Free Daily Practice — SSC GD Constable Part B GK/GA

SSC GD Constable GK 2026 — Free Daily General Awareness Practice

SSC GD Constable is one of India's largest exams — over a crore aspirants, tens of thousands of vacancies in BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB, NIA, and Assam Rifles. Part B covers General Knowledge and General Awareness: 20 questions, 40 marks, fully counted in the merit. Build your daily GK habit here — 20 MCQs every day, no login, completely free.

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Why SSC GD General Awareness 2026 Deserves Its Own Strategy

SSC GD Constable is unlike most competitive exams you'll read about on coaching websites. The eligibility is Class 10 pass — no degree, no diploma required. The exam scale is enormous: SSC GD 2024 had over 39,000 vacancies and more than a crore applicants. And the job itself is not a desk role — selected candidates join India's paramilitary forces: BSF guards the western and eastern borders, CRPF handles internal security and counter-insurgency, CISF protects airports and critical infrastructure, ITBP is deployed at high-altitude Himalayan posts, and Assam Rifles operates in the Northeast. Knowing that context actually helps you prepare — the exam reflects the world it recruits for, and defence-related current affairs, border management news, and security force appointments appear in Part B GK/GA questions more consistently than in any other SSC exam.

The Computer Based Examination (CBE) has four parts, each with 20 questions worth 2 marks each — 80 questions, 160 marks, 60 minutes total. Part B (GK/GA) is fully counted in merit, not qualifying. This matters because every mark in Part B adds directly to your final score, and at a 0.5-mark negative per wrong answer, disciplined attempt selection pays off. The GK section sits at a genuine Class 10 level: expect questions on Indian history (freedom struggle and modern India), basic geography (rivers, national parks, passes), science (Class 8–10 level Biology, Physics, Chemistry), constitutional basics, and current affairs from the last 6–12 months.

The current affairs portion of Part B is where SSC GD questions diverge from SSC MTS or CHSL. You'll see questions specifically about CAPFs — the founding year or headquarters of CRPF, a recent appointment to a border force directorship, or a paramilitary welfare scheme. These are free marks for any aspirant who reads the GK sections of a good news digest. At the same time, 8–10 of the 20 GA questions are mainstream current affairs: government scheme launches, Padma Awards, Nobel Prize winners, important sports tournaments, and ISRO missions. So the preparation blend is: mainstream current affairs practice daily, NCERT static GK revision weekly, and a specific focus on paramilitary and defence current events.

One more thing worth saying upfront: SSC GD GK previous year questions with answers are one of the best preparation resources available. The 2021 and 2023 CBE papers are publicly available and the question patterns are highly consistent. Working through those papers with answer keys will show you exactly which topics repeat and at what depth. You'll quickly notice that the science questions sit firmly at Class 9–10 NCERT level, the history questions focus heavily on modern India, and the geography questions test factual India knowledge rather than analytical map reading. Let that guide your revision priorities.

SSC GD Constable 2026 — Exam Pattern & GK Syllabus at a Glance

One CBE, four parts, 80 questions, 160 marks, 60 minutes. All four parts count toward merit — no qualifying-only sections. Part B (GK/GA) is 20 questions, 40 marks, with 0.25-mark negative per wrong answer. Every correct GA answer adds 2 marks to your rank score.

20

GK Questions (Part B)

40

GK Marks

60 min

Total Exam Duration

−0.25

Negative Marking

GK/GA Topic-wise Split — SSC GD Part B (20 Questions)

Current Affairs (last 6–12 months) 8–10 questions

Government scheme launches, Padma and sports awards, ISRO missions, defence milestones, sports championships, CAPF appointments, India bilateral summits, and important national days with themes

Browse daily quizzes →
History (Modern India focus) 3–4 questions

Freedom struggle 1857–1947 carries the most weight. Congress sessions, Gandhi movements, Subhas Chandra Bose and INA, partition. Ancient and medieval are secondary — one question at most each

History GK →
Science (Biology, Physics, Chemistry) 2–3 questions

Biology dominates: human body systems, diseases and causative agents, vitamins and deficiency diseases. Physics covers basic laws and SI units. Class 8–10 NCERT is the exact right level

Science GK →
Geography, Polity & Govt Schemes 5–6 questions (combined)

Physical India (rivers, national parks, passes, soil types), Constitution basics (Fundamental Rights, Parliament), and flagship schemes (PM-KISAN, Ayushman Bharat, MGNREGS, Ujjwala)

Polity GK →

SSC GD Constable Key Facts — 2026

Eligibility: 10th pass, age 18–23

Only a Class 10 (Matriculation) certificate required — no degree or diploma. Age limit 18–23 years, with standard relaxations (OBC: 3 years, SC/ST: 5 years). Physical and medical standards apply post-CBE.

