Exam Info

CAPF (AC) Complete Beginner's Guide

The full first-read primer to the UPSC CAPF (Assistant Commandants) Examination: forces, eligibility, selection funnel, both written papers, PST/PET, medical, interview, syllabus, strategy, and FAQ

CAPF wiki43 min read46 sections

This is the headline document of the wiki. If you have never sat for a UPSC examination and you are starting from zero, read this page end to end before anything else. It explains what the examination is, who it recruits, every stage you must clear, exactly how the marks work, the full official syllabus, how deep to study each subject, a realistic preparation plan, the standard booklist, and the questions every beginner asks. Wherever a fact changes from year to year (age reference date, vacancies, fees, exam dates, cut-off marks, exact physical numbers), this guide gives the commonly published indicative value and tells you to confirm the current notification on upsc.gov.in. Treat that instruction as binding: the only authoritative source for a specific cycle is that cycle's official UPSC notification.

Reading order for a beginner: this guide first, then the five forces, eligibility, exam pattern marking, selection process, and finally the subject indexes under Paper I and Paper II.

A quick glossary before you start

A few terms recur throughout this guide and the wiki. Learn them now so the rest reads cleanly.

Term Meaning
CAPF (AC) Central Armed Police Forces (Assistant Commandants) Examination, the exam this wiki covers
UPSC Union Public Service Commission, the body that conducts the exam
MHA Ministry of Home Affairs, the ministry the five forces report to
Assistant Commandant (AC) The direct-entry officer rank you are recruited into
Group A gazetted The senior officer category of government service the AC belongs to
PST Physical Standards Test, the height and chest measurement stage
PET Physical Efficiency Test, the timed run, jump, and throw events
Scoring stage A stage whose marks count toward the final merit (Paper I, Paper II, interview)
Qualifying stage A stage you must pass but which adds no marks (PST, PET, medical)
Cut-off The minimum mark UPSC fixes to advance; cycle-specific and category-wise
Merit list The final ranked list, out of 600 marks, used for selection and force allocation

1. What CAPF (AC) is, and who should attempt it

The full name is the Central Armed Police Forces (Assistant Commandants) Examination, written CAPF (AC). It is a national-level recruitment examination conducted once a year by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), the same constitutional body that conducts the Civil Services Examination. The examination fills Assistant Commandant posts, which are Group A gazetted officer posts, in the five Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) that function under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).

An Assistant Commandant (AC) is the direct-entry officer rank in these forces. It is not a constable, head constable, or sub-inspector post; those are recruited separately by the forces themselves or by the Staff Selection Commission. When you clear CAPF (AC), you enter at the bottom of the officer ladder and command troops from very early in your career.

The officer's life and role

An Assistant Commandant is a field officer who leads a body of armed personnel, holds command and administrative responsibility, and is posted wherever the force needs an officer. That can mean a forward border post, a high-altitude location, an internal-security theatre, an airport, or a critical installation. The work is operational, physical, and outdoor, often away from home and family, and the officer is responsible for the discipline, welfare, and conduct of the personnel under command. This is why the examination, unlike a purely academic test, adds physical-standards, physical-efficiency, and medical stages: the job demands a fit officer who can sustain hard field conditions.

The typical promotion ladder runs Assistant Commandant, Deputy Commandant, Second-in-Command, Commandant, Deputy Inspector General (DIG), Inspector General (IG), and higher. As a Group A officer the AC draws a Level-10 pay (on the pay matrix) along with the allowances attached to the force and the posting, including hard-area and high-altitude allowances where applicable. Confirm the current pay level and allowances on upsc.gov.in and the MHA force websites. For the role and the annual cycle in more detail, see about capf ac.

Before joining a field unit, a newly selected Assistant Commandant goes through basic officer training at the force's training academy. Training covers weapons handling, drill and physical conditioning, tactics, law and procedure, map reading, and the conduct expected of an officer. The point worth taking away as a beginner is that selection is the start, not the end, of the physical demand: the academy assumes you are already fit, so the fitness you build for the PST/PET carries straight into training. Postings after training can rotate between field (border or operational), static (installation or headquarters), and training roles across a career, and an officer is expected to serve wherever posted.

Who should attempt it

You should consider CAPF (AC) if you are an Indian graduate within the eligible age band who:

  • wants an officer-rank uniformed career with command responsibility from the start;
  • is willing to do physically demanding field service anywhere in the country;
  • can commit to a focused but achievable written syllabus alongside serious physical training;
  • is drawn to internal security, border management, and the protection of the nation as a vocation rather than only as a job.

It is a strong choice for candidates who want a uniformed service but find the Civil Services Examination's depth and unpredictability too long a road, and for candidates who actively want the paramilitary officer life rather than a desk-bound administrative one. It is not a fit for someone unwilling to train physically or to accept hard postings.

How it compares to the Civil Services Examination (CSE) and to SSC CPO

These three are often confused. They are distinct recruitments.

Feature CAPF (AC) Civil Services Examination (CSE) SSC CPO
Conducting body UPSC UPSC Staff Selection Commission
Entry rank Assistant Commandant (Group A gazetted officer) IAS, IPS, IFS and other Group A services Sub-Inspector (in Delhi Police and CAPFs)
Education Graduation Graduation Graduation
Written stages Paper I (objective) + Paper II (descriptive), same day Prelims (screening) then Mains (nine papers) then interview Two computer-based papers
Optional subject None Yes (one optional, two papers) None
Physical test Mandatory PST, PET, and medical No physical-standards stage PST/PET and medical
Analytical depth Broad static command plus a security and human-rights lens Deep, analytical, essay-and-optional heavy Moderate, includes reasoning and quantitative aptitude
Personality test 150-mark interview High-weight personality test No interview

The headline takeaways for a beginner: the CAPF written syllabus is narrower and less analytically demanding than CSE Mains, but CAPF adds physical and medical gates that CSE does not have, and it recruits for a specific uniformed officer cadre rather than a wide spread of services. SSC CPO recruits at the Sub-Inspector level, a rank below Assistant Commandant, so CAPF (AC) is the officer-entry route and SSC CPO is not. Notes in this wiki are calibrated to the CAPF level, not the CSE level: aim for broad conceptual command and strong static recall with an explicit security focus, not mains-style jurisprudence.


