UPSC Prelims 2026 — 30-Day Revision Plan
The final 30 days before UPSC Prelims are the most critical phase of your preparation. This is not the time to learn new topics — it is the time to revise, consolidate and sharpen your accuracy. A well-structured 30-day revision plan can add 20–30 marks to your Prelims score and push you from the borderline to a comfortable qualifying position.
UPSC Prelims 2026 — Exam at a Glance
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Paper 1 — GS | 100 questions, 200 marks, 2 hours |
| Paper 2 — CSAT | 80 questions, 200 marks (qualifying — 33%) |
| Negative Marking | 0.66 marks per wrong answer in GS Paper 1 |
| Medium | Hindi and English |
| Mode | Offline (OMR-based) |
Subject-Wise Weightage in UPSC Prelims GS Paper 1
| Subject | Approx. Questions | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Current Affairs (National + International) | 20–30 | 🔴 Critical |
| History (Ancient + Medieval + Modern) | 15–20 | 🔴 Critical |
| Indian Polity and Constitution | 12–16 | 🔴 Critical |
| Geography (Indian + World) | 10–15 | 🟡 High |
| Economy | 10–12 | 🟡 High |
| Environment and Ecology | 8–12 | 🟡 High |
| Science and Technology | 6–10 | 🟢 Moderate |
30-Day Revision Plan — Week-by-Week Schedule
Week 1 (Days 1–7): History + Polity
| Day | Topic | Resource |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Ancient India — Indus Valley, Vedic, Maurya, Gupta | NCERT Class 11 (Themes) + Your Notes |
| Day 2 | Medieval India — Delhi Sultanate, Mughals, Bhakti-Sufi | NCERT Class 11 (Themes) |
| Day 3 | Modern India — 1857 to 1947, Movements, Acts | Spectrum by Rajiv Ahir (Revise key chapters) |
| Day 4 | Indian Polity — Constitution Basics, Preamble, FR, DPSP | Laxmikant (Revise marked pages) |
| Day 5 | Parliament, President, Governor, Judiciary | Laxmikant + Your Notes |
| Day 6 | Constitutional Amendments, Emergency, Centre-State | Laxmikant |
| Day 7 | History + Polity Mock Test (50 Q) + Review mistakes | Civils Gyani Mock Test |
Week 2 (Days 8–14): Geography + Economy
| Day | Topic | Resource |
|---|---|---|
| Day 8 | Indian Geography — Physical, Rivers, Soils, Vegetation | NCERT Class 11 Physical Geography |
| Day 9 | World Geography — Continents, Oceans, Climate Zones | NCERT Class 11 + Atlas |
| Day 10 | Economic Geography — Agriculture, Industries, Ports | NCERT Class 12 India People Economy |
| Day 11 | Indian Economy — GDP, Budget, Monetary Policy, Inflation | Ramesh Singh / Your Economy Notes |
| Day 12 | Government Schemes — PM Schemes, Economic Surveys | Current Affairs compilation |
| Day 13 | International Economic Institutions — IMF, World Bank, WTO | Your Notes |
| Day 14 | Geography + Economy Mock Test (50 Q) + Review | Civils Gyani Mock Test |
Week 3 (Days 15–21): Environment + Science + Current Affairs
| Day | Topic | Resource |
|---|---|---|
| Day 15 | Ecology — Ecosystems, Biodiversity, Conservation | Shankar IAS Environment |
| Day 16 | Climate Change, Environmental Laws, National Parks | Shankar IAS + Your Notes |
| Day 17 | Science — Biology, Physics, Chemistry basics | NCERT Class 8–10 revision |
| Day 18 | Science and Technology — Space, Defence, Biotech | Current Affairs + Civils Gyani Articles |
| Day 19 | Current Affairs — Jan–May 2026 National Events | Your CA notes / Monthly compilations |
| Day 20 | Current Affairs — International Affairs, Awards, Reports | Monthly CA compilation |
| Day 21 | Environment + Science + CA Mock Test (50 Q) | Civils Gyani Mock Test |
Week 4 (Days 22–30): Full Revision + Mock Tests
- Days 22–25: Second revision pass — go through all your notes quickly (2–3 hours per day per subject)
- Days 26–28: Attempt 3 full-length Prelims mock tests (100 Q each, timed at 2 hours) — analyse every mistake
- Day 29: Light revision of high-yield topics — focus on areas where you lost marks in mocks
- Day 30: Rest, relax, light notes scan. Do NOT study new material.
High-Yield Topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 — Must Revise
History
- Harappan Civilisation — town planning, trade, decline
- Bhakti and Sufi movements — saints, key teachings
- Revolt of 1857 — causes, centres, leaders, aftermath
- Gandhi’s movements — Champaran, Non-Cooperation, CDM, Quit India
- Constitutional developments — Regulating Act 1773 to Independence Act 1947
Polity
- Fundamental Rights (Articles 12–35) — exceptions, SC judgments
- 73rd and 74th Amendments — local self-government
- Money Bill vs Ordinary Bill — differences and procedure
- Parliamentary privileges and immunity
- Article 370 and its abrogation
Current Affairs (2025–2026)
- India’s foreign policy milestones
- New legislation passed by Parliament
- Major SC judgments
- Space missions — ISRO, NASA, ESA
- Climate commitments — COP29, NDCs, net zero targets
Daily Schedule Template — 30-Day Revision
| Time | Activity |
|---|---|
| 6:00–8:00 AM | Revision of previous day’s material + newspaper scan |
| 8:00–11:00 AM | Core subject revision (Day’s topic) |
| 11:30 AM–1:30 PM | Practice MCQs — 30–50 questions |
| 2:30–5:00 PM | Second subject revision |
| 5:30–7:00 PM | Current Affairs — Newspaper + Monthly compilation |
| 8:00–9:30 PM | Light revision of notes + error log review |
Quiz data missing.
Frequently Asked Questions — UPSC Prelims 2026 Revision
Is 30 days enough to revise for UPSC Prelims?
Yes, 30 days is sufficient for revision — if your foundation is already built. The 30-day plan works for consolidation and accuracy improvement, not for first-time learning. Start your main preparation at least 6–9 months before Prelims.
How many mock tests should I attempt before UPSC Prelims 2026?
Attempt at least 10–15 full mock tests before UPSC Prelims. The quality of analysis matters more than quantity — after every mock, spend equal time analysing your mistakes and understanding why you got questions wrong.
Which subject should I focus most on in the last 30 days?
Current Affairs deserves maximum attention in the final 30 days since it contributes 20–30 questions. After that, focus on History and Polity which are consistent high-weightage areas. Science and Environment can be revised quickly with notes.
Should I read newspapers daily during the 30-day revision phase?
Yes, but limit newspaper reading to 30–45 minutes daily during revision. Focus on editorials and current affairs summaries rather than full newspapers. Use compiled monthly current affairs instead of starting from scratch.
What is the typical UPSC Prelims GS Paper 1 cutoff?
The UPSC Prelims GS Paper 1 cutoff varies by year and category. For general category, it typically ranges from 85–110 marks (out of 200). In difficult years it can drop to 80; in easier years it can rise to 115+.