1. Exam Overview
- Official exam name: Central Armed Police Forces (Assistant Commandants) Examination
- Short name / abbreviation: CAPF AC, often written as UPSC CAPF AC
- Country / region: India
- Exam type: National-level recruitment examination for Group A gazetted officer posts
- Conducting body / authority: Union Public Service Commission (UPSC)
- Status: Active, conducted annually subject to UPSC notification and Government vacancy requisition
The Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination is a national recruitment exam conducted by UPSC to select candidates for appointment as Assistant Commandants in India’s Central Armed Police Forces. It is an officer-entry exam, not a college admission test. If you want a leadership role in forces such as BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, or SSB, CAPF AC is one of the main direct-entry pathways. The process usually includes a written exam, physical standards/physical efficiency tests, medical standards tests, and an interview/personality test.
Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination and CAPF AC at a glance
This guide covers the UPSC-conducted Central Armed Police Forces (Assistant Commandants) Examination, commonly called CAPF AC, and not other police, paramilitary, SSC, state police, or defence recruitment exams.
2. Quick Facts Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Who should take this exam | Graduates who want officer-level careers in CAPFs |
| Main purpose | Recruitment of Assistant Commandants in CAPFs |
| Level | Employment / public service / Group A officer recruitment |
| Frequency | Usually annual |
| Mode | Written exam is offline (pen-and-paper) |
| Languages offered | Paper I: bilingual options as per notification; Paper II: essay can be written in English or Hindi, précis/comprehension/other language skills usually in English only, as per official rules |
| Duration | Paper I: 2 hours; Paper II: 3 hours |
| Number of sections / papers | 2 written papers, followed by PET/PST, medical standards tests, and interview/personality test |
| Negative marking | Yes, for Paper I objective questions |
| Score validity period | For that recruitment cycle only |
| Typical application window | Usually around April–May in recent years, but check current UPSC notice |
| Typical exam window | Usually around August in recent years, but check current UPSC calendar/notification |
| Official website(s) | UPSC: https://www.upsc.gov.in and application portal notified by UPSC |
| Official information bulletin / brochure availability | Yes, through the official UPSC examination notification |
Important: Dates, fees, and vacancies change every year. Always use the current UPSC notification for the exact cycle.
3. Who Should Take This Exam
Ideal candidates include:
- Graduates who want a uniformed leadership career
- Candidates interested in:
- internal security
- border management
- counter-insurgency support
- law-and-order support roles
- command, administration, and field leadership
- Students preparing for government service with physical and mental demands
- Aspirants who can handle both:
- academic preparation
- fitness preparation
Academic background suitability
This exam is open to graduates from many streams, including:
- Arts
- Science
- Commerce
- Engineering
- Management
- Other recognized bachelor’s degrees
No specific subject combination is generally required for the written exam.
Career goals supported by the exam
This exam is suitable if your goal is to become an officer in:
- Border Security Force (BSF)
- Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF)
- Central Industrial Security Force (CISF)
- Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP)
- Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB)
Who should avoid it
This exam may not be suitable if:
- You do not want a uniformed, disciplined, transferable service
- You are not comfortable with:
- physical endurance requirements
- medical standards
- service in remote or difficult locations
- command responsibility
- You only want a desk-based civil services role
- You are not eligible on age, medical, or nationality grounds
Best alternative exams if this exam is not suitable
Depending on your goals, alternatives may include:
- UPSC Civil Services Examination — for IAS, IPS, and other civil services
- SSC CPO — for Sub-Inspector roles in CAPFs/Delhi Police
- State Public Service Commission police service exams
- Indian Army/Navy/Air Force officer entry exams
- Assistant Commandant departmental or other force-specific routes, where applicable
- SSC GD / Constable / other subordinate force recruitment, if officer-entry is not currently possible
4. What This Exam Leads To
This exam leads to recruitment, not admission.
Outcome
Candidates selected through the CAPF AC process are considered for appointment as Assistant Commandants in Central Armed Police Forces, depending on vacancy allocation and final merit.
Jobs and pathways opened
The exam can lead to appointment in one or more of the following forces, depending on the year’s vacancies:
- BSF
- CRPF
- CISF
- ITBP
- SSB
Is the exam mandatory?
For direct recruitment to these Assistant Commandant posts through the UPSC route, this exam is a major and official pathway. However, it is not the only possible career route into all security services overall, because some forces may also have:
- departmental promotion channels
- different recruitment levels for other ranks
- other specialized entries
Recognition inside India
This is a highly recognized central government recruitment examination conducted by UPSC, one of India’s most trusted constitutional recruiting bodies.
International recognition
There is no direct international academic equivalence attached to CAPF AC. Its value is mainly as an Indian government officer recruitment route.
5. Conducting Body and Official Authority
- Full name of organization: Union Public Service Commission (UPSC)
- Role and authority: Conducts the examination, publishes the notification, receives applications, declares written results, and conducts the personality test/interview stage
- Official website: https://www.upsc.gov.in
- Governing ministry / regulator / board: UPSC is a constitutional body. The posts are under the Government of India, with force/service allocation linked to the concerned Ministry/authorities, generally associated with the Ministry of Home Affairs for CAPFs.
- Exam rules source: Annual UPSC notification, examination rules, and official instructions for the relevant cycle
Warning: UPSC notifications are the controlling source. Coaching websites often simplify rules, but final interpretation must come from the official notification.
6. Eligibility Criteria
Eligibility must be checked from the current UPSC notification because details can change slightly by cycle.
Nationality / domicile / residency
For the Assistant Commandants examination, candidates are generally required to be:
- citizens of India, or
- persons falling within categories explicitly permitted by UPSC notification
For this exam, practical eligibility is typically centered on Indian citizens, especially because these are officer posts in armed police forces. Check the current notification for the exact nationality clause.
Age limit and relaxations
Historically and in recent UPSC CAPF AC notifications, candidates generally must be:
- at least 20 years old
- not more than 25 years old
This age is usually reckoned on the date specified in the notification.