2. The five forces in brief

CAPF (AC) recruits officers for five Central Armed Police Forces, all under the MHA. Learn these cold, because both papers and the interview return to them constantly. One-line mandate each:

  • BSF, Border Security Force. Guards India's land borders in peacetime and checks transborder crime; principally on the India-Pakistan and India-Bangladesh borders.
  • CRPF, Central Reserve Police Force. India's largest CAPF; internal security, counter-insurgency, anti-Left-Wing-Extremism (anti-Naxal) operations, and law-and-order assistance to the States.
  • CISF, Central Industrial Security Force. Security of critical industrial undertakings, airports, metros, ports, and key public and private installations; also disaster-management and VIP-security roles.
  • ITBP, Indo-Tibetan Border Police. Guards the India-China border along the Himalayas; a high-altitude, mountain-warfare-trained force.
  • SSB, Sashastra Seema Bal. Guards the open India-Nepal and India-Bhutan borders and works on border-area development and good relations.

Assam Rifles is sometimes mentioned in the same breath, but it is administered differently: its administrative control sits with the MHA while its operational control sits with the Army (Ministry of Defence). It is not one of the five forces filled through CAPF (AC). Knowing this distinction is a classic discriminator question. For raising years, headquarters, mottoes, and deployment detail for each force, see the five forces.


3. Eligibility

Eligibility turns on nationality, age, education, and physical fitness. The structure is durable; the precise numbers (especially the age reference date and relaxation slabs) change each cycle, so always confirm the current notification on upsc.gov.in. The full treatment is in eligibility; the essentials follow.

Nationality

A candidate must be a citizen of India. (Certain other categories, such as subjects of Nepal or Bhutan, may be eligible under the conditions UPSC specifies in the notification; confirm on upsc.gov.in.)

Age

The commonly published band is 20 to 25 years, computed as on a reference date stated in the notification (often 1 August of the examination year). Verify the exact reference date on upsc.gov.in. Upper-age relaxations apply to reserved and special categories and are notification-dependent; the indicative pattern is:

Category Indicative upper-age relaxation Status
OBC (non-creamy layer) up to 3 years Verify on upsc.gov.in
SC / ST up to 5 years Verify on upsc.gov.in
Government servants and other special categories as specified in the notification Verify on upsc.gov.in

Treat the slabs above as indicative only. The notification is the sole authority for your eligibility.

Education

A candidate must hold a bachelor's degree from a recognised university (graduation in any discipline). There is no subject restriction at graduation. Final-year students are typically allowed to apply provisionally and must produce proof of passing by the date UPSC specifies; confirm the wording in the current notification.

Number of attempts

CAPF (AC) does not impose a fixed cap on attempts in the way the Civil Services Examination does. In practice the age limit itself is the constraint: you may attempt the examination as long as you remain within the eligible age band. Confirm there is no attempt clause in the current notification on upsc.gov.in.

Gender

The examination is open to men and women. Female candidates are eligible for the officer posts; force-wise availability of posts for women and the applicable physical standards are set out in the notification each year. See eligibility and the FAQ below.

Physical eligibility pointers

Beyond the written exam you must meet physical standards (height and chest), physical efficiency events, and medical standards. Some standards (for example height and chest) carry relaxations for specified categories and regions (such as candidates from hill areas and certain communities). These are previewed here and detailed in pst pet standards and medical standards. Start treating physical fitness as part of your eligibility from day one, not as an afterthought.


4. The selection funnel, end to end

CAPF (AC) is a multi-stage funnel. You progress only by clearing each gate. Some stages are scoring (they contribute marks to the final merit) and some are qualifying (you must pass, but they add no marks). Understanding this distinction is the single most important structural fact about the exam.

# Stage What happens Scoring or qualifying
1 Notification UPSC publishes the year's notification (vacancies, dates, fees, age reference date) Administrative
2 Online application You apply on upsc.gov.in (or the UPSC online portal), pay the fee, choose centre Administrative
3 Written examination Paper I (objective, 250) and Paper II (descriptive, 200) on the same day Scoring
4 Paper I cut-off screen Paper II is evaluated only for candidates at or above the Paper I cut-off Screening rule
5 PST and PET Physical Standards Test (height, chest) and Physical Efficiency Test (run, jump, throw) Qualifying
6 Documentation Document verification of eligibility, category, age, education Administrative
7 Medical Standards Test Vision, BMI, and disqualifier screening by a medical board Qualifying
8 Interview / Personality Test A board interview of 150 marks Scoring
9 Final merit list Built from Paper I + Paper II + Interview for fully qualified candidates Result
10 Force allocation Allotment to BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, or SSB by merit, preference, and vacancy Result

Two rules to internalise now:

  • Paper I screens Paper II. If you do not clear the Paper I cut-off, your descriptive Paper II is never even read. This means Paper I performance is gatekeeping, not just merit-feeding.
  • PST, PET, and medical add no marks but can end your candidature. A topper in the written exam who fails the run or the medical is out. Physical preparation is therefore non-negotiable.

A few practical points about the funnel that beginners miss:

  • The two written papers are written on the same day, Paper I in the morning and Paper II in the afternoon. You must perform in both in a single sitting; there is no gap of weeks between them.
  • Choice of force preference is usually expressed during the application or a later stage, but the actual allocation happens only at the very end, on merit and vacancy. Stating a preference does not guarantee that force.
  • Document verification checks that what you claimed at application (age, category, education, identity) holds up. Keep originals of your degree, date-of-birth proof, and category certificate ready and valid as on the date the notification specifies.
  • Each gate is sequential. You are called for PST/PET only after the written result, for medical only after PST/PET, and for interview only after the medical. Plan your physical peak and your document readiness around that sequence.

