Practice Sets

Paper I Pattern and Analysis

The durable shape of CAPF Paper I, the question count, subject-wise split, question formats, difficulty band, and negative-marking strategy

CAPF wiki5 min read7 sections
At a glance
PaperPaper I

This is the durable, structural picture of CAPF (Assistant Commandants) Paper I: what the paper looks like year after year, regardless of which exact questions appear. Use it to plan effort and to read every authored practice set in context. Always re-verify the live numbers against the current notification on upsc.gov.in, because UPSC can revise the design.

The paper at a glance

Attribute Durable value
Name General Ability and Intelligence
Marks 250
Questions About 125 objective multiple-choice questions
Marks per question 2
Duration 2 hours
Medium English and Hindi (bilingual paper)
Negative marking One-third of the marks for a wrong answer (about 0.66 mark off per wrong question)
Mode OMR, single best answer

The 2-marks-per-question, 125-question, 250-mark structure is the stable backbone. The negative-marking fraction of one-third is the standard UPSC objective penalty.

Subject-wise split (the working weights)

The six sub-areas named in the syllabus are General Mental Ability, General Science, Current Events of National and International Importance, Indian Polity and Economy, History of India, and Indian and World Geography. UPSC does not publish a fixed per-subject question count, and the mix moves year to year, but the durable working weights are:

Sub-area Indicative share of the paper Typical questions
General Mental Ability (reasoning, quantitative) 15 to 25 percent 20 to 30
Indian Polity and Economy 15 to 20 percent 20 to 25
History of India 12 to 18 percent 15 to 22
Indian and World Geography 12 to 18 percent 15 to 22
General Science 12 to 18 percent 15 to 22
Current Events (national and international) 12 to 18 percent 15 to 22

Treat these as planning bands, not guarantees. The lesson is that no single subject can be skipped, and that the static subjects (polity, history, geography, science) plus reasoning together carry most of the paper, with current events as the swing block.

The question formats CAPF uses

CAPF Paper I is a single-best-answer paper, but the stem is built in a few recurring shapes. Knowing the shape tells you how to attack it.

Format What it looks like How to attack it
Single-correct (direct) A factual stem with four options, one correct Recall or eliminate; fastest to answer
Statement-based "Consider the following statements: 1, 2, 3. Which are correct?" with options like "1 and 2 only" Judge each statement true or false independently, then match to the option
Matching (List I and List II) Two lists to pair, with code options Anchor the pairs you are sure of, then eliminate codes that break them
Assertion-Reason An Assertion (A) and a Reason (R); decide if each is true and whether R explains A Check A, then R, then the link; the link is the trap
Odd-one-out and sequence Pick the item that does not belong, or order events or sizes Find the classifying rule; for sequence, anchor the earliest and latest
Map and diagram based (geography, science) Identify a location, a feature, or read a simple figure Convert to known static facts; do not over-read the image

The statement-based and assertion-reason formats are where most marks are won or lost, because a single wrong sub-statement flips the whole answer. Train them deliberately.

Difficulty band

CAPF Paper I sits below the Civil Services Prelims in depth but rewards broad static command. The realistic picture:

  • Most questions are direct or two-statement, solvable by a well-prepared aspirant with clean NCERT-level facts.
  • A minority are multi-statement or fine-distinction items (exact Article numbers, exact dates, precise institutional facts) that separate the top scorers.
  • Reasoning and quantitative items are school-level but time-sensitive; speed, not difficulty, is the constraint.
  • Current events questions reward six to twelve months of consistent reading, not last-week cramming.

The paper is a breadth-and-accuracy test, not a depth test. A candidate strong on fundamentals across all six areas beats a specialist who is deep in two and blank in four.

Negative-marking strategy

With 2 marks for a correct answer and one-third penalty for a wrong one, the expected-value maths is friendly to informed guessing:

  • A blind guess among four options has expected value of (0.25 x +2) plus (0.75 x -0.66), which is roughly negative 0.16: slightly losing, so do not blind-guess.
  • Eliminate one option and the guess becomes break-even to slightly positive; eliminate two and it is clearly positive. So guess once you can rule out at least one or two options.
  • Never leave a question where you are 60 percent or more confident; the maths strongly favours attempting it.
  • In statement-based questions, partial knowledge (being sure one statement is false) often kills two options at once, turning a hard item into a profitable guess.
  • Manage time so you are not forced into blind guesses at the end; the reasoning block is where minutes leak.

A clean target is to attempt the large majority of the paper while keeping the wrong-answer count low, leaning on elimination rather than raw recall.

How this maps to study

If you are weak here Prioritise Anchor notes
Polity Rights, bodies, federalism, amendments Index
History Freedom struggle, ancient and medieval high points Index
Geography India physiography, monsoon, rivers, world chokepoints Index
Science Everyday physics and chemistry, biology basics Index
Economy RBI, budget terms, schemes, inflation Index
Current events National and international six to twelve month window Index
Reasoning and maths Speed drills on core types Index

Cross-references

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