Upper age relaxation is generally available for certain categories such as:
- Scheduled Castes (SC)
- Scheduled Tribes (ST)
- Other Backward Classes (OBC)
- Civilian Central Government servants in some circumstances
- Ex-servicemen in some circumstances
Exact relaxation rules vary by notification and category conditions. Always verify from the latest UPSC exam notice.
Educational qualification
Candidates generally must hold a:
- Bachelor’s degree from a university incorporated by an Act of Parliament or State Legislature in India, or
- an educational institution established by an Act of Parliament, or
- a deemed university, or
- an equivalent qualification recognized by the Government
Minimum marks / GPA / class / degree requirement
Typically, there is no general minimum percentage requirement announced for all candidates beyond possessing the required degree.
Subject prerequisites
- No fixed stream/subject requirement is generally prescribed.
- Graduates from any discipline may apply if they meet other conditions.
Final-year eligibility rules
In recent patterns, candidates appearing in the final year/semester of their degree examination may be allowed to apply provisionally, subject to producing proof of passing by the deadline specified in the notification or detailed application process.
Because documentation deadlines matter, confirm this carefully in the current cycle notification.
Work experience requirement
- No prior work experience is generally required.
Internship / practical training requirement
- Not applicable as a general eligibility condition.
Reservation / category rules
Reservation and relaxation rules follow Government of India norms and the UPSC notification, including categories such as:
- SC
- ST
- OBC
- EWS
- Ex-servicemen, where applicable
Medical / physical standards
This is a critical part of eligibility and selection.
Candidates must satisfy:
- Physical Standards Test (PST) requirements
- Physical Efficiency Test (PET) requirements
- Medical Standards Test
These cover areas such as:
- height
- chest measurements for male candidates
- weight in proportion to height and age
- vision standards
- general medical fitness
Some standards differ by:
- gender
- category
- sometimes region/community exceptions where officially provided
Physical and medical standards are highly important and should be read directly from the latest UPSC notification.
Language requirements
There is no separate general language eligibility condition beyond the exam rules. However:
- Paper II includes English language-related components
- Candidates should be able to handle written communication and comprehension effectively
Number of attempts
UPSC CAPF AC notifications usually do not prescribe a fixed attempt cap in the same way as some other UPSC exams. Practically, your number of attempts is limited by your age eligibility and notification rules.
Gap year rules
- Gap years are generally not a disqualification by themselves.
- You must still satisfy age, educational, physical, medical, and other conditions.
Special eligibility for foreign candidates / NRI / international students / reserved categories / disabled candidates
- Foreign nationals are generally not the typical applicant group for this exam.
- NRIs must satisfy the same nationality and degree recognition requirements if applicable.
- Persons with benchmark disabilities are usually subject to the functional requirements of the post; because this is a uniformed force officer role with physical standards, eligibility is restrictive. Check the current notification carefully.
Important exclusions or disqualifications
Candidates may be disqualified for reasons such as:
- not meeting nationality conditions
- not meeting age requirements
- not having the required degree by the prescribed date
- failing PST/PET/medical standards
- furnishing false information
- document mismatch
- misconduct/unfair means
- serious service/character issues found during verification
Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination and CAPF AC eligibility summary
For the Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination, academic eligibility is comparatively broad, but CAPF AC becomes restrictive because age limits, physical standards, and medical fitness are as important as the degree requirement.
7. Important Dates and Timeline
Current cycle dates
I am not listing specific current-cycle dates unless confirmed from the latest official UPSC notification for the running year. Dates vary every year and must be checked on:
- https://www.upsc.gov.in
- UPSC annual calendar
- the relevant CAPF AC notification PDF
Typical annual timeline based on recent historical pattern
Typical / past pattern only:
- Notification release: April
- Application window: April to May
- Correction/edit window: If provided, as per UPSC’s application system rules
- Admit card release: A few weeks before exam
- Written exam: Around August
- Written result: Usually later in the year
- PET/PST and medical stages: After written result, as notified
- Interview / personality test: After qualifying physical/medical stages
- Final result: Later stage of the recruitment cycle
What students should do month by month
12–10 months before typical exam month
- Read previous notification
- Check age eligibility carefully
- Start fitness baseline
- Build newspaper/current affairs habit
- Begin NCERT and basic static subjects
9–7 months before
- Cover Paper I fundamentals:
- polity
- history
- geography
- economy
- environment
- science
- current affairs
- Begin Paper II writing practice
- Solve previous-year questions
6–4 months before
- Start full-length Paper I mocks
- Practice Paper II essays, précis, and reading/comprehension
- Improve speed and accuracy
- Train regularly for fitness benchmarks
3–2 months before
- Intensive revision
- Timed mock tests
- Past paper analysis
- Document preparation
- Keep checking UPSC notices
Final month
- Revise notes only
- Improve weak topics
- Avoid new heavy sources
- Confirm exam center arrangements
- Sleep and fitness discipline
After written exam
- Continue fitness
- Preserve documents
- Prepare for interview/personality test if written result is positive
- Stay alert for PST/PET and DAF-related instructions if issued
8. Application Process
The application process is controlled by UPSC and may evolve with portal updates.
Step 1: Where to apply
Apply only through the official UPSC website or official application portal linked from:
- https://www.upsc.gov.in
Step 2: Registration / account creation
UPSC may require candidates to complete a registration process through its online application system. The exact interface can change.
Usually this involves:
- basic personal details
- mobile/email verification
- generation of registration credentials
Step 3: Fill the application form
You will usually need to enter:
- name as per official records
- date of birth
- parents’ details
- category
- educational qualification
- address
- photo ID details
- exam center preferences
- service-related details if applicable
Step 4: Upload documents
Typical uploads may include:
- recent passport-size photograph
- signature
- photo identity proof details
- category/disability certificates where applicable, often at later stages or as instructed
Follow exact format rules in the notification and portal, such as:
- file type
- file size
- background
- signature dimensions
- face visibility
Step 5: Category / reservation declaration
Declare category carefully:
- General
- EWS
- OBC
- SC
- ST
- Ex-serviceman, if applicable
Your claim must match valid certificate rules.