For the stage-by-stage detail, dates logic, and force-allocation mechanics, see selection process.


5. The written exam structure

The written examination is two papers on the same day: Paper I in the morning, Paper II in the afternoon. Here is the marks architecture, which you should be able to recite.

Paper Title Marks Duration Mode Negative marking Medium
Paper I General Ability and Intelligence 250 2 hours Objective MCQ on OMR Yes (typically one-third) English and Hindi
Paper II General Studies, Essay and Comprehension 200 3 hours Descriptive (pen and paper) No See below

Inside Paper II:

Part Content Marks Medium
Part A Essay 80 English or Hindi (candidate's choice)
Part B Comprehension, précis, and language skills 120 English only

The full merit architecture:

Component Marks Counts toward merit
Paper I (objective, after negative marking) 250 Yes
Paper II (descriptive) 200 Yes
Interview / Personality Test 150 Yes
PST / PET Qualifying No
Medical Standards Test Qualifying No
Total merit marks 600

Key rules:

  • The written total is 450 (Paper I 250 + Paper II 200).
  • The interview adds 150, so the merit is out of 600.
  • Paper II is evaluated only for candidates who clear the Paper I cut-off. Paper I is a screen as well as a scoring paper.
  • Part B of Paper II is in English only. You cannot answer the comprehension and précis section in Hindi. Part A (the essay) may be in English or Hindi.
  • Negative marking applies to Paper I only; the standard deduction is one-third of the marks for a wrong answer, with no penalty for a blank. Confirm the exact deduction on upsc.gov.in.

For the complete treatment, including how the final merit and force allocation are computed, see exam pattern marking.


6. Paper I, deep orientation

Paper I, General Ability and Intelligence, is 250 marks, objective, 2 hours, with negative marking. It covers six areas. There is no fixed published mark split across the areas, so the weightages below are indicative patterns from past papers, not guarantees; treat them as a planning aid, and confirm nothing about an exact split.

Area What it tests Indicative weight How deep a beginner must go
(a) General Mental Ability Logical reasoning, quantitative aptitude, numerical and data analysis Substantial Practice-driven; learn shortcuts and speed, not theory
(b) General Science Everyday physics, chemistry, biology; science in daily life, environment, ICT Moderate to substantial NCERT-level conceptual command, application over rote
(c) Current Events of National and International Importance The last roughly twelve months of significant national and world events Moderate to substantial Consistent monthly current affairs, linked to static topics
(d) Indian Polity and Economy Constitution, governance, political system, panchayati raj, public policy, economic development Substantial Strong static base; the Constitution and economy fundamentals
(e) History of India Social, economic, political history with an emphasis on the freedom movement Moderate Modern India and the freedom struggle solidly; ancient and medieval lightly
(f) Indian and World Geography Physical, social, and economic geography of India and the world Moderate Map-based and concept-based; physical geography plus Indian geography

What each area means for a beginner:

  • General Mental Ability is the most scoring and most trainable area because it does not require memorising facts. It rewards practice. Drill reasoning (series, analogies, syllogisms, directions, coding-decoding) and quantitative aptitude (percentages, ratios, averages, time and work, simple data interpretation) until speed and accuracy are automatic. See Index.
  • General Science is about understanding, not memorising. Cover physics, chemistry, and biology at the school (NCERT) level, plus everyday science, environment and ecology, and basic information and communications technology. See Index.
  • Current Events is a rolling, twelve-month window of national and international affairs. Do not binge it at the end; build it monthly and tie each event to its static anchor (a scheme to its ministry, a summit to its grouping). See Index.
  • Indian Polity and Economy is the backbone of Paper I and the heart of the security and human-rights lens. Polity (Constitution, fundamental rights, the executive, judiciary, federalism, constitutional bodies) and economy (national income, money and banking, inflation, the budget, schemes) both reward a clean static base. See Index and Index.
  • History of India leans heavily on modern India and the freedom struggle. Get that period solid; treat ancient and medieval more lightly. See Index.
  • Indian and World Geography rewards maps and concepts together: physical geography (landforms, climate, the monsoon), Indian geography (rivers, relief, resources, agriculture), and the human-economic layer. See Index.

The strategic point: General Mental Ability is the area where a hardworking beginner can score the most reliably because it is skill, not knowledge. Polity, economy, and current events together carry the static load and the CAPF security flavour. Do not neglect any one area, because Paper I is also your screening gate.

Reading the Paper I clock and the negative marking

Paper I gives you 2 hours for 250 marks. With negative marking at (typically) one-third per wrong answer, the paper rewards a deliberate two-pass approach:

  • First pass: attempt the questions you know cleanly or can narrow to a confident answer. Bank these marks fast and do not linger.
  • Second pass: return to the questions where you can eliminate one or two options and make an educated attempt only when the odds clearly favour you. Leave pure guesses blank.
  • Time check: because reasoning and quantitative questions can eat time, do not let a single hard calculation rob you of five easy questions elsewhere. Move on and come back.

This discipline is itself a skill, and it is best built in timed mocks rather than discovered on exam day. A candidate who attempts every question blindly often scores below one who attempts fewer with high accuracy, precisely because of the deduction.


7. Paper II, deep orientation

Paper II, General Studies, Essay and Comprehension, is 200 marks, descriptive, 3 hours, split into two parts. It is your writing exam. A beginner who treats Paper II as an afterthought tends to scrape through Paper I and then write a weak Paper II, which is fatal because Paper II is fully half the written exam's value once you are past the Paper I screen.

