If you are preparing for the APSC CCE Prelims, the most important question you need to answer before anything else is, which subject gets how many questions? The APSC subject-wise weightage in the prelims paper directly decides where you put your time, which topics you prioritize, and how you build your scoring strategy. Get this wrong and even consistent preparation falls short.
This article focuses entirely on the APSC subject-wise weightage for GS Paper I, the only paper that determines your prelims score and your shortlisting for mains.
What Does the APSC Prelims Actually Look Like?

The APSC CCE Prelims has two papers. GS Paper I carries 200 marks and is the only paper that counts toward your merit ranking. GS Paper II (CSAT) carries 200 marks but is purely qualifying, you need just 33%, which is 66 marks, to clear it, and your CSAT score does not count in your ranking at all.
So when we talk about APSC subject-wise weightage for prelims, everything comes down to GS Paper I. Every mark you score here moves you closer to or further from the Mains shortlist. The paper carries a negative marking of 0.25 marks per wrong answer, which means incorrect attempts actively pull your score down.
Since only GS Paper I determines your Prelims merit, it is equally important to understand the score you should target. Read our detailed guide on APSC CCE Expected Cut-Off 2026 to explore the expected category-wise cut-offs, previous year trends, and the safe score required to qualify for the APSC CCE Mains Examination.
What Is the APSC Subject-wise Weightage for GS Paper I?
The table below shows the past year approximate subject-wise weightage for GS Paper I alongside a column for the actual 2026 paper. The 2026 APSC CCE Prelims is scheduled for 5 July 2026. The actual question distribution from the 2026 paper will be updated in the table below after the exam is held and the paper is analyzed.
| Subject / Topic Area | Past Year Approximate Weightage | Questions (Past Trend, Out of 100) | 2026 Actual Questions |
| Assam — Geography, History, Economy, Socio-cultural | 30% – 35% | 30 – 35 Questions | To Be Updated |
| Indian History and National Movement | 10% – 12% | 10 – 12 Questions | To Be Updated |
| Indian and World Geography | 8% – 10% | 8 – 10 Questions | To Be Updated |
| Indian Polity and Governance | 8% – 10% | 8 – 10 Questions | To Be Updated |
| Economic and Social Development | 8% – 10% | 8 – 10 Questions | To Be Updated |
| General Science | 8% – 10% | 8 – 10 Questions | To Be Updated |
| Current Events — National and International | 8% – 10% | 8 – 10 Questions | To Be Updated |
| Environment, Ecology, and Biodiversity | 5% – 8% | 5 – 8 Questions | To Be Updated |
Note: The APSC CCE Prelims 2026 takes place on 5 July 2026. The actual subject-wise question count from the 2026 paper will be added to the table above after the exam and paper analysis. Bookmark this page and check back after 5 July.
Which Subject Gets the Most Questions in the APSC Prelims?
Looking at past year data, Assam-specific topics dominate the APSC subject-wise weightage by a wide margin. Roughly 30 to 35 questions out of 100 in GS Paper I come directly from Assam, its geography, rivers, districts, history, economy, government schemes, and socio-cultural developments.
That is almost one-third of the entire paper from a single subject cluster. No other subject comes close. Indian History comes next at around 10 to 12 questions, followed by Geography, Polity, Economy, Science, and Current Affairs, each contributing roughly 8 to 10 questions.
This breakdown makes one thing very clear. If you score well in Assam and do reasonably well in the remaining subjects, you build a strong total. If you ignore Assam, no amount of work in other subjects fully compensates for that gap.
How Should You Use the APSC Subject-wise Weightage for Your Preparation?
The APSC subject-wise weightage is not just a data to look at, it is a preparation tool. Here is how to use it practically:
Spend the most time on Assam. Since 30 to 35 percent of the paper comes from Assam, at least 30 to 35 percent of your total daily study time should go toward Assam-specific content. Build a dedicated notes file covering Assam geography, important rivers, wildlife sanctuaries, national parks, districts, economic data, government schemes, cultural communities, and historical events.
Do not skip Current Affairs. Current Affairs contributes 8 to 10 questions in every cycle. Since this is the one subject that changes every year, you cannot rely on old notes alone. Read a reliable daily current affairs summary and maintain a monthly notes file throughout your preparation period.
Cover General Science from NCERT. General science questions in APSC prelims are largely NCERT-based, Class 6 to Class 10. Covering these thoroughly gives you 8 to 10 relatively predictable marks without spending excessive time on advanced material.
Do not over-invest in CSAT. GS Paper II is qualifying only and needs just 33% to clear. Spend 2 to 3 weeks on basic aptitude and logical reasoning practice, and then move on. Every extra hour on CSAT is an hour taken away from GS Paper I, which is where your actual score comes from.
What Is the Negative Marking Rule and How Does It Affect Your Attempt Strategy?
The APSC prelims analysis becomes even more important when you factor in negative marking. Every wrong answer in GS Paper I costs you 0.25 marks. So four wrong answers wipe out one correct answer completely.
This means your strategy in the exam should not be to attempt every question. Instead, group questions into three categories as you go through the paper:
- Confident — attempt immediately. Questions where you know the answer without doubt.
- Partially sure — come back in the second round. Questions where you can eliminate at least 2 options. Use the elimination technique to improve your odds before attempting.
- Unsure — skip entirely. Questions where you have no real basis to pick an answer. Guessing here actively reduces your score.
Based on past-year analysis, candidates who attempted 75 to 85 questions with 85 to 90 percent accuracy consistently outperformed those who attempted all 100 questions with 70 to 75 percent accuracy. The quality of the attempt matters more than the quantity in this exam.
After the examination, evaluate your performance by comparing your responses with the official solutions. Download the APSC Prelims Question Paper 2026 with Answer Key to check the complete question paper, detailed answer key, and estimate your expected Prelims score before the official results are announced.
How Does Assam Weightage Compare to Other Subjects in the Prelims?
To make the APSC subject-wise weightage picture even clearer, here is a simple comparison of how Assam stacks up against other individual subjects:
| Comparison | Past Year Questions |
| Assam (all topics combined) | To Be Updated |
| Indian History | To Be Updated |
| Geography | To Be Updated |
| Polity | To Be Updated |
| Economy | To Be Updated |
| General Science | To Be Updated |
| Current Affairs | To Be Updated |
| Environment | To Be Updated |
Assam alone contributes more questions than any three other individual subjects combined. This comparison makes the preparation priority absolutely clear, Assam is your highest-return subject and should receive the most focused attention throughout your preparation.
Conclusion
The APSC subject-wise weightage for Prelims tells you one thing very clearly, Assam is where you build your score and everything else is where you protect it. With 30 to 35 percent of GS Paper I coming from Assam content, no preparation plan is complete without making this subject your first and biggest priority.
Use the past year weightage data in this blog to plan your subject-wise study time right now. Once the 5 July 2026 paper is held and analysed, come back to this page for the actual 2026 question distribution so you can refine your understanding of the subject-wise weightage trend going forward.
Prepare strategically, attempt with discipline, and walk into that exam hall knowing exactly which subjects your score depends on.
FAQs
Assam-specific topics carry the highest weightage by far, contributing roughly 30 to 35 percent of GS Paper I, that is, around 30 to 35 questions out of 100. This includes Assam geography, history, economy, and socio-cultural content. No other single subject comes close to this level of representation in the paper.
No, CSAT does not count toward your merit score at all. GS Paper II is purely qualifying and requires only 33%, which is 66 marks out of 200 to pass. After clearing that threshold, your CSAT marks play no role in shortlisting for Mains. Only your GS Paper I score determines your prelims rank.
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