Step 6: Fee payment
Pay through the approved online/offline methods listed in the notification for that year.
Step 7: Review and final submission
Before final submission, verify:
- spelling of name
- date of birth
- category
- exam center
- educational status
- photograph/signature clarity
Step 8: Save proof
Download and save:
- application form
- fee receipt
- registration number
- confirmation page
Correction process
If UPSC provides a correction/edit window, it will be mentioned in the notice or portal instructions. Not all fields may be editable.
Common application mistakes
- entering wrong date of birth
- mismatch between certificate name and application name
- selecting wrong category
- uploading unclear photo/signature
- not checking final eligibility before paying fee
- ignoring degree completion date rules
- assuming physical standards can be managed later
Final submission checklist
- [ ] Read current UPSC notification
- [ ] Confirm age eligibility
- [ ] Confirm degree status
- [ ] Check physical and medical standards
- [ ] Upload correct photo/signature
- [ ] Enter valid email/mobile
- [ ] Pay fee successfully
- [ ] Download final application copy
9. Application Fee and Other Costs
Official application fee
The fee changes by year and category. In recent UPSC recruitment patterns, reduced or exempted fees may apply for some categories, including women and reserved categories, but you must confirm exact current-cycle fee from the official notification.
Category-wise fee differences
Typically, UPSC notifications specify whether fee exemption applies to:
- female candidates
- SC
- ST
- certain other categories, if any
Do not rely on memory. Check the exact current notice.
Late fee / correction fee
- Usually only if specifically provided in the portal system.
- Not all cycles include a separate correction fee.
Counselling / interview / document verification fee
- Generally not referred to as “counselling” for this recruitment exam.
- Interview stage usually does not involve a typical academic counselling fee, but travel and logistics costs are real.
Retest / revaluation / objection fee
- Written answer review rules follow UPSC procedures.
- UPSC does not generally provide conventional revaluation on demand in the way some academic boards do.
- Answer key timing and objection mechanisms, if any, are limited and process-specific.
Hidden practical costs students should budget for
Travel
- exam center travel
- PET/PST/medical/interview travel
- possible repeat visits
Accommodation
- if center is outside your city
- hotel/hostel stay for multiple stages
Coaching
- optional, can be expensive
- online or classroom fees vary widely
Books
- standard GS books
- essay/writing material
- current affairs resources
Mock tests
- paid test series often help
- paper-wise and full-length tests
Document costs
- photocopies
- certificate renewals
- attestations if needed
- ID corrections if mismatch exists
Medical tests
Some pre-checks by candidates themselves can help identify issues early, though official medical exam standards are final.
Internet / device needs
- stable phone/email access
- online form submission
- admit card download
- online preparation if self-studying
Pro Tip: For CAPF AC, budget not only for the written exam but also for later physical and interview stages.
10. Exam Pattern
The exam pattern below is based on standard UPSC CAPF AC structure used in recent official notifications. Always confirm from the latest notification.
Written Examination structure
| Paper | Subject | Type | Marks | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paper I | General Ability and Intelligence | Objective | 250 | 2 hours |
| Paper II | General Studies, Essay and Comprehension | Descriptive | 200 | 3 hours |
Total marks
- Written exam total: 450 marks
Follow-up stages
After the written exam, qualified candidates are called for:
- Physical Standards Test (PST)
- Physical Efficiency Test (PET)
- Medical Standards Test
- Interview / Personality Test
Interview marks
In recent official patterns:
- Interview / Personality Test: 150 marks
Total selection marks
- Written + Interview = 600 marks, subject to qualifying later stages and eligibility
Mode
- Offline, pen-and-paper written exam
Question types
Paper I
- Objective multiple-choice questions
Paper II
Usually includes:
- essay writing
- comprehension
- précis writing
- other language/communication-related tasks as prescribed
Language options
Paper II generally follows this broad structure in recent notifications:
- Essay component may be written in English or Hindi
- Other components such as précis, comprehension, and language skills are often to be answered in English only
Check the current notification wording carefully.
Marking scheme
Paper I
- Objective marks as per question paper
- Negative marking applies
In recent UPSC CAPF AC patterns:
- One-third of the marks assigned to a question is deducted for each wrong answer in Paper I
Paper II
- No MCQ negative marking in the same sense; descriptive evaluation is used
Partial marking
- Not generally described as “partial marking” in the official pattern for descriptive answers
Sectional timing
- Paper I and Paper II have separate fixed durations
- No internal sectional timing officially announced in the usual pattern
Physical Efficiency Test components
These are important but should be confirmed from the latest official notification because standards may be revised. Recent historical pattern commonly includes events such as:
For male candidates: – 100 meters race – 800 meters race – long jump – shot put
For female candidates: – 100 meters race – 800 meters race – long jump
Exact qualifying timings/distances must be taken from the official notification.
Normalization or scaling
- UPSC does not typically describe CAPF AC scoring in terms of public percentile normalization like some CBT exams.
- Merit is based on official evaluation and qualifying rules as notified.
Does the pattern vary by force?
- Written pattern is common for the exam.
- Final force allocation depends on vacancies, merit, preferences, and eligibility.
Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination and CAPF AC pattern summary
The Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination tests both knowledge and officer-like communication. CAPF AC is not cleared by GS alone; descriptive writing, fitness, and interview performance also matter.
11. Detailed Syllabus
UPSC provides a defined syllabus in the official notification. The syllabus is relatively stable, though emphasis can vary from year to year.
Paper I: General Ability and Intelligence
This paper broadly tests general mental ability and broad awareness.
1) General Mental Ability
Topics generally include:
- logical reasoning
- quantitative aptitude
- numerical ability
- data interpretation
- pattern recognition
- analytical ability
2) General Science
Focus areas:
- general awareness of science
- everyday science applications
- basic scientific phenomena
This is not usually as technical as engineering-level science.
