Loading...
Loading...
The SSC CGL Tier 1 exam analysis gives candidates a structured view of how the paper is set across shifts, which sections are toughest, and how many questions need to be attempted to clear the cutoff comfortably. For candidates who have already appeared, the analysis helps estimate performance. For candidates with future shifts or preparing for the next cycle, it reveals the difficulty pattern, section-wise weightage in practice, and the kind of score that constitutes a safe attempt.
This page covers the official exam analysis for SSC CGL Tier 1 2025, year-wise difficulty trends, section-wise observations, good attempt ranges, and an important note on why sharing question-level analysis is restricted under current law.
Starting from 2025, the Staff Selection Commission enforced restrictions on detailed exam analysis under the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024. Under this Act, sharing memory-based questions, shift-wise paper content, or detailed question-level reviews is prohibited and punishable with imprisonment ranging from 3 to 10 years and fines up to Rs 1 crore for organised malpractice.
As a result, individual question sharing from SSC CGL 2025 shifts is not available from officially compliant sources. Exam analysis on this page is based on aggregate difficulty feedback from candidates, overall pattern observations, and official cutoff data released post-result.
The SSC CGL 2025 Tier 1 examination was conducted from September 12 to September 26, 2025, with an additional date on October 14, 2025, for candidates whose exams were rescheduled due to centre cancellations in Gurugram and Delhi.
| Parameter Detail | |
| Exam Dates | September 12 to 26, October 14, 2025 |
| Shifts Per Day | 3 shifts (some days had 4) |
| Total Registered Candidates | Approximately 28 lakh |
| Exam Mode | Computer-Based Test (CBT) |
| Total Questions | 100 (25 per section) |
| Total Marks | 200 |
| Duration | 60 minutes |
| Negative Marking | 0.50 marks per wrong answer |
Based on aggregate candidate feedback collected across shifts, the SSC CGL Tier 1 2025 exam was rated as easy to moderate overall. This is consistent with the difficulty level observed in 2024 and 2023.
A consistently easy-to-moderate paper pushes the effective cutoff higher because more candidates are able to attempt more questions correctly. This is compounded by the normalisation process, which accounts for the variation in difficulty across shifts.
Candidates who scored above 140 marks (normalised) in the UR category had a strong probability of advancing to Tier 2. The official cutoff for UR (other posts) in 2025 came in at 136.83 marks, confirming that a score of 145 to 155 represented a safe performance.
| Observation Detail | |
| Difficulty Level | Easy to Moderate |
| Good Attempts | 21 to 23 out of 25 |
| Common Question Types | Analogy, Coding-Decoding, Series, Blood Relations, Direction Sense, Mirror Images |
Reasoning was considered the most scoring section by most candidates. The non-verbal portion (mirror images, paper folding, embedded figures) was straightforward in most shifts. Coding-decoding and analogy questions were predictable in format. A candidate with reasonable preparation should target 20 or more correct attempts in this section.
| Observation Detail | |
| Difficulty Level | Moderate to Difficult |
| Good Attempts | 14 to 18 out of 25 |
| Topics Observed | History, Polity, Science, Economics, Current Affairs (6 months preceding the exam) |
General Awareness is the most unpredictable section. Difficulty varied significantly between shifts. Some shifts had more current affairs-heavy papers while others leaned towards static GK. Candidates reported that History, Indian Polity, and Science questions were the most straightforward, while current affairs from the preceding six months caused the most difficulty for those who had not prepared consistently.
| Observation Detail | |
| Difficulty Level | Moderate |
| Good Attempts | 17 to 20 out of 25 |
| Topics Observed | Arithmetic (Percentage, SI/CI, Profit and Loss, TW), Algebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, DI |
Quantitative Aptitude was rated moderate. Arithmetic topics were manageable for most candidates, but Algebra, Trigonometry, and Geometry required strong formula recall and application. Data Interpretation questions involved calculations that were time-consuming in some shifts. Candidates who had practised time-efficient calculation methods were at an advantage.
| Observation Detail | |
| Difficulty Level | Easy to Moderate |
| Good Attempts | 20 to 23 out of 25 |
| Topics Observed | Reading Comprehension, Cloze Test, Error Spotting, Fill in the Blanks, Synonyms, Antonyms, One-word Substitution |
English was the second most scoring section after Reasoning. Vocabulary questions (Synonyms, Antonyms, One-word Substitution) were manageable for candidates with a strong word bank. Cloze Tests were story-based and did not require complex inference. Reading Comprehension passages were of moderate length with predictable question types.
