Free Daily Practice

UPSC Current Affairs MCQ Questions 2026

One quiz. Twenty questions. Every day. The fastest way to stay ahead of the current affairs curve for UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, RRB NTPC, and state PSC exams — all in one place, completely free.

Today's Quiz
213 daily quizzes 4260+ MCQ questions Updated every day 100% free — no login

Why UPSC Current Affairs MCQ Practice is Non-Negotiable in 2026

Ask any UPSC topper what made the difference in their Prelims preparation, and almost all of them will say the same thing: consistent daily current affairs practice. Not occasional newspaper skimming. Not last-minute cramming before the exam. Daily, disciplined, MCQ-format practice.

Here's the reality. UPSC Prelims GS Paper I typically has 18 to 22 questions that are directly linked to current events — government schemes, appointments, international agreements, science missions, awards, and economic data. That's roughly 18 to 22 marks out of 200. At the cutoff level, where students miss the final list by 2 or 3 marks, this section can be the deciding factor.

What makes current affairs tricky for UPSC is that the exam doesn't just test raw facts. It tests contextual understanding. A question about a new government scheme won't just ask you the scheme's name — it'll ask which ministry runs it, what constitutional provision it sits under, or how it relates to an existing policy. That depth of understanding only comes from reading explanations alongside MCQ answers, not from reading news headlines alone.

DailyGK publishes UPSC current affairs MCQ questions 2026 every single day — 20 questions drawn from the previous day's most significant news, each with a detailed explanation that gives you the "why" behind the correct answer. Over six months of daily practice, that's over 3,600 exam-level questions — without spending a rupee or creating an account.

UPSC Prelims 2026 — Exam Pattern & Current Affairs Syllabus

UPSC Civil Services Prelims has two papers. Only GS Paper I marks count for Mains eligibility — CSAT (Paper II) is qualifying only (minimum 33%). Here's the exact structure and what it means for your current affairs preparation.

100

GS Paper I Questions

200

Total Marks

2 Hours

Time

0.67/wrong

Negative Marking

GS Paper I — Subject-wise Weightage (based on 2023–2025 analysis)

Environment & Ecology 15–17 questions

Protected areas, biodiversity treaties (Ramsar, CITES, CBD), climate conventions

Practice →
Indian Polity & Governance 14–16 questions

Constitutional articles, amendments, CAG, Election Commission, Supreme Court

Practice →
Economy 14–16 questions

Budget terms, monetary policy, inflation, GDP, flagship schemes (PM-KISAN, MGNREGS)

Practice →
Geography (India + World) 12–15 questions

River systems, mountain passes, soil types, cyclones, physical geography

Practice →
Current Affairs / Intl. Relations 10–20 questions

Highly variable — can be as low as 1 or as high as 24 in any given year

Practice →
History (Ancient + Medieval + Modern) 12–15 questions

Temple architecture, freedom struggle, social reform movements, Mughal period

Practice →
Science & Technology 8–12 questions

ISRO missions, defence tech, biotech, health policy, new discoveries

Practice →
Art & Culture 5–8 questions

Classical dance forms, UNESCO heritage sites, Sangam literature, folk arts

Practice →

Current Affairs Preparation Window & Strategy

How many months?

Cover 12–18 months before exam. Most heavily tested window: last 12 months. Some ongoing events (geopolitical, climate) reference up to 24 months prior.

Current Affairs vs Static GK

Current affairs typically 10–20% of the paper (10–20 questions). Static GK and applied knowledge dominate the rest (~80–85 questions).

UPSC's Unique Pattern

UPSC often tests current events through a static lens — a news event becomes a question about the underlying constitutional provision or ecological concept. Both layers matter.

Important Current Affairs Topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 — What the Exam Actually Tests

UPSC doesn't set questions randomly. There are recurring topic areas that appear cycle after cycle. Knowing where to focus makes your preparation sharper and less overwhelming.

Government Schemes & Policies

New central schemes, flagship programmes, budget allocations, and policy amendments. Questions often link scheme names to the ministry, beneficiaries, or constitutional basis. Examples in 2026: PM housing schemes, digital India initiatives, agricultural support programmes.