3) Current Events of National and International Importance
Important areas:
- government schemes
- internal security developments
- international relations basics
- important reports and events
- defence/security headlines
- national issues
- sports, awards, major appointments where relevant
4) Indian Polity and Economy
Topics include:
- Constitution
- political system
- governance
- public administration basics
- Panchayati Raj
- social systems
- economic development
- budgeting basics
- planning/development issues
5) History of India
Topics include:
- ancient, medieval, and modern India
- freedom struggle
- social and political movements
- post-independence themes at broad level
6) Indian and World Geography
Topics include:
- physical geography
- Indian geography
- climate
- resources
- agriculture
- population
- economic geography
- major world regions
Paper II: General Studies, Essay and Comprehension
This paper tests writing ability, analysis, and communication.
Part A: Essay
Candidates may be asked to write essays on topics related to:
- modern Indian history
- geography
- polity and constitution
- economy
- security issues
- analytical and social themes
- current affairs
Part B: Comprehension and language skills
Typical areas:
- précis writing
- comprehension passages
- developing counter-arguments
- simple grammar and usage
- language clarity
- sentence structuring
- communication skill
Skills being tested
The exam tests:
- broad national awareness
- officer-level judgment
- disciplined thinking
- writing clarity
- analytical understanding
- factual retention
- decision-oriented reading of current affairs
High-weightage areas if known
UPSC does not officially publish chapter-wise weightage. Based on historical papers, these areas are often important:
- polity
- current affairs
- history
- geography
- economy
- security and governance themes
- essay writing quality
- English comprehension/précis
Static vs dynamic syllabus
- Static areas: polity, history, geography, science basics
- Dynamic areas: current affairs, security developments, economy updates, governance themes, essay themes
Link between syllabus and real exam difficulty
The syllabus looks broad but manageable. The difficulty comes from:
- breadth of coverage
- unpredictable current affairs weight
- need for quick elimination in MCQs
- Paper II writing quality under time pressure
Commonly ignored but important topics
- basic arithmetic/reasoning practice for Paper I
- précis writing format
- reading comprehension accuracy
- internal security/governance-linked essay themes
- map-based geography basics
- constitutional bodies and amendments
- science in everyday life
12. Difficulty Level and Competition Analysis
Relative difficulty
- Moderate to high
- Easier than some highly specialized exams in terms of technical depth
- Hard because of the combination of:
- UPSC-style standards
- limited vacancies
- fitness and medical filtering
- interview stage
Conceptual vs memory-based nature
This exam is a mix of:
- conceptual understanding
- factual recall
- current affairs awareness
- analytical writing
Speed vs accuracy demands
Paper I
- speed matters
- elimination skill matters
- accuracy is crucial because of negative marking
Paper II
- writing quality matters more than speed alone
- time management still matters due to long descriptive format
Typical competition level
Competition is serious because:
- the exam is national-level
- vacancies are limited
- many candidates from UPSC/general studies backgrounds apply
Number of test-takers / vacancies / selection ratio
These vary by year.
- Vacancies: officially announced in each UPSC notification
- Applicants/test-takers: not always consistently published in a simple student-facing format
- Selection ratio: fluctuates significantly by year
Do not rely on random internet vacancy tables unless they match the current UPSC notice.
What makes the exam difficult
- wide syllabus
- dual nature: objective + descriptive
- physical requirements
- medical standards can eliminate candidates late
- interview/personality test matters
- service preference and final merit dynamics
What kind of student usually performs well
Students who usually do well are:
- disciplined
- physically active
- comfortable with current affairs
- decent at essay and English writing
- consistent rather than last-minute crammers
- able to avoid reckless guessing
13. Scoring, Ranking, and Results
Raw score calculation
Paper I
- marks awarded for correct answers
- wrong answers attract negative marking
- unanswered questions usually get no marks
Paper II
- evaluated descriptively by examiners
Percentile / scaled score / rank
- UPSC generally publishes result lists and final merit outcomes rather than percentile-style student dashboards used in many CBT exams.
- Final merit is based on performance in written exam and interview/personality test, subject to qualifying other stages.
Passing marks / qualifying marks
UPSC may prescribe:
- minimum qualifying marks in the written exam and/or interview
- qualifying standards for Paper I/Paper II or combined written stage
- PET/PST and medical standards are qualifying in nature
Always check the current notification.
Sectional cutoffs
UPSC may use paper-wise qualifying standards. These are not always publicly framed in the same way as “sectional cutoffs” in management entrance exams.
Overall cutoffs
Final cutoffs vary by year depending on:
- vacancies
- difficulty level
- category
- performance distribution
Only official result notices should be trusted.
Merit list rules
The final merit list is typically based on:
- written examination marks
- interview/personality test marks
- eligibility and successful completion of PST/PET/medical and document verification processes
Tie-breaking rules
Tie rules, where applicable, are governed by official UPSC recruitment rules for the exam cycle.
Result validity
- Valid for that recruitment cycle only.
Rechecking / revaluation / objections
- UPSC does not usually offer conventional revaluation on demand.
- Representation mechanisms, answer key publication timing, and marks disclosure are governed by UPSC policy.
Scorecard interpretation
Useful things to track if UPSC releases marks later:
- Paper I performance
- Paper II writing strength
- interview marks
- category-wise competition position
14. Selection Process After the Exam
The CAPF AC selection process does not end with the written test.
Stage 1: Written Examination
- Paper I + Paper II
Stage 2: Physical Standards Test (PST)
Checks whether you meet prescribed standards such as:
- height
- chest (for male candidates)
- weight standards
- other notified measurements
Stage 3: Physical Efficiency Test (PET)
Qualifying physical tasks as specified in the notification.
Stage 4: Medical Standards Test
A detailed medical examination checks whether you meet the force’s medical requirements.
Stage 5: Interview / Personality Test
Candidates who clear earlier stages are called for UPSC interview/personality test.
This assesses:
- leadership potential
- mental alertness
- communication
- judgment
- motivation for service
- balance under pressure
Stage 6: Final Merit List
Prepared based on:
- written marks
- interview marks
- subject to qualifying physical/medical standards and document verification
Stage 7: Document Verification and Background Checks
Candidates must provide all required original documents. Character and antecedent verification also forms part of recruitment.