The table below consolidates the overall good attempt range for SSC CGL Tier 1 across the 2025, 2024, and 2023 cycles.
| Exam Year Overall Good Attempts (Out of 100) Remarks | ||
| SSC CGL 2025 | 71 to 76 | Easy to Moderate overall difficulty |
| SSC CGL 2024 | 75 to 81 | Easy to Moderate with higher accuracy required |
| SSC CGL 2023 | 72 to 77 | Moderate difficulty; GA was tougher in some shifts |
Good attempts refer to the number of questions a candidate attempts (does not mean all are correct). When combined with a reasonable accuracy rate of 85 to 90 percent, these numbers correspond to a total score between 120 and 160 normalised marks.
| Section 2025 Good Attempts 2024 Good Attempts 2023 Good Attempts | |||
| Reasoning | 21 to 23 | 22 to 24 | 21 to 23 |
| General Awareness | 14 to 18 | 16 to 19 | 14 to 17 |
| Quantitative Aptitude | 17 to 20 | 18 to 21 | 16 to 20 |
| English | 20 to 23 | 21 to 23 | 20 to 22 |
| Overall | 71 to 76 | 75 to 81 | 72 to 77 |
A safe score is one where the candidate has near-certainty of advancing to Tier 2, regardless of which shift they were assigned and how the normalisation plays out.
| Category Minimum Qualifying Score (Approx.) Safe Score Target Score | |||
| Unreserved (UR) | 135 to 140 | 150 to 158 | Above 160 |
| OBC | 128 to 133 | 143 to 150 | Above 155 |
| EWS | 125 to 130 | 140 to 148 | Above 150 |
| SC | 112 to 118 | 125 to 135 | Above 140 |
| ST | 104 to 110 | 118 to 128 | Above 135 |
These ranges are based on the officially released cutoff data from 2023 to 2025. For JSO and Statistical Investigator Grade II posts, the required safe score is significantly higher (165 or above for UR).
SSC conducts the Tier 1 exam across multiple shifts over multiple days. Since each shift may have a slightly different difficulty level, raw scores cannot be directly compared. SSC applies a normalisation formula that converts raw scores to normalised scores on a common scale.
The key points about normalisation are:
This means that targeting a raw score of 155 to 165 is advisable, even if the cutoff for a previous year was around 136 to 153, because the normalisation impact can push scores in either direction.
The exam analysis from previous cycles is one of the most useful inputs for building an effective preparation strategy for 2026.
Use difficulty trends to prioritise sections. General Awareness is consistently moderate to difficult and the most variable. Spend more time on current affairs in the 6 to 8 months before the exam. Reasoning and English are consistently scoring and should be protected sections where you lose very few marks.
Set section-wise targets. Based on 2023 to 2025 patterns, targeting 22 to 23 correct answers in Reasoning, 20 to 22 in English, 18 to 20 in Quantitative Aptitude, and 16 to 18 in General Awareness gives a raw score of approximately 152 to 166, which is competitive for the UR category across all post groups.
Analyse shift-wise variation. Since difficulty can vary between shifts, candidates should aim to score well in their natural strong areas and make up in easier sections rather than chasing accuracy in all sections.
Take timed mock tests. The best preparation tool for Tier 1 is regular timed mock tests. The SSC CGL Tier 1 Test Series on Aspirant Mitraa provides 400 tests that cover topic-wise practice, subject-wise full sections, and complete mock examinations. Attempting full mocks under timed conditions and then reviewing every wrong answer is the most efficient way to raise both speed and accuracy.
Review previous year question papers. For understanding exact question formats and difficulty levels as seen in actual SSC exams, refer to PYQs. Visit the SSC CGL PYQ page for year-wise and shift-wise papers with answer keys.
The SSC CGL 2026 Tier 1 exam is expected in July to August 2026. Once the exam is conducted, the exam analysis for 2026 will be updated on this page with:
Bookmark this page and check back after the 2026 exam dates are confirmed.
Why is the SSC CGL exam analysis restricted? Under the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024, sharing memory-based questions or shift-wise paper content during an ongoing exam series is prohibited. Violations can result in significant legal penalties.
How many questions should I attempt in SSC CGL Tier 1? Based on 2023 to 2025 patterns, attempting 71 to 78 questions with 85 to 90 percent accuracy puts candidates in the safe zone for most categories in other posts. For JSO posts, a higher attempt count and accuracy are required.
Does the difficulty of my shift affect my score? Yes, the normalisation formula adjusts raw scores based on shift difficulty. Candidates in harder shifts receive a compensatory adjustment, and those in easier shifts may see their normalised score come in below their raw score.
When is the exam analysis released? The informal analysis based on candidate feedback is available immediately after each shift. The official cutoff and result, which confirm actual qualifying scores, are released a few months after the exam concludes.
Analysis data on this page is compiled from officially released SSC result documents, candidate feedback aggregated post-exam, and official cutoff PDFs from ssc.gov.in. Individual question-level content from 2025 exam shifts is not shared in compliance with the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024.
Stay updated with the latest news and notifications about SSC CGL Tier 1 Exam Analysis: Section-wise Difficulty, Good Attempts and Trends and other exams.
ExamUpdateAspirantMitraa
20 May 2026
ExamResultAspirantMitraa
20 May 2026