Polity GK →

International Affairs & Summits

India's bilateral agreements, multilateral summits (G20, BRICS, SCO, QUAD), and foreign policy moves. The 2026 exam window has several high-profile events worth tracking — especially India's engagements in the Indo-Pacific and South Asia.

Browse all quizzes →

Science, Space & Technology

ISRO missions, defence technology milestones, new scientific discoveries, and India's space diplomacy. UPSC loves questions that connect current S&T events to broader policy — like why a particular satellite matters for national security or agriculture.

Science & Tech GK →

Economy & Finance

RBI decisions, GDP data, inflation trends, Union Budget highlights, and new economic schemes. UPSC often tests the connection between current economic events and fundamental economic concepts — which makes combining current affairs practice with static economy MCQs especially powerful.

Economy GK →

Awards, Honours & Appointments

National and international awards, Padma honours, Nobel prizes, and new appointments to constitutional and statutory bodies. These are high-frequency UPSC questions because they're easy to verify and often connect to the broader significance of the awardee's work.

Awards GK →

Environment & Ecology

Climate agreements, wildlife conservation milestones, national park notifications, pollution data, and India's net-zero commitments. Environment questions in UPSC often require you to connect a current event to a treaty, an act, or a constitutional provision — making contextual explanations essential.

Geography GK →

Daily Current Affairs Quiz for UPSC Prelims 2026 — Latest Sets

Each quiz below is a 20-question set pulled from that day's news. Click any date to attempt the quiz — answers and explanations are revealed as you go. No timer pressure. Learn at your own pace.

Monthly Current Affairs MCQ Compilation for UPSC & SSC

Each month's archive is a complete set of daily quizzes rolled up into one view — perfect for catching up, weekend revision, or the final sprint before an exam. If you missed a few days, jump straight to the month and work through what you missed.

Current Affairs Multiple Choice Questions with Answers UPSC — Why MCQ Format Beats Passive Reading

A lot of UPSC aspirants fall into the same trap: they read The Hindu every morning, feel productive, and then blank out when they see actual exam questions. The problem isn't the reading — it's that passive reading and active recall are completely different cognitive processes. Reading something and being able to answer questions about it under exam conditions are not the same skill.

Current affairs multiple choice questions with answers force your brain to actively retrieve information, not just recognise it. This distinction matters enormously for exam performance. Research on spaced repetition consistently shows that attempting recall — even when you get it wrong — is far more effective for memory consolidation than re-reading the same material.

Here's a practical workflow that combines both approaches. Spend 10 minutes each morning on DailyGK's daily quiz — attempt all 20 questions cold, before reading any news. Then read the explanations for every question, including the ones you got right. The explanations add the contextual layer that pure MCQ practice lacks. After that, spend 10 minutes skimming the day's top stories in a newspaper or news app — but now you're reading to fill in gaps you just identified in the quiz, which makes the information stick far more effectively.

This 20-minute daily routine — quiz first, then news — is what several UPSC toppers describe when they talk about their current affairs strategy. It's not glamorous, but it compounds. After six months, you'll have attempted over 3,600 exam-level questions and read explanations for every single one of them. That depth of exposure is hard to beat.

How to Build a 15-Minute Daily Current Affairs Habit for UPSC 2026

Consistency beats intensity every time in UPSC preparation. Here's a routine that actually works — no 3-hour sessions, no guilt about missed days.

1 5 min

Attempt the Quiz Cold

Open today's quiz without reading the news first. Getting questions wrong here is fine — it's the most efficient way to identify what you don't know and make your brain engage actively.

2 5 min

Read Every Explanation

After submitting, read each explanation carefully — especially for questions you got wrong. This is where the real learning happens. The explanation gives you exam-level context, not just the surface fact.

3 3 min

Bridge to Static GK

If you missed an economy question, spend two minutes on the Economy GK section. If you missed a science question, check the Science & Tech MCQs. Current affairs and static GK reinforce each other.