Salary: ₹21,700–₹69,100/month

Pay Level 3 (7th CPC). Basic pay starts at ₹21,700 + HRA + TA + DA. Paramilitary allowances, free accommodation at posting, and CGHS medical benefits. NPS pension applies.

Vacancies: 26,000–45,000 per cycle

One of India's largest government recruitments. Posts span BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB, NIA, SSF, and Assam Rifles. Exam conducted annually — notification typically October–November, CBE January–March.

SSC GD GK 2026 — Subject-wise Breakdown and What to Study

Twenty questions across five subject areas. Here's exactly where to focus your preparation time — based on actual question distribution from SSC GD Constable CBE papers.

Current Affairs — 8–10 Questions

The largest single slice of SSC GD Part B. Cover the 6–12 months before the exam, with deepest focus on the last 4 months. Priority areas: Union Budget key allocations and new scheme names, government scheme launches (note the ministry, beneficiary group, and financial figure), Padma Award winners, national sports award recipients (Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, Arjuna Award), ICC and major sports championship results, India bilateral agreements, ISRO mission outcomes (mission name, payload, orbit type), Cabinet and constitutional appointments, and important national days with their annual themes. An often-underserved area unique to SSC GD: CAPF-specific news — appointments of Directors General, new deployments, and paramilitary welfare scheme launches. These are free marks for candidates who track defence-related current affairs.

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History — 3–4 Questions

Modern India is the priority — the freedom struggle from the 1857 Revolt of Sepoys through to Independence and partition in 1947. High-yield events: the 1857 Revolt (immediate and long-term causes), the formation of the Indian National Congress in 1885 by A.O. Hume, Gandhi's three major movements (Non-Cooperation 1920–22, Civil Disobedience 1930, Quit India 1942), the role of Bhagat Singh and the Revolutionary movement, and Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army. Ancient India contributes roughly one question (Mauryan Empire, Ashoka, Buddhism basics). Medieval India contributes one question at most (Delhi Sultanate, Mughal rulers, Bhakti movement). Devote 60% of history study time to modern India — it has the highest return per hour for SSC GD.

History GK →

Science — 2–3 Questions

Biology gives the best return per hour and accounts for most science questions in SSC GD. Human body systems (digestive, circulatory, respiratory, nervous), diseases and their causative agents (malaria — Plasmodium — Anopheles; dengue — Aedes mosquito; cholera — Vibrio cholerae), vitamins and deficiency diseases (A: night blindness; B12: pernicious anaemia; C: scurvy; D: rickets), and plant biology basics. Physics adds 1 question occasionally: Newton's laws of motion, laws of reflection, basic electrical concepts, and SI units. Chemistry rounds out with 1 question: acids and bases, common compounds (CO2 in fizzy drinks, H2SO4 as battery acid, NaHCO3 as baking soda), and periodic table basics. Class 8–10 NCERT Science textbooks cover everything you need — nothing beyond that is required.

Science & Tech GK →

Geography — 2–3 Questions

Physical geography of India is the core: major rivers and their tributaries (Ganga, Brahmaputra, Godavari, Krishna, Cauvery), important mountain passes (Nathu La on the Sikkim-China border, Rohtang in Himachal Pradesh, Zoji La in J&K, Shipki La), major national parks and wildlife sanctuaries (which animal each is known for — Kaziranga for one-horned rhino, Jim Corbett for tigers, Gir for Asiatic lions), soil types in India (alluvial soils in Indo-Gangetic Plain, black cotton soil in Deccan, red soil in Eastern India, laterite in Western Ghats), Indian states and their capitals, and longest/largest geographical features. World geography appears at a basic level — major countries and their capitals, continents and oceans. Class 6–10 NCERT Geography covers all of this at exactly the right level.