Part A, Essay (80 marks)

You write essays (usually a choice from a set) on broad themes. The five indicative theme families that recur are:

  1. Modern Indian history and the freedom struggle
  2. Geography and the environment
  3. Polity and governance
  4. Economy and development
  5. Security and human-rights issues (the CAPF-distinctive family)

Length and style: write a structured, paragraph-form essay with a clear introduction, a body that argues in an ordered sequence, and a reasoned conclusion. Aim for balance and coherence over flourish. The essay may be written in English or Hindi (your choice). Marks come from relevance to the topic, organisation, the quality of argument, factual accuracy, and language. For technique, model structures, and theme banks see Index, and use the security family in theme internal security and theme human rights.

A reliable beginner's essay skeleton:

  1. Introduction. State what the topic is and the line you will take, in two or three sentences. Avoid a generic opening.
  2. Body, in ordered paragraphs. Each paragraph makes one point, supports it with a fact or example, and links to the next. For a security or rights topic, deliberately show both sides before you resolve them.
  3. Conclusion. Resolve the argument with a forward-looking, balanced close. Do not introduce a brand-new point here.

Two habits that lift essay marks quickly: plan for two or three minutes before writing (a quick spine of points stops mid-essay drift), and write in clear, correct sentences rather than ornate ones, because clarity is what is rewarded. Build a small bank of facts, data points, and a few apt quotations across the five theme families so that you never face a blank page.

Part B, Comprehension and précis (120 marks, English only)

Part B is in English only and tests English language skill. The sub-skills:

  • Comprehension. Reading passages and answering questions that test understanding, inference, and vocabulary.
  • Précis writing. Condensing a passage to about a third of its length without losing the core meaning, in your own words.
  • Other communication and language skills. Items that may include sentence correction, vocabulary, antonyms and synonyms, idioms, and short composition, as specified.

How it is marked: comprehension answers are marked for accuracy and relevance; the précis is marked for faithful compression, coherence, and staying within the word limit; the language items are marked for correctness. Because Part B is worth 120 of Paper II's 200 marks, English skill is disproportionately valuable. A candidate weak in English must start Part B practice early. See Index.

The overall lesson: Paper II rewards clear, correct, structured writing. It is more about communication discipline than about new knowledge, which means it improves steadily with regular practice, and it stays poor if you only practise in the last few weeks.


8. PST and PET

After the written exam, candidates who clear the cut-off are called for the Physical Standards Test (PST) and the Physical Efficiency Test (PET). Both are qualifying, not scoring: you must pass to continue, but they add no marks. A failure here removes you no matter how high your written score. The exact numbers carry category and region relaxations and change with the notification, so the figures below are indicative only; confirm on upsc.gov.in and see pst pet standards.

PST, the body measurements

The PST measures height and chest (chest with expansion, for male candidates). There are relaxations for candidates from specified hill regions and certain communities, and separate standards for female candidates. Indicative reference values:

Measure Indicative norm (general) Status
Height, male about 165 cm Verify on upsc.gov.in
Height, female about 157 cm Verify on upsc.gov.in
Chest, male (unexpanded / expanded) about 81 cm / 86 cm (minimum 5 cm expansion) Verify on upsc.gov.in

PET, the efficiency events

The PET is a set of timed and measured physical events. The standard events to expect are a 100 m sprint, an 800 m run, a long jump, and a shot put. Indicative norms (general category), with separate, eased norms for women:

Event Indicative men's norm Indicative women's norm Status
100 m race within about 16 seconds within about 18 seconds Verify on upsc.gov.in
800 m race within about 3 minutes 45 seconds within about 4 minutes 45 seconds Verify on upsc.gov.in
Long jump about 3.5 m (within a set number of chances) about 3.0 m Verify on upsc.gov.in
Shot put (7.26 kg) about 4.5 m not applicable / separate event Verify on upsc.gov.in

These are qualifying events; you pass or you do not, and passing adds nothing to merit. Do not let that mislead you into treating them lightly, because failing them ends everything.

How to start training months ahead

Physical readiness cannot be crammed. Begin at least three to six months before the PST/PET window, in parallel with study:

  • Build a running base first (steady runs), then add interval work for the 800 m and sprint drills for the 100 m.
  • Practise the long jump technique (approach, take-off, landing) and shot put technique (the glide or stand-throw and release angle), because technique gains metres that raw strength alone will not.
  • Add strength and core work two or three times a week, and protect against injury with mobility and recovery.
  • Track your times against the indicative norms above, leaving a comfortable margin so that exam-day nerves and fatigue do not push you over the limit.

The honest framing: train as if the physical standards are the easy part to fail. Many academically strong candidates lose here purely because they started too late.


9. Medical standards

Candidates who clear PST/PET face the Medical Standards Test, also qualifying. The medical board checks that you are fit for the rigours of force service. The detailed standards are in medical standards; the orientation:

  • Vision. Each force prescribes minimum visual-acuity standards, with and without correction, and limits on refractive error; colour vision must be normal for many roles. Confirm the current vision standards on upsc.gov.in.
  • Body mass index (BMI) and build. You must fall within an acceptable weight-for-height range; significant under- or over-weight is a concern.
  • Common disqualifiers. Conditions that frequently lead to rejection include knock knees (genu valgum), flat foot (the absence of a proper foot arch), varicose veins, colour blindness, significant hearing defects, and other conditions the standards specify. Many of these are structural and cannot be fixed quickly, so it is wise to get screened early in your preparation rather than discover a disqualifier at the medical stage.
  • The review process. A candidate found unfit may, within the prescribed time, opt for a review medical examination (a Review Medical Board) under the conditions UPSC and the forces specify. Know the appeal route before you need it.

The practical advice: get a basic medical check done at the start of your preparation, covering eyes, feet, knees, and veins, so that you know where you stand and can address anything addressable well before the formal board.