4 2 min

Note It, Don't Rewrite It

Keep a simple running list of topics you've missed more than once. Not lengthy notes — just a keyword (e.g., "IONS chairmanship", "RBI Payment Vision 2028"). Review this list once a week.

5 Weekend

Re-attempt the Week's Quizzes

On Sunday, go through the last 7 days of quizzes at speed. You'll notice you now get 16 to 18 right instead of 12 to 14. That improvement builds confidence and locks in the material.

6 Pre-exam

Use the Monthly Archive

Three weeks before the exam, use the monthly archive to go through the last 4 to 6 months rapidly. Focus on questions you flagged, and download the monthly PDF from our Telegram channel for offline revision.

Combining Current Affairs with Static GK — The Edge Most Aspirants Miss

One of the most underrated strategies for UPSC current affairs preparation is using current events as entry points into static GK topics. When a question comes up about a new port development in Odisha, that's also a geography question. When UPSC asks about a constitutional amendment relating to a scheme, that's also a polity question. The boundary between current affairs and static GK is blurrier than most people think.

DailyGK's static GK section is designed to work alongside the daily current affairs quiz. If you're finding economy questions hard, the Economy MCQs cover everything from Five-Year Plans to monetary policy. If science and technology questions are a weak spot, the Science & Technology GK section will fill those gaps systematically. The Polity and History sections similarly complement the current affairs topics that come up repeatedly in Prelims.

The combination approach — daily current affairs practice plus targeted static GK revision based on your weak areas — is what turns a 100/200 Prelims score into a 130/200. That difference is where most candidates land on the wrong side of the cutoff.

Exams covered

UPSC Prelims GS-I UPSC Mains GS-II UPSC Mains GS-III SSC CGL General Awareness SSC CHSL SSC MTS RRB NTPC RRB Group D RRB JE IBPS PO IBPS Clerk SBI PO SBI Clerk State PSC Prelims NDA GK CDS GK CAPF GK

What UPSC Actually Asked in 2024 & 2025 — And What It Means for 2026

UPSC doesn't repeat questions, but it absolutely repeats themes. Here's what the last two cycles tell us about where to focus in 2026.

UPSC 2024 — Key Current Affairs Themes

  • Space missions dominated — ISRO missions, international space treaties, lunar diplomacy
  • Climate and environment saw 4–5 questions: COP28, loss & damage fund, India net-zero pledges
  • Government schemes tested contextually — not names, but beneficiaries and ministry links
  • India-China border dynamics appeared across GS-II and GS-III
  • Women-led development was a recurring theme — scheme linkages and constitutional provisions

UPSC 2025 — Key Current Affairs Themes

  • Geopolitics-heavy year — SCO, QUAD, ASEAN, and India's multilateral positioning
  • Economy questions shifted toward inequality data, digital economy, and financial inclusion metrics
  • Biodiversity and wildlife conservation featured prominently — conventions, protected areas
  • Science questions became more applied — quantum computing, semiconductors, AI governance
  • Constitutional bodies and their recent decisions were tested with nuance

What this means for UPSC Prelims 2026

Environment, geopolitics, and applied science are the three areas gaining weight every cycle. Economy questions are moving away from textbook definitions toward current data — RBI reports, NSSO surveys, budget allocations. Cover these themes daily through current affairs practice, and pair each topic with its static GK foundation using the Static GK sections.

Also Preparing For?

These pages cover overlapping topics — one smart preparation strategy works across all of them.