Stage 8: Force Allocation / Appointment
Appointment depends on:
- final merit
- vacancies
- force preferences
- category rules
- medical/other suitability
Stage 9: Training / Probation
Selected candidates undergo training as per force/service rules before full field responsibilities.
15. Seats, Vacancies, Intake, or Opportunity Size
For this exam, the correct term is vacancies, not seats.
Total vacancies
- Vacancies are announced every year in the official UPSC CAPF AC notification.
- The number changes annually.
Category-wise breakup
- May be reflected through reservation policy and final vacancy distribution.
- Exact breakup must be taken from the current notification.
Force-wise distribution
Vacancies are usually distributed across forces such as:
- BSF
- CRPF
- CISF
- ITBP
- SSB
The distribution changes each year.
Recent trends
There is no fixed guaranteed intake. Opportunity size depends on government requisition and force needs.
Warning: Historical vacancy numbers are useful only for rough perspective. They should not be used to predict this year’s selection chances.
16. Colleges, Universities, Employers, or Pathways That Accept This Exam
This is not a college entrance exam, so “accepting institutions” are actually recruiting forces.
Main employers / forces
- Border Security Force (BSF)
- Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF)
- Central Industrial Security Force (CISF)
- Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP)
- Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB)
Acceptance scope
- Nationwide, under central government recruitment
Top examples
All the above are major Central Armed Police Forces under the Union Government framework.
Notable exceptions
This exam is not for direct recruitment into:
- Indian Army officer cadre
- state police deputy superintendent posts
- SSC police exams
- IPS through Civil Services Examination
Alternative pathways if a candidate does not qualify
- UPSC Civil Services
- SSC CPO
- state police service exams
- defence officer entry exams
- subordinate CAPF recruitment with later promotion possibilities
17. Eligibility-to-Outcome Map
If you are a final-year graduation student
If your final-year status is accepted under the current notification and you meet the age rule, this exam can lead to Assistant Commandant selection, subject to passing the degree by the required deadline and clearing all stages.
If you are a graduate in arts/science/commerce
This exam can lead to a Group A officer career in CAPFs if you also meet physical and medical requirements.
If you are an engineering graduate
Your degree is generally eligible, and this exam can lead to a uniformed command role rather than a technical engineering job.
If you are a civil services aspirant who wants a security-service path
CAPF AC can lead to a direct officer role in paramilitary forces and may suit you if you prefer field command and operational service.
If you are physically fit but weak in descriptive writing
You are eligible, but the exam will only lead to selection if you improve Paper II and interview communication.
If you are above the age limit
This exam may not be possible unless you qualify for valid age relaxation. You should then explore alternatives like SSC, state services, or other eligible recruitments.
18. Preparation Strategy
Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination and CAPF AC preparation mindset
The Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination rewards balanced preparation. CAPF AC is not just a GS exam and not just a fitness test. You must prepare for written, physical, and personality stages together.
12-month plan
Best for beginners or working candidates.
Months 1–3
- Read official syllabus and previous notification
- Build basics from NCERTs or standard foundation books
- Start daily current affairs notes
- Begin light but regular fitness training
- Practice basic reasoning and arithmetic
Months 4–6
- Complete first full syllabus coverage for Paper I
- Start weekly essay writing
- Practice comprehension and précis
- Solve previous-year Paper I questions topic-wise
- Build revision notebook
Months 7–9
- Start full-length mocks
- Analyze mistakes deeply
- Revise static subjects second time
- Make short current affairs compilations
- Increase physical performance steadily
Months 10–12
- Intensive testing phase
- Focus on high-yield topics
- Paper II timed writing every week
- Refine guessing strategy for Paper I
- Prepare documents and application readiness
6-month plan
Good for candidates with basic GS familiarity.
Months 1–2
- Finish polity, history, geography, economy basics
- Start science and current affairs parallelly
- 2 essays per week
- 3–4 fitness sessions per week
Months 3–4
- Full Paper I practice
- Paper II sectional writing drills
- Previous-year papers
- Begin mock tests every 7–10 days
Months 5–6
- Mocks every 3–5 days
- Aggressive revision
- Improve weak areas
- Practice answer structure and précis under time limit
3-month plan
Possible for strong candidates but risky for beginners.
Month 1
- Complete high-yield static subjects
- Daily current affairs revision
- Begin mock tests
- Start answer writing immediately
Month 2
- Alternate-day Paper I practice
- 2–3 Paper II sessions weekly
- Previous-year papers
- Topic-wise error log
Month 3
- Full-length tests only
- Revision from self-notes
- No source-hopping
- Fitness maintenance, not overtraining
Last 30-day strategy
- Revise only trusted notes and marked questions
- Solve 6–10 quality full mocks if not already done
- Review all wrong answers
- Practice 4–6 essays
- Practice précis and comprehension under time pressure
- Sleep discipline
- No major new books
Last 7-day strategy
- Reduce volume, increase recall
- Revise polity articles, geography maps, economy basics, current affairs snapshots
- Read essay frameworks
- Light practice only
- Confirm admit card, ID, travel plan
Exam-day strategy
Paper I
- First pass: attempt sure questions
- Second pass: attempt eliminable questions
- Avoid ego-attempts
- Protect accuracy because of negative marking
Paper II
- Allocate time before starting
- Keep essay structure clear:
- intro
- body with subpoints
- balanced conclusion
- Write legibly
- Do not spend too long on one answer block
Beginner strategy
- Start with NCERT-level clarity
- Do not begin from advanced coaching notes
- Focus first on:
- polity
- modern history
- geography
- current affairs
- basic reasoning
- Add Paper II from the first month itself
Repeater strategy
- Do not repeat old mistakes blindly
- Diagnose whether your issue was:
- Paper I score
- Paper II score
- physical stage
- interview stage
- Use previous marks to redesign preparation
- Increase mock analysis, not just mock count
Working-professional strategy
- Study 2–3 focused hours on weekdays
- 6–8 hours on weekends
- Use early mornings for reading-heavy subjects
- Keep current affairs concise
- Practice writing on weekends
- Build a realistic PET fitness routine
Weak-student recovery strategy
If your basics are poor:
- Choose limited sources
- Study one subject at a time
- Solve easy-to-moderate MCQs first
- Write short answers before full essays
- Focus on 70% high-yield syllabus instead of perfection
Time management
A practical weekly split:
- 40% Paper I static GS
- 20% current affairs
- 20% Paper II writing and comprehension
- 10% mock review
- 10% fitness and recovery planning beyond daily routine
Note-making
Make three layers of notes:
- Layer 1: full notes during first reading
- Layer 2: short revision notes
- Layer 3: one-page final revision sheets
Revision cycles
- First revision within 7 days of study
- Second revision within 21 days
- Third revision before mock phase
- Final revision from short notes only
Mock test strategy
- Start topic-wise
- Move to sectional
- Then full-length timed papers
- Review every wrong answer:
- knowledge gap
- silly mistake
- bad elimination
- time pressure
Error log method
Keep a notebook or spreadsheet with columns:
- date
- source/mock
- topic
- mistake type
- correct concept
- revision due date
This is one of the highest-return habits.