Geography GK →

Indian Polity & Constitution — 2–3 Questions

SSC GD tests polity at a foundational level — no obscure amendments or procedural minutiae. High-yield areas: the Preamble and its key words (Socialist, Secular, Democratic, Republic), the six Fundamental Rights under Articles 12–35 (particularly Article 19: freedom of speech, and Article 21: right to life and personal liberty), the Directive Principles of State Policy (non-justiciable but fundamental to governance), Parliament composition (Lok Sabha — 543 elected seats; Rajya Sabha — maximum 250 seats), the President's powers and role vs the Prime Minister's role, and the Emergency provisions under Articles 352 (National Emergency), 356 (President's Rule), and 360 (Financial Emergency). The 73rd Amendment (Panchayati Raj) and 74th Amendment (Urban Local Bodies) appear frequently. Class 9–10 NCERT Democratic Politics covers all of this completely.

Polity & Constitution GK →

Awards, Schemes & Important Days — 3–4 Questions

Awards are reliable scorers — expect 1–2 questions on Padma Awards (Bharat Ratna, Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan, Padma Shri — note recipients from the current year), Nobel Prize winners from the current cycle, national sports awards (Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, Arjuna Award, Dronacharya Award, Dhyan Chand Award), and Sahitya Akademi awards. Government schemes appear in 1–2 questions: PM-KISAN (₹6,000 per year in three instalments to farmer families — Ministry of Agriculture), Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY (₹5 lakh health cover — Ministry of Health), MGNREGS (100 days guaranteed employment — Ministry of Rural Development), and PM Ujjwala Yojana (free LPG connections to BPL families). Important Days also feature — know the annual theme for World Environment Day, International Yoga Day (June 21), National Science Day (February 28), and Armed Forces Flag Day (December 7).

Awards & Schemes GK →

SSC GD Current Affairs MCQ 2026 — Latest Daily Sets

Each set has 20 questions from that day's current affairs — the same topics that appear in SSC GD Part B GA. Attempt cold first, then read every explanation including the ones you got right. The adjacent facts in explanations often show up as standalone questions in the actual paper.

Monthly Current Affairs Archive — SSC GD GK 2026

Use the monthly archive for systematic current affairs revision. SSC GD draws from 6–12 months before the exam — the months closest to your exam date have the highest question probability, but don't ignore the earlier months entirely.

SSC GD Constable GK Preparation 2026 — What Actually Works

The single biggest mistake SSC GD aspirants make with GK preparation is treating it like a scaled-down version of SSC CGL or SSC CHSL. It isn't. SSC GD tests factual recall at a genuine Class 10 level — specific, direct, and largely memory-based. What this means in practice is that your source material should match: NCERT textbooks from Class 6 to 10, not coaching material written for graduation-level exams. Many aspirants study from dense notes intended for UPSC Prelims and find the SSC GD questions easier in isolation but confusing in bulk because they've overprepared in the wrong direction. Use the right tool for the job.

The current affairs component — roughly 8–10 of the 20 GK questions — is where consistent daily effort pays the biggest dividend. Think about it: if you practice 20 current affairs MCQs every single day for 90 days before the exam, you've rehearsed 1,800 questions covering virtually every major event in a three-month window. The events that actually appear in the SSC GD paper are a small subset of what happens in the news cycle, and they cluster predictably around government scheme launches, awards, appointments, sports, and India's foreign policy milestones. A daily quiz habit — cold attempts, then reading all explanations — builds the recall pattern for exactly these topics without requiring you to memorise raw facts from news articles.

Static GK preparation deserves a structured approach across the 10–12 questions it contributes. Divide your subjects into weekly blocks: spend one week on modern Indian history (NCERT Class 8 and 9), the next on geography (NCERT Class 6–10), the next on polity (Class 9–10 Democratic Politics), and the next on science (Class 8–10). Rotate through subjects rather than doing all of one subject in one go — interleaving improves long-term retention significantly. Within history, allocate 60% of your time to modern India (1857–1947 freedom struggle) because that's where SSC GD consistently draws from. Ancient and medieval history are secondary.