Frequently Asked Questions — UPSC Current Affairs MCQ 2026

How many current affairs questions appear in UPSC Prelims 2026?
Historically, UPSC Prelims GS Paper I carries 15 to 25 questions directly linked to current affairs. In recent years — 2022, 2023, and 2024 — that number has consistently been between 18 and 22. Subjects like government schemes, international relations, environment summits, and science missions are the most frequently tested. That's why daily MCQ practice covering all these areas is so critical.
Which months' current affairs are most important for UPSC Prelims 2026?
For UPSC Prelims 2026, focus on current affairs from roughly June 2025 through May 2026. The highest-weight months are February (Union Budget), March (year-end government reviews), and months with major international summits. The UPSC notification typically mentions the cutoff period — always cover at least 12 months back from the exam date.
Is daily current affairs quiz practice enough for UPSC Prelims 2026?
Daily MCQ practice is necessary but works best alongside newspaper reading and static GK revision. Use DailyGK's 20-question quiz to simulate exam conditions every morning, then read explanations carefully to build context. Once a week, revisit missed questions. This combination — daily quiz, deep explanation reading, and weekly revision — is what most successful UPSC candidates follow.
Are DailyGK current affairs quizzes useful for SSC CGL and RRB NTPC too?
Yes, fully. The topics covered — government schemes, appointments, sports achievements, science missions, awards, and economic data — are the same topics that appear in SSC CGL Tier I General Awareness, SSC CHSL, and RRB NTPC General Awareness sections. The MCQ format also mirrors these exams exactly. UPSC aspirants who practice here get SSC and RRB preparation as a bonus.
How often are new UPSC current affairs MCQ questions added?
A fresh 20-question quiz is published every single day, covering the previous day's most significant news events. Monthly compilations are available in the archive. Since 2026 started, DailyGK has published 213 daily quizzes — totalling over 4260 MCQ questions — all free, no login required.
What is the best way to revise current affairs before UPSC Prelims?
Two to three weeks before Prelims, go through the monthly archives on this page and re-attempt quizzes from the last 6 months. Focus on questions you got wrong the first time. Also revisit the static GK sections — polity, economy, geography, and science — since UPSC often connects current events back to fundamental concepts. A quick-revision PDF is available on the DailyGK Telegram channel.
What are the most repeated current affairs themes in UPSC Prelims 2026?
Environment and ecology, government schemes (especially their ministry linkages and constitutional basis), science and technology missions, and India's foreign policy positioning are the themes that appear cycle after cycle. In recent years, UPSC has also increased questions on economic data — GDP components, financial inclusion metrics, and RBI policy decisions. Tracking these themes daily through MCQ practice, rather than trying to memorise headlines, is the most efficient preparation approach.
How is UPSC current affairs different from SSC or RRB current affairs?
UPSC tests contextual understanding — a question about a new scheme will ask about the ministry, constitutional provision, or policy objective, not just the name. SSC and RRB test factual recall: dates, locations, names, and numbers. This means UPSC preparation is more layered, but it also means that someone who prepares for UPSC current affairs can answer SSC and RRB questions easily — the reverse is less reliable.
Should I attempt DailyGK quizzes before or after reading the newspaper?
Before — always. Attempting the quiz cold forces active recall, which is far more effective for memory than passive reading. When you get a question wrong because you didn't read that day's news, that failure creates a learning trigger. Then when you read the explanation, the information sticks. Read the newspaper after the quiz to fill gaps you identified, not as a pre-quiz warm-up.
What is the UPSC Prelims 2026 exam pattern?
UPSC Civil Services Prelims has two papers held on the same day. GS Paper I: 100 questions, 200 marks, 2 hours, negative marking of 0.67 per wrong answer. GS Paper II (CSAT): 80 questions, 200 marks, 2 hours — qualifying only, minimum 33% required, marks not counted in merit. Only GS Paper I marks determine Mains eligibility and cutoff ranking. Each correct answer in GS Paper I carries 2 marks. Environment and Ecology, Polity, Economy, and Geography typically contribute 14–17 questions each, while Current Affairs can range from 10 to 20 questions depending on the year.
How many months of current affairs are asked in UPSC Prelims 2026?
UPSC Prelims typically tests current affairs from the last 12–18 months before the exam date. The most heavily tested window is the last 12 months. Some questions reference ongoing developments — geopolitical situations, climate negotiations, infrastructure projects — that span up to 24 months. Unlike banking exams, UPSC current affairs questions are often applied: a recent event becomes a question about the underlying constitutional provision, ecological principle, or historical parallel. Covering both the current event and the static concept it connects to is the right preparation approach.