Subject prioritization
Highest practical priority for most students:
- Polity
- Current affairs
- Modern history
- Geography
- Economy
- Science
- Reasoning/mental ability
- Paper II writing drills
Accuracy improvement
- Attempt fewer, better
- Use elimination
- Avoid guessing when clueless
- Track your safe-attempt range from mocks
Stress management
- Maintain physical activity
- Keep one weekly half-day break
- Do not compare mock scores excessively
- Reduce social media noise
Burnout prevention
- Rotate subjects
- Use short study blocks
- Keep sleep regular
- Every 2–3 weeks, do one light revision day
19. Best Study Materials
Official syllabus and official documents
UPSC CAPF AC notification and syllabus
- Why useful: This is the most authoritative source for pattern, syllabus, eligibility, and physical standards.
- Official site: https://www.upsc.gov.in
Previous-year question papers from UPSC
- Why useful: Best source to understand real question level and trend.
- Official site: https://www.upsc.gov.in
Standard books for Paper I
Indian Polity by M. Laxmikanth
- Why useful: Strong coverage of Constitution, governance, and polity basics.
Spectrum’s Modern History
- Why useful: Efficient for modern Indian history and freedom struggle.
NCERT textbooks (History, Geography, Economics, Science)
- Why useful: Best for concept-building and clean basics.
Certificate Physical and Human Geography by G.C. Leong
- Why useful: Helpful for physical geography basics.
Basic economy sources
- Use standard beginner economy material plus budget/economic updates.
- Why useful: Economy questions are usually broad, not specialist-level.
Paper II resources
Good essay practice notebook + editorial reading
- Why useful: CAPF Paper II rewards structure, clarity, and balanced argument.
Wren & Martin or equivalent grammar reference
- Why useful: Useful for language correction and writing basics, especially for weaker candidates.
Précis and comprehension practice books
- Why useful: Many candidates ignore this and lose marks.
Current affairs sources
PIB
- Official: https://pib.gov.in
- Why useful: Government schemes and official developments.
Ministry of Home Affairs
- Official: https://www.mha.gov.in
- Why useful: Security, governance, internal affairs context.
Newspapers such as The Hindu / Indian Express
- Why useful: Good for issues, analysis, and essay content.
- These are not official sources, so use them for preparation, not rules.
Practice sources
Previous-year papers
- Best for trend understanding
Reputed mock test series
- Useful for time management and elimination skill
- Choose those that explain solutions well
Video / online resources
Use credible platforms with known UPSC/CAPF relevance. Prefer lectures that follow official syllabus instead of sensational “100% questions from here” claims.
20. Top 5 Institutes for Preparation
Important note: There is no official government ranking of coaching institutes for CAPF AC. The options below are listed because they are widely known or commonly chosen for UPSC/CAPF-type preparation. Students should verify current course relevance, faculty, and results independently.
1. Unacademy
- Country / city / online: India / online
- Mode: Online
- Why students choose it: Wide range of UPSC and CAPF-related educators, flexible access, recorded/live classes
- Strengths:
- broad subject coverage
- accessible from anywhere
- useful for working candidates
- Weaknesses / caution points:
- quality varies by educator
- can overwhelm beginners due to too many options
- Who it suits best: Self-directed students, remote learners, working professionals
- Official site: https://unacademy.com
- Exam-specific or general: General competitive exam / UPSC-oriented platform with CAPF relevance
2. BYJU’S Exam Prep (formerly Gradeup brand in exam prep space)
- Country / city / online: India / online
- Mode: Online
- Why students choose it: Structured online classes, mock tests, exam-oriented material
- Strengths:
- organized digital content
- test series support
- useful for candidates wanting app-based preparation
- Weaknesses / caution points:
- check whether current CAPF-specific batches are active
- quality may differ by course/faculty
- Who it suits best: Students who prefer guided online preparation
- Official site: https://byjusexamprep.com
- Exam-specific or general: General exam-prep platform with CAPF/category relevance
3. Adda247
- Country / city / online: India / online and some offline presence
- Mode: Primarily online
- Why students choose it: Affordable test-prep ecosystem and competitive exam practice content
- Strengths:
- budget-friendly options
- mock/test practice
- useful for GS and aptitude support
- Weaknesses / caution points:
- verify depth for descriptive Paper II and interview prep
- not every batch is equally CAPF-focused
- Who it suits best: Budget-conscious students needing broad prep support
- Official site: https://www.adda247.com
- Exam-specific or general: General competitive exam platform
4. Testbook
- Country / city / online: India / online
- Mode: Online
- Why students choose it: Practice-heavy platform, quizzes, mock tests, app support
- Strengths:
- strong for MCQ practice
- accessible and convenient
- useful for Paper I practice
- Weaknesses / caution points:
- not sufficient alone for Paper II writing and interview depth
- students must add standard books
- Who it suits best: Students wanting large-scale practice and mock support
- Official site: https://testbook.com
- Exam-specific or general: General test-prep platform
5. Drishti IAS
- Country / city / online: India / Delhi / online + offline
- Mode: Hybrid
- Why students choose it: Strong GS foundation, Hindi-medium support, essay and current affairs coverage
- Strengths:
- good GS and answer-writing ecosystem
- strong support for Hindi-medium aspirants
- Weaknesses / caution points:
- primarily civil services oriented, so CAPF-specific adaptation is needed
- students must separately ensure fitness and CAPF pattern alignment
- Who it suits best: Students wanting strong GS foundation, especially Hindi-medium learners
- Official site: https://www.drishtiias.com
- Exam-specific or general: General UPSC-oriented coaching with CAPF overlap
How to choose the right institute for this exam
Pick an institute only if it helps with your actual weakness:
- Need full guidance? Choose structured coaching.