Why early screening matters so much: several of the common disqualifiers are structural (the shape of the knees or the foot arch) and cannot be corrected by training in the weeks before the medical. Some, such as a refractive error within limits, may be correctable, and a few candidates choose corrective procedures well in advance where the standards allow them; the standards, not assumptions, decide what is acceptable, so verify the current rules on upsc.gov.in before relying on any of this. The worst outcome is to clear the written exam and the physical events and then be eliminated at the medical for something a single check at the start of preparation would have flagged.


10. The Personality Test (interview)

Candidates who clear the written exam and qualify in PST, PET, and the medical are called for the Interview / Personality Test, worth 150 marks. This is a scoring stage; its marks feed straight into the merit, so it can move you up or down significantly.

  • The board. A UPSC interview board assesses you in a structured conversation.
  • What is assessed. Not your bookish knowledge, but your suitability to be a paramilitary officer: leadership and the capacity to command, mental alertness and clarity of thought, balanced judgement, integrity, emotional stability under pressure, the ability to take responsibility, awareness of national and security affairs, and the temperament for hard field service.
  • What it is not. It is not a viva on the syllabus. It is a test of personality, attitude, and decision-making.

Because this is a uniformed-officer interview, expect a thread of internal security, border management, the forces themselves, current affairs, and human-rights-in-operations questions, alongside questions about your background, motivation, and choices. Prepare to articulate why you want this service specifically. See personality test for the board's assessment dimensions and likely questions and themes for likely lines of questioning.


11. The CAPF-distinctive edge: the security and human-rights layer

This is the section that separates a CAPF preparation from a generic UPSC preparation, and it is the most under-appreciated edge a beginner can build.

CAPF (AC) recruits officers for forces whose daily work is internal security and border management. As a result, a security and human-rights layer runs through the entire examination: it shapes current-affairs questions in Paper I, it is one of the five recurring essay families in Paper II, it underlies many comprehension passages, and it dominates the interview. The topics you must own:

  • Internal security. The architecture of internal security in India, Left-Wing Extremism (Naxalism), insurgency in the North-East, the situation in Jammu and Kashmir, terrorism and cross-border infiltration, and the role of the central forces in aiding the States.
  • Borders and border management. India's land and maritime borders, the agencies that guard each (mapping the forces from Section 2 to the borders they hold), and the challenges of open versus disputed borders.
  • The forces themselves. The mandates, history, and deployment of BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, and SSB, plus the distinct status of Assam Rifles. See the five forces.
  • AFSPA. The Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, what it provides, where it applies, and the debate around it. See concept afspa.
  • NHRC and human rights. The National Human Rights Commission, its composition and powers, and why human-rights compliance in security operations is central to a modern paramilitary officer's conduct. See concept nhrc and human rights and internal security.

Why this pervades both papers: UPSC is recruiting people who will operate at the sharp edge of state power, so it tests whether you understand both the security imperative and the rights and lawful-conduct constraints that bind a force in a democracy. A CAPF aspirant who can hold both ideas at once, security and human rights, writes better essays, answers current-affairs questions with the right frame, and interviews far more convincingly. Own this layer. It is where you out-perform candidates who prepared like it was a general-knowledge quiz.

A short worked map of how the layer recurs across the exam, so the connection is concrete:

Where it appears What it looks like
Paper I, Indian Polity (item d) Questions on human rights, regional and international security, the constitutional bodies that protect rights
Paper I, Current Events The forces in the news, border incidents, security policy, rights reports
Paper II, Essay (Part A) A full essay-theme family on security and human-rights issues
Paper II, Comprehension (Part B) Passages drawn from security, governance, and rights writing
Interview / Personality Test Why this service, force mandates, conduct in operations, the rights-security balance

The single mental model to carry into all of these: a paramilitary officer in a democracy must be effective (achieve the security objective) and lawful (within the Constitution and human-rights norms) at the same time. Frame your answers around that balance and you will read like someone who understands the job, not just the syllabus.


12. How deep to go per subject

A recurring beginner mistake is studying every subject to the same (excessive) depth. CAPF rewards calibrated depth: deep where it pays, light where it does not. Here is the realistic depth question answered for each Paper I area and each Paper II skill.

Paper I

  • General Mental Ability: go deep on practice, shallow on theory. You do not study reasoning so much as drill it. Target speed and accuracy. This is your highest-return area.
  • General Science: go to NCERT (school) conceptual depth, no further. Understand mechanisms and everyday applications; do not chase degree-level detail.
  • Current Events: wide but shallow, over a rolling twelve months, always anchored to a static topic. Do not memorise trivia; understand significance.
  • Indian Polity: go moderately deep. Constitution, rights, the three organs, federalism, constitutional and statutory bodies. This is a high-yield, stable subject; invest here.
  • Indian Economy: go to solid fundamentals: national income, money and banking, inflation, the budget and fiscal policy, key schemes. Concepts over data.
  • History of India: go deep on modern India and the freedom struggle, light on ancient and medieval. Most questions cluster in the modern period.
  • Geography: go moderately deep on physical geography and Indian geography, supported by maps. World geography lighter.

Paper II

  • Essay (Part A): develop the skill of structured argument and a fact-and-quote bank across the five theme families, with extra depth on the security and human-rights family. Practice writing full essays under time, not just reading about them.
  • Comprehension and précis (Part B): build steady, regular practice. Reading speed and accuracy, inference, and disciplined précis compression improve only with repetition. Because Part B is 120 marks, this skill is worth more than its profile suggests, so do not under-invest.

The unifying principle: Paper I rewards breadth with a few deep anchors (mental ability, polity, economy); Paper II rewards a trained writing skill. Match your hours to that reality.


13. Study strategy: a 6-month and a 3-month plan

Below are two realistic plans. Both integrate physical training with study from day one, because the two cannot be sequenced (you cannot study for five months and then train for one; the body needs months).