The negative marking in SSC GD CBE is 0.25 per wrong answer — much milder than SSC MTS's 1-mark penalty or even SSC CGL's 0.50 penalty. This changes the optimal strategy: the expected value of guessing when you can eliminate even one option is positive. In practice, you should attempt every question where you can rule out at least one of the four options, and only leave blank the questions where all four options are genuinely unknown territory. With 60 minutes for 80 questions, time pressure is also relatively low — SSC GD CBE rewards accuracy over speed, but it's rarely a race. Use your time, don't guess blindly, but don't leave easy marks on the table.

One area specific to SSC GD Constable preparation that generic GK guides overlook: knowing the basics of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs). The headquarters of each force (CRPF: New Delhi, BSF: New Delhi, CISF: New Delhi, ITBP: New Delhi, SSB: New Delhi, Assam Rifles: Shillong), their founding years (CRPF is the oldest, established in 1939 as Crown Representative's Police), their primary roles (BSF — border security with Pakistan and Bangladesh; CISF — industrial and critical infrastructure security; ITBP — Indo-Tibet border), and current Directors General are all fair game for Part B questions. Spend 2 hours specifically on CAPF facts before the exam — it's a unique edge that most general GK guides don't give you.

6-Step Daily Study Habit for SSC GD Constable Aspirants

Built around two streams — current affairs practice daily and static GK from NCERTs weekly. Total daily time: under 45 minutes. Regularity is the whole game with SSC GD GK.

1 15 min

Morning: Attempt Today's Current Affairs Quiz Cold

Before checking any news, attempt the daily 20-question current affairs MCQ quiz. Cold attempts — without warm-up or pre-reading — surface your real recall gaps more accurately than warmed-up attempts. Don't spend more than 30 seconds per question. Getting questions wrong is useful data: it shows exactly where your memory needs reinforcement, not where you already know things.

2 10 min

Read Every Explanation — Including Correct Answers

After submitting, read every explanation — not just the wrong ones. SSC GD frequently tests adjacent facts. The explanation for a question about an Arjuna Award winner might mention that player's sport and home state, both of which become standalone questions in the actual paper. Reading all explanations doubles your information gain from each quiz session without doubling your time.

3 20 min

NCERT Static GK — One Chapter Per Day, Rotating

Pick one chapter from your NCERT rotation: history one day, geography the next, polity the day after, then science. Spend 20 minutes reading actively — note every fact that could be turned into a multiple-choice question. Keep the notes short: two or three bullet points per page maximum. Rotating subjects daily (interleaving) builds stronger retention than spending three consecutive days on one subject.

4 30 min

Previous Year Paper — One Part B Section, Timed

Three times a week, attempt the 20-question Part B (GK/GA) section from an SSC GD previous year CBE paper under exam conditions — 15 minutes, pen and paper, no looking up. Apply the 0.25 negative marking rule before calculating your score. Review every mistake against the NCERT source. Tracking your score week over week is the only honest indicator of whether your preparation is working.

5 10 min

CAPF Facts and Scheme Flashcards

Maintain 30–40 flashcards for the most forgettable hard facts: CAPF founding years and headquarters, constitutional article numbers (Article 21, Article 32, Article 356), classical dance forms and their states (Bharatanatyam — Tamil Nadu, Kathak — UP/Rajasthan, Odissi — Odisha), vitamins and deficiency diseases, and key government scheme figures. Review ten cards daily. Remove cards you answer correctly five times in a row and add one new card from that day's quiz.

6 Weekly

Sunday: Full Mock CBE + Defence News Review

Every Sunday, take a complete 80-question mock CBE in 60 minutes with full negative marking applied. Calculate your score honestly across all four parts. Then spend 15 minutes reviewing defence and paramilitary current news from the week — any new CAPF deployments, appointments, or government announcements. These compound over months: after 10 weeks you'll have a strong recall base for the CAPF-specific questions that most general prep materials skip entirely.

Also Preparing For?

SSC GD GK preparation overlaps significantly with these exams — the same daily current affairs habit and NCERT static GK foundation covers multiple papers at once.