- Need only practice? Choose test series.
- Weak in Paper II? Prefer answer-writing support.
- Working candidate? Prefer flexible online access.
- Hindi-medium learner? Confirm language support before paying.
Common Mistake: Joining expensive coaching without checking whether it actually covers CAPF AC Paper II, fitness planning, and interview guidance.
21. Common Mistakes Students Make
Application mistakes
- filling wrong category
- not checking age cutoff date
- name mismatch with certificates
- bad photo/sign upload
- not saving application proof
Eligibility misunderstandings
- assuming any age is acceptable after graduation
- ignoring final-year proof deadlines
- overlooking nationality clause
- underestimating physical/medical standards
Weak preparation habits
- preparing only like SSC or only like UPSC CSE prelims
- neglecting Paper II
- reading too many sources without revision
- avoiding previous-year papers
Poor mock strategy
- taking mocks but not analyzing them
- chasing score, not learning
- over-attempting despite negative marking
Bad time allocation
- spending everything on static GS
- ignoring current affairs
- not practicing descriptive writing
- delaying fitness training until after written exam
Overreliance on coaching
- copying notes passively
- not writing answers independently
- assuming coaching guarantees success
Ignoring official notices
- missing admit card
- missing PET/PST instructions
- missing document deadlines
- following unofficial rumors
Misunderstanding cutoffs or rank
- assuming one year’s cutoff predicts all future years
- not accounting for category and vacancy changes
Last-minute errors
- trying new sources in final week
- poor sleep before exam
- reaching center late
- carrying wrong ID
22. Success Factors and Winning Traits
The candidates who usually succeed in CAPF AC tend to show these traits:
Conceptual clarity
You must understand, not just memorize:
- polity
- economy basics
- governance
- geography
- history themes
Consistency
Daily steady study beats occasional heavy bursts.
Speed
Needed mainly for Paper I, but only controlled speed matters.
Reasoning
Elimination skill improves score significantly.
Writing quality
Paper II can separate candidates. Good writing means:
- structure
- clarity
- relevant examples
- concise language
Current affairs awareness
A serious advantage in:
- Paper I
- essays
- interview
Domain awareness
Understanding internal security, national issues, and governance helps.
Stamina
This exam demands:
- mental stamina for 2 papers
- physical stamina for later stages
- emotional stamina for long recruitment cycles
Interview communication
A calm, balanced, officer-like presence helps.
Discipline
This exam rewards candidates who can manage:
- study
- fitness
- sleep
- paperwork
- follow-up stages
23. Failure Recovery and Backup Options
If you miss the deadline
- Wait for the next cycle
- Start preparation immediately instead of wasting a year
- Track UPSC annual calendar
- Prepare documents in advance
If you are not eligible
Check why:
- age issue
- degree issue
- medical issue
- nationality issue
Then choose alternatives such as:
- SSC CPO
- state police service exams
- civil services if age permits
- defence entries
- other central/state recruitments
If you score low in the written exam
- Get your marks if/when UPSC releases them
- Identify whether weakness was:
- MCQ accuracy
- current affairs
- descriptive writing
- Redesign your preparation, don’t just “study harder”
Alternative exams
- UPSC Civil Services Examination
- SSC CPO
- State PSC police exams
- CDS / AFCAT / other officer exams depending on eligibility
- State subordinate services
- Central government non-uniformed Group B/C exams
Bridge options
If you want security/government service but not CAPF AC immediately:
- attempt related officer-entry exams
- take subordinate recruitment and plan later progression
- build profile for future government opportunities
Lateral pathways
For most students, there is no easy “lateral transfer” substitute for direct CAPF AC selection. If you miss this route, you usually need another exam path.
Retry strategy
- Retake only if age window allows
- Improve your weakest stage first
- Build both written and physical readiness together
Does a gap year make sense?
A gap year can make sense if:
- you are still age-eligible
- this is a serious priority
- you can maintain structured preparation
- you have a realistic backup plan
A gap year is risky if you are vague, inconsistent, or already near age limit.
24. Career, Salary, and Long-Term Value
Immediate outcome
After selection and appointment, you enter as an Assistant Commandant in a Central Armed Police Force.
Job options after qualifying
Depending on force allocation, you may serve in roles involving:
- command of personnel
- field operations
- security management
- border/industrial/internal security duties
- administration and training responsibilities
Career trajectory
Typical long-term path can include promotions through force hierarchy according to service rules, performance, vacancies, and seniority/selection criteria.
Salary / pay scale / earning potential
Assistant Commandant is a Group A officer post. Pay is governed by Government of India pay rules and is typically linked to the 7th Central Pay Commission framework for the post level applicable to Assistant Commandant. Exact in-hand salary varies by:
- force
- posting location
- allowances
- risk/hardship conditions
- accommodation and deductions
For exact current pay details, candidates should refer to official recruitment notification or service rules if stated.
Long-term value
Key advantages:
- respected officer-level central government career
- leadership role from entry stage
- salary plus allowances and service benefits
- strong career identity
- national-level service exposure
Risks or limitations
- physically demanding life
- transfers and difficult postings
- high responsibility
- medical/fitness standards remain relevant
- family/lifestyle constraints in some postings
25. Special Notes for This Country
Reservation / quota / affirmative action
In India, reservation and relaxation policies may apply for categories such as:
- SC
- ST
- OBC
- EWS
- ex-servicemen, where applicable
Always verify certificate format and validity rules.