The 6-month plan (the comfortable runway)

Phase Weeks Study focus Physical focus
Foundation 1 to 6 Polity + Economy static base; start General Mental Ability daily drills; start daily current affairs Build running base; basic strength and core
Build 7 to 14 Add History (modern), Geography, General Science; begin weekly essay and précis practice Add interval running; long-jump and shot-put technique
Integrate 15 to 20 Continue all subjects in rotation; full-length Paper I practice; weekly full essays Time the PET events; tighten to indicative norms with margin
Revise 21 to 24 Revision modules; mock tests for Paper I and II; targeted weak-area repair Maintain peak fitness; taper to avoid injury before the window

The 3-month plan (the compressed runway)

Phase Weeks Study focus Physical focus
Sprint base 1 to 4 Polity + Economy + General Mental Ability simultaneously; daily current affairs from now Immediate running base; begin event technique now
Build 5 to 8 History (modern), Geography, General Science; start essay and précis twice a week Interval and sprint work; weekly PET event timing
Peak 9 to 12 Full-length mocks both papers; revision modules; weak-area repair Reach indicative norms with margin; taper at the very end

The compressed plan works only if you are already roughly fit and can study full time. If you are starting unfit, the 6-month runway is strongly preferable, because the physical gates do not compress.

A sample weekly routine (integrating training and study)

Day Morning Midday Evening
Mon Run (base/interval) Polity static + notes General Mental Ability drills + current affairs
Tue Strength and core Economy static + notes Reasoning/quant drills + current affairs
Wed Run + sprint drills History (modern) Essay writing (one full essay)
Thu Strength and core Geography + maps Précis and comprehension practice
Fri Run (interval) General Science Mixed revision + current affairs
Sat PET event practice (jump, shot put, timed runs) Full-length Paper I mock Mock review and error log
Sun Long run or active recovery Paper II practice (essay + Part B) Weekly revision + plan next week

Surround the routine with three disciplines that decide outcomes:

  • Note-making. Make short, revisable notes as you study, not exhaustive transcripts. One page per topic that you can re-read in minutes is worth more than a textbook copied out.
  • Revision discipline. Schedule spaced revision (revisit a topic after a day, a week, a month). The revision modules in this wiki (Index) exist for exactly this.
  • Mock discipline. Take full-length, timed mocks of both papers and keep an error log. For Paper I, practise the negative-marking decision (when to attempt and when to leave). For Paper II, practise finishing within three hours, because unfinished descriptive papers lose easy marks.

Common scheduling pitfalls in either plan

  • Do not front-load all study and back-load all fitness. The body adapts over months; you cannot compress a running base into the final weeks without injury risk.
  • Do not leave Paper II for the end. Writing is a slow-improving skill. One essay and two précis a week from early on beats a frantic month of writing at the close.
  • Protect revision time. New material always feels more urgent than revision, but unrevised material is forgotten material. Block revision into the week and treat it as non-negotiable.
  • Taper before the physical window. In the final two weeks before PST/PET, reduce load to arrive fresh and uninjured, not exhausted.

14. The standard booklist (the canon)

Anchor your preparation to the standard canon: the Constitution and the relevant Acts, the NCERT textbooks, a small set of standard reference books per subject, and government and multilateral primary sources. Do not build your preparation around coaching booklets. The wiki's curated, source-policy-compliant list is in booklist; the canon by subject, in brief:

Subject Canon (indicative)
Polity NCERTs (Class IX to XII civics/political science); a standard Indian Polity reference; the Constitution of India
Economy NCERTs (Class XI to XII economics); a standard Indian Economy reference; Economic Survey highlights
History NCERTs (modern India focus); a standard modern-India / freedom-struggle reference
Geography NCERTs (Class XI to XII geography); a standard atlas; a standard geography reference
General Science NCERT science (Class VI to X); plus current science from reliable news
General Mental Ability A standard reasoning and quantitative-aptitude practice book
Current Affairs A reliable newspaper and a monthly compilation (see Section 15)
Paper II English A standard English grammar and comprehension/précis practice book

Read fewer books more times rather than many books once. Mastery of the canon, revised repeatedly, beats a shelf of unread sources.


15. Current affairs: the twelve-month window and the durable-versus-dated method

Current Events in Paper I, and material for both the essay and the interview, are drawn from roughly the last twelve months before the exam. The aspirant's question is always "how do I read current affairs without drowning". The method:

  • The window. Track national and international events for about a twelve-month rolling period up to the exam. You do not need years of back-news; you need the recent and significant.
  • Sources. A reliable daily newspaper, the relevant government and multilateral primary sources (ministry releases, official reports, the Economic Survey, recognised international bodies), and a disciplined monthly compilation to consolidate. Use the daily current-affairs briefs in this wiki and the date index for the chronological trail.
  • The durable-versus-dated method. For every news item, separate the durable core from the dated detail. The durable core is the concept, institution, scheme, treaty, or constitutional provision behind the news (this is what is examinable for years). The dated detail is the transient specifics (exact figures, the personality of the week) that will not be asked next year. Study the durable; skim the dated. Anchor every news story to its static topic, so that current affairs reinforces your static syllabus instead of competing with it.

The trap to avoid is over-reading current affairs: spending hours daily on news while the static syllabus (which carries most marks) goes unrevised. Cap your current-affairs time, anchor it to static topics, and consolidate monthly.

A simple daily current-affairs workflow that keeps it under control:

  1. Read the newspaper for a fixed, capped time (for example 45 minutes).
  2. For each genuinely significant item, write a one-line durable note: the concept or institution behind the news, not the transient figure.
  3. Tag the note to its static topic (scheme to ministry, summit to grouping, ruling to constitutional provision).
  4. At month-end, consolidate the notes into a short revisable list and discard the dated chaff.

This turns the news from a time sink into a steady reinforcement of your static syllabus, which is exactly how a CAPF current-affairs section is best answered.