Exams covered

SSC GD Constable CRPF BSF CISF ITBP SSB Delhi Police Constable UP Police Constable RRB Group D SSC MTS

Frequently Asked Questions — SSC GD Constable GK 2026

Does the GK/GA section (Part B) in SSC GD 2026 count toward the final merit, or is it just qualifying?
Part B — General Knowledge and General Awareness — is fully counted in the final merit for SSC GD Constable. There is no purely qualifying section in the CBE: all four parts (Part A: Reasoning, Part B: GK/GA, Part C: Mathematics, Part D: English/Hindi) contribute to your total score of 160 marks, and that total determines your rank. This is a key difference from SSC MTS, where Session 1 is purely qualifying. In SSC GD, every single GA question you get right adds 2 marks to your final score, and every wrong answer deducts 0.5 marks. Treat Part B with the same seriousness as any other section — candidates who score 15–18 out of 20 in GA routinely outrank those who score 10–12, even when other sections are equal.
How many current affairs questions actually come in SSC GD GK/GA — is it mostly static GK?
Based on analysis of SSC GD Constable CBE papers from 2018, 2021, and 2023, current affairs questions account for roughly 8–10 out of the 20 Part B questions. The remaining 10–12 come from static GK — history (especially modern India), geography, science, polity, and culture. The current affairs questions tend to cover government scheme launches, awards (Padma and national sports awards), sports championships, ISRO and defence milestones, important international summits, and appointments. Because the exam recruits paramilitary forces, there is often 1–2 questions specifically on defence organisations, border forces, or national security-related current events. Don't neglect static GK in favour of only current affairs — both halves matter.
What is the negative marking rule in SSC GD 2026 and how should I handle it strategically?
The negative marking for SSC GD Constable CBE is 0.5 marks (half a mark) per wrong answer, against a correct answer value of 2 marks. This is a relatively mild penalty — milder than SSC MTS Session 2 (1 mark per wrong) and similar in ratio to SSC CGL (0.5 per wrong in Tier 1). The practical implication is that you need to get at least one correct answer to "pay for" every two wrong ones. A useful threshold: if you can eliminate two of the four options and narrow it down to two, the expected value of guessing is slightly positive — go ahead. If you genuinely have no idea about a question, skip it. Most candidates should target attempting at least 70 of the 80 questions, focusing on accuracy over speed. SSC GD typically has a generous time allocation (60 minutes for 80 questions), so rushing is rarely the issue.
Which NCERT class textbooks are sufficient for SSC GD GK preparation?
Class 6 to Class 10 NCERTs cover the static GK portion of SSC GD GA at exactly the right depth — you don't need anything from Class 11 or 12. For History, focus on Class 8 (Our Pasts III — 1857, Congress, partition), Class 9 (India and the Contemporary World), and Class 10 (India and the Contemporary World II) to cover modern Indian history solidly. For Geography, Class 6–10 covers physical India, rivers, and basic world geography. For Polity, Class 9 Democratic Politics I and Class 10 Democratic Politics II are essential. For Science, Class 8–10 Science textbooks cover the biology, physics, and chemistry at the right level. The one area NCERTs can't help with is current affairs — for that, daily MCQ practice covering the 6–12 months before the exam is the most efficient approach.
What science topics are asked in SSC GD — is it split evenly between Physics, Chemistry, and Biology?
No, Biology dominates the science questions in SSC GD. Out of the 2–3 science questions typically appearing in Part B, Biology contributes the most consistently: human body systems (digestive, circulatory, respiratory, nervous), common diseases and their causative agents (malaria is caused by Plasmodium via Anopheles mosquito, tuberculosis by Mycobacterium tuberculosis), vitamins and deficiency diseases (Vitamin A causes night blindness, Vitamin C causes scurvy, Vitamin D causes rickets), and plant biology basics. Physics contributes 1 question occasionally on Newton's laws, optics, or SI units. Chemistry contributes 1 question on acids and bases, common compounds (what gas is released when baking soda reacts with acid — CO2), or periodic table basics. Study Biology first — it gives the highest return per hour. Class 9 and 10 NCERT Science covers all of this completely.
How far back should I cover current affairs for SSC GD 2026?