Regional language issues
- Written exam language rules are specific.
- Hindi-medium candidates may get flexibility in essay language, but some Paper II components are usually in English.
- This makes English practice important even for Hindi-medium candidates.
State-wise rules
This is a national central recruitment exam, not state-wise admission. However, exam centers and later postings may vary across India.
Public vs private recognition
This is a public central government recruitment route with high institutional recognition.
Urban vs rural exam access
Candidates from rural areas may face challenges such as:
- fewer coaching options
- limited internet access
- travel cost to centers
But self-study is still possible with official syllabus, PYQs, standard books, and selective online resources.
Digital divide
Because application and updates are online, candidates should ensure:
- working email
- stable mobile number
- regular internet access
Local documentation problems
Frequent issues include:
- date of birth mismatch
- category certificate mismatch
- name spelling differences across Aadhaar/degree/board certificate
Fix these early.
Visa / foreign candidate issues
This exam is generally not aimed at international students. Nationality and security-service restrictions apply.
Equivalency of qualifications
If your degree is from a non-standard institution or foreign university, equivalence/recognition must meet official rules. Such candidates should read the notification carefully and may need supporting proof.
26. FAQs
1. Is CAPF AC a college admission exam?
No. It is a recruitment exam for Assistant Commandant posts in Central Armed Police Forces.
2. Who conducts the Central Armed Police Forces Assistant Commandant Examination?
The exam is conducted by UPSC.
3. Can final-year students apply?
Often, yes provisionally, if allowed in the current notification and if they produce proof of passing by the required deadline. Check the latest UPSC notice.
4. Is there negative marking in CAPF AC?
Yes, for Paper I objective questions, as per UPSC rules.
5. Is Paper II compulsory?
Yes. Paper II is an important descriptive paper and cannot be ignored.
6. Is physical fitness checked before final selection?
Yes. Candidates who qualify the written stage must clear PST/PET and medical standards tests.
7. Can women apply for CAPF AC?
Yes, subject to eligibility and the rules of the current notification.
8. Is there a fixed number of attempts?
Usually, the practical limit comes from the age window and eligibility rules rather than a separately announced attempt cap. Check the current notification.
9. What degree is required?
A recognized bachelor’s degree.
10. Is coaching necessary for CAPF AC?
No, not mandatory. Many candidates can prepare through self-study, but coaching/test series may help with structure and Paper II practice.
11. What is a good score in CAPF AC?
A “good” score changes every year depending on difficulty, vacancies, and category. Use official previous cutoffs only for rough guidance.
12. Is CAPF AC tougher than SSC exams?
In many ways, yes, because it combines UPSC-style GS, descriptive writing, physical stages, and interview.
13. Can international students apply?
Generally this exam is meant for candidates meeting the nationality conditions in the UPSC notification, usually centered on Indian citizens for these posts.
14. What happens after I clear the written exam?
You may be called for PST/PET, medical examination, and interview/personality test.
15. Is the score valid next year?
No. It is valid only for that recruitment cycle.
16. Can I prepare for CAPF AC in 3 months?
Possible for candidates with strong existing GS basics and writing ability, but difficult for complete beginners.
17. Do I need good English for this exam?
Yes, especially for parts of Paper II that are usually assessed in English.
18. What if I fail the medical test?
You may not proceed to final selection unless rules provide any review medical process as specified. Check the notification and instructions for that cycle.
27. Final Student Action Plan
Use this checklist in order:
- [ ] Confirm this is the correct exam for your goal: officer recruitment in CAPFs
- [ ] Read the latest official UPSC CAPF AC notification
- [ ] Verify age eligibility carefully
- [ ] Verify degree eligibility and final-year rules
- [ ] Read physical standards and medical standards in full
- [ ] Check category/reservation certificate requirements
- [ ] Note application opening and closing dates
- [ ] Keep photo, signature, ID, and documents ready
- [ ] Apply only on the official UPSC portal
- [ ] Download and save your application proof
- [ ] Start Paper I + Paper II + fitness preparation together
- [ ] Solve previous-year papers early
- [ ] Build an error log from mocks
- [ ] Practice essays, comprehension, and précis regularly
- [ ] Monitor official UPSC notices for admit card and later stages
- [ ] Plan travel and logistics before exam day
- [ ] After written exam, continue fitness and document readiness
- [ ] Prepare for interview/personality test if shortlisted
- [ ] Keep backup exam options ready in case of age or selection risk
28. Source Transparency
Official sources used
- Union Public Service Commission official website: https://www.upsc.gov.in
- UPSC examination notifications and rules for CAPF AC (relevant yearly notification on UPSC website)
- UPSC previous-year papers and examination notices on the official website
- Ministry of Home Affairs website for institutional context: https://www.mha.gov.in
- Press Information Bureau for current affairs/government context: https://pib.gov.in
Supplementary sources used
- General knowledge of widely used preparation resources and publicly known exam-prep platforms for supplementary preparation guidance only
- No unofficial source has been used here for hard facts such as final dates, vacancies, or cutoffs
Which facts are confirmed for the current cycle
Only those facts that are structurally stable and governed by UPSC’s established exam framework are presented as confirmed in general terms, such as:
- exam identity
- conducting body
- recruitment nature
- broad written pattern structure used in recent official notifications
- existence of PST/PET/medical/interview stages
Which facts are based on recent historical patterns
The following are marked as typical or historical because they vary by year:
- notification month
- application window
- exam month
- vacancy count
- fee amount
- exact age relaxation wording
- exact PET/PST standards wording
- current cycle dates
- cutoffs
Any unresolved ambiguity or missing public information
- Exact current-cycle dates, fees, and vacancies must be taken from the latest UPSC notification.
- Attempt-limit wording should be read from the current rules rather than assumed.
- Physical and medical standards can include nuanced category/gender/regional exceptions; candidates must read the official notification table carefully.
Last reviewed on: 2026-03-22