16. Cut-offs and what a competitive performance looks like

UPSC fixes category-wise cut-offs at the written stage and a final cut-off for selection, and they change every cycle, so the only authority is upsc.gov.in. With that flagged clearly, here is the durable shape of what "competitive" means.

  • The Paper I screening logic. Paper I is scoring and a screen. UPSC fixes a Paper I cut-off; only candidates at or above it have their Paper II evaluated. A weak Paper I therefore wastes a strong Paper II entirely. Your first target is to clear the Paper I screen comfortably, not by a single mark.
  • Negative marking and the attempt decision. Because Paper I deducts (typically) one-third per wrong answer, blind guessing destroys score. A competitive candidate attempts confidently where they know or can narrow to a strong elimination, and leaves pure guesses. Accuracy, not raw attempt count, drives a good Paper I score.
  • The shape of a competitive total. Merit is out of 600 (Paper I 250 + Paper II 200 + Interview 150). Strong candidates tend to combine a solidly-above-cut-off Paper I, a well-written Paper II (essays and précis that read clean and complete), and a confident interview. Because qualifying stages add no marks, the merit race is decided on these three. Exact qualifying and final cut-off marks are cycle-specific; verify on upsc.gov.in.

The takeaway: aim to clear Paper I with margin, write a complete and correct Paper II, and interview well, while treating the physical and medical gates as pass-or-perish.


17. Common mistakes and myths

The patterns below sink more first-time aspirants than the difficulty of the syllabus does.

  • Ignoring Paper II until late. Paper II is 200 of 450 written marks and a trained writing skill that improves slowly. Candidates who only start essay and précis practice in the final weeks write weak papers. Start Paper II practice early and keep it weekly.
  • Neglecting physical preparation. PST and PET are qualifying and add no marks, which lulls candidates into ignoring them. They are also where many academically strong people are eliminated. Train from month one.
  • Over-reading current affairs. Spending hours daily on news at the expense of the static syllabus is a classic time sink. Cap it, anchor it to static topics, and consolidate monthly.
  • Treating it like the Civil Services Examination. CAPF is narrower and less analytical than CSE Mains. Over-preparing with mains-depth material wastes time you needed for breadth, physical training, and Paper II writing. Calibrate to the CAPF level.
  • Guessing into negative marking. Believing that attempting everything maximises score; in fact one-third deductions punish blind guesses. Practise the leave-it discipline.
  • Discovering a medical disqualifier late. Not getting screened early for eyes, knees, feet, and veins, then being eliminated at the medical board. Screen yourself at the start.
  • Skipping the security and human-rights layer. Preparing as if it were a general quiz and missing the internal-security and human-rights frame that the essay and interview reward. Own that layer.
  • Reading too many books once. Hoarding sources instead of revising a small canon repeatedly. Fewer books, more revisions.

Myths to drop: that there is an optional subject (there is not), that NCC or sports is mandatory (it is not, though fitness helps), that women cannot apply (they can), and that CAPF and SSC CPO are the same thing (they recruit at different ranks).


18. The first 90 days: a concrete starter roadmap

If you are starting today with nothing, this is what the first three months should look like.

Days 1 to 7, set up.

  • Read this guide, then the five forces, eligibility, exam pattern marking, and selection process.
  • Confirm your eligibility against the current notification on upsc.gov.in (age reference date especially).
  • Get a basic medical self-screening (eyes including colour vision, knees, feet, veins).
  • Buy or download the canon (Section 14) and set up a notebook and an error log.

Days 8 to 30, foundation and base.

  • Begin Polity and Economy static reading with short notes.
  • Start daily General Mental Ability drills (reasoning and quant alternately).
  • Start a daily newspaper habit and a current-affairs note, anchored to static topics.
  • Begin a running base and basic strength three times a week.

Days 31 to 60, broaden and start writing.

  • Add History (modern), Geography (with maps), and General Science.
  • Start one full essay and two précis/comprehension exercises per week (Paper II).
  • Add interval running and begin long-jump and shot-put technique.
  • Take your first timed Paper I sectional tests.

Days 61 to 90, integrate and test.

  • Rotate through all subjects; keep static revision spaced (use Index).
  • Take a full-length Paper I mock and review it through the error log.
  • Continue weekly essays and précis; begin finishing Paper II within three hours.
  • Time your PET events against the indicative norms with a safety margin.

By day 90 you should have a static base in polity and economy, a daily mental-ability and current-affairs habit, an opened front on history, geography and science, a started Paper II writing practice, and a measurable fitness base. That is the platform from which the 3-month or 6-month finishing plan (Section 13) takes over.


19. The complete CAPF syllabus, reproduced

Below is the official syllabus structure, reproduced for reference. For the clause-to-wiki-page mapping, see syllabus index. Confirm the current wording in the year's notification on upsc.gov.in.

Paper I, General Ability and Intelligence (250 marks, objective)

The questions are designed to test the general mental ability and the basic intelligence of candidates. The broad areas are:

  • (a) General Mental Ability. Questions on logical reasoning, quantitative aptitude including numerical ability, and data interpretation.
  • (b) General Science. Questions on general awareness, scientific temper, comprehension and appreciation of scientific phenomena of everyday observation, including new areas of importance such as information and communication technology (ICT), biotechnology, environmental science, and the like.
  • (c) Current Events of National and International Importance. Questions on national and international current events, sports, the Indian and world economy, social and cultural developments, and similar matters of recent importance.
  • (d) Indian Polity and Economy. Questions on the country's political system and the Constitution of India, social systems and public administration, economic development in India, regional and international security issues and human rights, including its indicators.
  • (e) History of India. Questions on the broad general understanding of the subject in its social, economic and political aspects, with an emphasis on the Indian national movement / freedom struggle.
  • (f) Indian and World Geography. Questions on the physical, social and economic aspects of geography pertaining to India and the world.