Cover the 6–12 months immediately before the exam date, with the deepest focus on the last 4 months. Unlike UPSC Prelims (which draws from 18–24 months of current affairs), SSC GD has a tighter window — events from 6–9 months before the exam are the sweet spot. Priority topics within this window: Union Budget key highlights, government scheme launches (note the ministry, beneficiary group, and key financial figure), Padma Award recipients, national sports award winners (Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, Arjuna Award), major ICC tournament results, India's bilateral agreements with neighbouring countries and major powers, ISRO mission outcomes (mission name, payload, orbit), and appointments to constitutional positions like Chief Justice of India, Election Commission, and CAG. Events from 10–12 months back are worth a quick pass — one or two questions can still come from that window, but the probability is lower.
Is SSC GD GK harder than SSC MTS or SSC CHSL — how does the difficulty compare?
SSC GD GK is broadly comparable in difficulty to SSC MTS GA, and noticeably easier than SSC CHSL or SSC CGL GA. All three tests are at Class 10 level, but SSC GD questions tend to be more direct and factual — "Who is the current Chief of CRPF?" or "Which ISRO mission reached the Moon in 2023?" — whereas CHSL and CGL questions sometimes require connecting two facts or interpreting a brief scenario. SSC GD's shorter GK section (20 questions vs 25 for MTS and CHSL) also means the topic coverage is less exhaustive — you're less likely to see an obscure historical detail or a boundary-pushing science question. The flip side is that on SSC GD, you can't afford to drop marks in GK and compensate in a longer section — with only 20 questions, each one counts more in percentage terms. Consistent daily current affairs practice and 2–3 weeks of NCERT revision is generally sufficient.
How many vacancies are typically announced for SSC GD Constable — is this really one of India's biggest exams?
Yes, SSC GD Constable is genuinely one of the largest recruitment examinations in India by both applicant count and vacancy size. The SSC GD 2021 notification had 25,271 vacancies. The SSC GD 2022 notification jumped to 45,284 vacancies. The SSC GD 2023 notification announced 26,146 vacancies. The SSC GD 2024 cycle brought 39,481 vacancies. Applicant counts routinely exceed one crore (10 million), making it one of the most competitive by absolute numbers even if the per-vacancy odds are actually more favourable than UPSC. The posts span BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB, NIA, SSF, and Assam Rifles — each with different state-wise postings and allowances. The exam is typically conducted annually, with the notification released in October–November and the CBE held in January–March.
Which government schemes and paramilitary-specific topics are commonly asked in SSC GD GA?
SSC GD GA tests two layers of government scheme knowledge. The first is the same pool that all SSC exams draw from: PM-KISAN (₹6,000 per year to farmer families in three instalments — Ministry of Agriculture), Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY (₹5 lakh health cover per family — Ministry of Health), MGNREGS (100 days guaranteed employment — Ministry of Rural Development), and PM Ujjwala Yojana (free LPG to BPL families). The second layer is specific to security forces: schemes related to the welfare of paramilitary and defence personnel, the CAPF welfare portal, or specific constitutional provisions relating to security forces. Additionally, SSC GD GA uniquely tends to include 1–2 questions on the founding years, headquarters, or DG (Director General) of the CAPFs (CRPF, BSF, CISF, ITBP, SSB). These are easy marks that go to candidates who treat SSC GD as its own exam rather than a lighter version of SSC CGL.
How can DailyGK's daily quizzes help me specifically for SSC GD Constable GK preparation?
DailyGK's 20-question daily current affairs quizzes are directly useful for the 8–10 current affairs questions in SSC GD Part B GA. The topics covered — government scheme launches, awards and appointments, sports results, ISRO and defence milestones, India's foreign policy events, and important national days with their themes — map almost exactly onto what SSC GD tests in current affairs. The MCQ format builds active recall, which is the skill the actual exam rewards: you retrieve the answer under time pressure, not recognise it from a reading passage. One thing to know: DailyGK's daily quizzes cover current affairs specifically, not static GK. For the history, geography, polity, and science portion of SSC GD GA, supplement with NCERT Class 6–10 revision. The ideal preparation routine pairs 15 minutes of daily MCQ practice on DailyGK with 20–30 minutes of NCERT static GK reading — that combination covers the full 20-question Part B section systematically.