R.S. Aggarwal 'Verbal & Non-Verbal Reasoning' → Kiran's SSC CGL Reasoning Chapter-wise.
- Quantitative Aptitude: R.S. Aggarwal 'Quantitative Aptitude' → Rakesh Yadav 7300 SSC Maths or Sarvesh Kumar Verma's Quantum CAT (Quant section).
- English: Norman Lewis 'Word Power Made Easy' → Wren & Martin 'High School English Grammar' → S.P. Bakshi 'Objective General English'.
- General Awareness: Lucent's General Knowledge → Manorama Yearbook → daily newspaper for current affairs.
- Practice: Disha or Arihant 'SSC CGL Previous Year Papers Chapter-wise Solved'.
Free Sample Questions (with Detailed Explanations)
Q1 (Reasoning). Find the next number: 3, 6, 11, 18, 27, ?
(b) 38
(c) 40
(d) 42
Q2 (Quantitative Aptitude). Simple interest on ₹5000 at 6% per annum for 3 years is:
(b) ₹700
(c) ₹800
(d) ₹900
Q3 (General Awareness). Who is known as the 'Father of the Indian Constitution'?
(b) Jawaharlal Nehru
(c) Dr. B.R. Ambedkar
(d) Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
Q4 (English). Choose the correct meaning of the idiom 'TO LET THE CAT OUT OF THE BAG':
(b) To reveal a secret
(c) To cause confusion
(d) To be lazy
Common Mistakes Aspirants Make
- Treating Tier 1 as just a screening test. Wrong — Tier 1 marks ARE counted in final selection (alongside Tier 2). A higher Tier 1 score gives serious cushion later.
- Over-attempting in the exam. Negative marking of 0.5 means a wrong answer is effectively a 2.5-mark loss compared to a correct one. Skip if your confidence is below ~60%.
- Neglecting GA / Current Affairs. 50 marks worth of recall — many students underprepare here. Make a 'one-page-per-month current affairs digest' from August onwards.
- Cramming without understanding. Especially in Quant — formulas without conceptual understanding fail when questions are slightly twisted. Always derive formulas at least once before memorising.
- Skipping mock test analysis. Taking 50 mocks without analysis is worse than taking 20 mocks WITH thorough analysis. Review every paper.
- Underestimating English. Many Hindi-medium aspirants leave English under-prepared and lose easy 50 marks.
- Inadequate sleep before the exam. A well-rested student outperforms a sleep-deprived one with the same prep.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is SSC CGL online or offline?
Tier 1 and Tier 2 are computer-based (online, CBT). Tier 3 is pen-and-paper (descriptive). Tier 4 is computer skill test (typing test or Excel/Word/PowerPoint).
What is the salary after SSC CGL selection?
Pay scale varies by post. Group B Gazetted posts (Asst Audit Officer, Asst Section Officer at MEA): ₹47,600 to ₹1,51,100 (Pay Level 8). Group B Non-Gazetted (Income Tax Inspector, Excise Inspector, etc.): ₹44,900 to ₹1,42,400 (Pay Level 7). With HRA, DA, and other allowances, gross monthly pay ranges from ₹55,000 to ₹95,000+ depending on city and post.
Can I prepare for SSC CGL in 6 months?
Possible if you study full-time (8–10 hours daily) AND have a strong base in basic Maths and English. Most full-time aspirants take 9–12 months. Working professionals usually take 12–18 months. Quality of preparation matters more than duration.
Is SSC CGL harder than UPSC?
Different exams. SSC CGL has a smaller syllabus and is more application-based (direct questions). UPSC has a vast syllabus, descriptive Mains, and an interview. SSC is harder on speed (60 min for 100 Qs), UPSC is harder on depth and breadth. Both are competitive — SSC has higher selection ratio than UPSC roughly 1:120 vs 1:1000.
Which post is the best in SSC CGL?
Most aspirants target Asst Audit Officer (CAG — fast promotions, audit profile), Asst Section Officer in MEA (postings abroad), Income Tax Inspector (good profile, regional posting), or Inspector of Customs/Central Excise (CBIC — well-known posts). Your preference list should balance growth, postings, work-life balance, and your own subject strength.
Do I need to know Hindi for SSC CGL?
No, SSC CGL Tier 1 is fully in English/Hindi (your choice). Most central postings function in English/Hindi mix. Knowledge of Hindi is helpful but not mandatory for selection.
Practice for SSC CGL — Free, Now
EkXam offers 2 full-length SSC CGL Tier 1 practice papers (200 questions total) covering all 4 sections with detailed step-by-step explanations. Time-bound mock practice. Free for everyone.
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