Paper II, General Studies, Essay and Comprehension (200 marks, descriptive)

  • Part A, Essay (80 marks). Essay questions to be answered in English or Hindi (the candidate's choice). The indicative essay areas span modern Indian history, especially the freedom struggle; geography; polity and economy; knowledge of security and human-rights issues; and analytical ability.
  • Part B, Comprehension, précis writing, other communication / language skills (120 marks). To be attempted in English only. It tests comprehension passages, précis writing, developing counter-arguments, simple grammar, and other aspects of language testing.

Language-medium rules

Component Medium
Paper I (objective) Set in both English and Hindi
Paper II Part A (Essay) English or Hindi, candidate's choice
Paper II Part B (Comprehension and language) English only

The medium rules are durable; confirm them against the current notification on upsc.gov.in.


20. FAQ

1. How many attempts do I get? There is no fixed attempt cap of the kind the Civil Services Examination has. In practice the age limit is the constraint: you may attempt as long as you are within the eligible age band. Confirm there is no attempt clause in the current notification on upsc.gov.in.

2. Is there an optional subject? No. CAPF (AC) has no optional subject. The syllabus is fixed across the six Paper I areas and the two Paper II parts.

3. What is the age limit? The commonly published band is 20 to 25 years as on a reference date stated in the notification, with category relaxations (indicatively up to 3 years for OBC and up to 5 years for SC/ST). Verify the exact reference date and slabs on upsc.gov.in.

4. What degree do I need? A bachelor's degree in any discipline from a recognised university. No specific subject is required.

5. Can a final-year student apply? Typically yes, provisionally, with the requirement to produce proof of passing by the date UPSC specifies. Confirm the exact wording in the current notification.

6. Does NCC help? NCC is not required and is not part of eligibility. Physical training and discipline from NCC can help you in the PST/PET and interview indirectly, but it carries no formal weight and is not mandatory.

7. Can women apply, and to which forces? Yes, women are eligible for the officer posts. Force-wise availability of posts for women and the applicable (eased) physical standards are set out in the notification each year. Verify on upsc.gov.in.

8. How is CAPF (AC) different from the Civil Services Examination? CAPF is a separate, narrower UPSC examination that recruits Assistant Commandants for five specific forces. It has two written papers (objective plus descriptive) on one day, no optional subject, and adds physical and medical stages that CSE does not have. CSE is deeper and analytically harder and recruits across many services.

9. How is it different from SSC CPO? SSC CPO is conducted by the Staff Selection Commission and recruits at the Sub-Inspector level (a rank below Assistant Commandant). CAPF (AC), conducted by UPSC, is the officer-entry route. Different conducting body, different rank.

10. Are PST, PET, and medical scored? No. They are qualifying: you must pass to continue, but they add no marks to merit. The merit (out of 600) comes from Paper I, Paper II, and the interview. A failure at a qualifying stage still ends your candidature.

11. What is the negative marking? Paper I (objective) carries negative marking, typically one-third of the marks for a wrong answer, with no penalty for a blank. Paper II (descriptive) has no negative marking. Confirm the exact deduction on upsc.gov.in.

12. Can I write the exam in Hindi? Paper I is set in both English and Hindi. Paper II Part A (Essay) may be in English or Hindi. Paper II Part B (Comprehension and language) is English only, so you must be able to read and write English.

13. Which is more important, Paper I or Paper II? Both matter, but Paper I is also a screen: if you do not clear the Paper I cut-off, your Paper II is never evaluated. So clear Paper I with margin first, then make Paper II count.

14. How many vacancies are there, and what is the fee? Both change every cycle and are not fixed. Read the current notification on upsc.gov.in for the year's vacancies, category split, and fee (fees are typically relaxed or waived for specified categories).

15. How do I choose which force I get? You do not directly choose; force allocation is done after the final merit on the basis of merit, your stated preference, and the available vacancies in each of BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, and SSB. State your preferences thoughtfully.

16. Do I need to be a science or arts graduate for a particular force? No. Eligibility is graduation in any discipline, and the syllabus is common. Your stream does not gate any force.

17. How long does the whole cycle take? From notification to final result the cycle typically spans most of a year: notification and application in the first half, the written exam in the second half, then PST/PET, documentation, medical, and interview, and finally the merit list and allocation. Exact dates are cycle-specific; verify on upsc.gov.in.

18. What single thing should a beginner not get wrong? Do not separate study from physical training, and do not leave Paper II writing for the end. Run the two together from day one, own the security and human-rights layer, and revise a small canon repeatedly. That combination, more than raw intelligence, is what clears CAPF (AC).


Last-mile recall

  • Conducted by UPSC, once a year, for Assistant Commandant (Group A gazetted) posts in MHA forces.
  • Five forces: BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, SSB; Assam Rifles is administered differently and is not filled through CAPF (AC).
  • Eligibility: Indian national, graduate, roughly 20 to 25 (relaxations apply), men and women, plus physical fitness; verify exact numbers on upsc.gov.in.
  • Written: Paper I 250 (objective, negative marking) + Paper II 200 (descriptive); Paper II Part B English only; Paper II evaluated only after clearing the Paper I cut-off.
  • PST, PET, medical are qualifying (no marks); Interview is 150 marks (scored).
  • Merit is out of 600 (250 + 200 + 150).
  • Own the security and human-rights layer; calibrate to the CAPF level, not CSE.
  • Verify every year-sensitive specific (age reference date, vacancies, fees, dates, cut-offs, exact physical numbers) on upsc.gov.in.

Sources

  • UPSC CAPF (AC) annual examination notification and syllabus, upsc.gov.in.
  • Ministry of Home Affairs and the official websites of BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, and SSB.
  • The Constitution of India and relevant Acts (for the polity, security, and human-rights material).
  • NCERT textbooks and the standard subject references catalogued in booklist.

See also

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