Yes, the CSE 2026 notification was released on 4 February 2026, announcing 933 vacancies with Prelims on 24 May 2026 and Mains from 21 August 2026.

CSE 2026 Notification: Full Breakdown

The UPSC Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination 2026 notification was officially released on 4 February 2026 on upsc.gov.in. The application window closed on 27 February 2026 at 6 PM and is now shut.

Key confirmed dates for the 2026 cycle:

EventDateStatus
Notification released4 February 2026Done
Application window4 – 27 February 2026Closed
Total vacancies933 (CSE)Confirmed
Prelims exam24 May 2026 (Sunday)8 days away
Mains exam commences21 August 2026 (Friday)Scheduled
Mains result / DAF-II / InterviewTo be announcedPost-Mains

Vacancy Breakdown: 933 Posts Across Services

The 933 CSE 2026 vacancies are distributed across two categories of services: All-India Services and Central Services.

Service-wise breakdown (sourced from UPSC official notification and corroborated by multiple coaching institute analyses):

ServiceApprox. Vacancies
Indian Administrative Service (IAS)180
Indian Police Service (IPS)150
Indian Foreign Service (IFS)40
Indian Revenue Service — Income Tax (IRS-IT)180
Indian Revenue Service — Customs & Indirect Taxes (IRS-C&IT)94
Other Group A and Group B Central Services (18 services)~289
Total933

Of the 180 IAS vacancies: 72 are unreserved (UR), 27 for SC, 14 for ST, 49 for OBC, and 18 for EWS — reflecting central reservation norms. Additionally, 33 posts across all services are reserved for Persons with Benchmark Disabilities (PwBD), broken down as: 7 for blindness and low vision, 11 for deaf and hard of hearing, 8 for locomotor disabilities (including cerebral palsy, dwarfism, acid attack victims, muscular dystrophy), and 7 for multiple disabilities.


CSE 2026 vs CSE 2025: Why the Drop from 1,087 to 933?

This is the question every aspirant is asking. The 933 vacancies represent a 154-seat reduction from CSE 2025's 1,087, and the sharpest single-year drop in recent memory.

The official reason is post-pandemic cadre rationalisation: the government has been systematically reviewing and reducing sanctioned strength across IRS (Income Tax and Customs), the Indian Information Service, and several Group B Central Services. These reductions are driven by digital automation reducing manpower needs in tax administration, not by any sudden policy reversal or austerity measure.

Historical vacancy trend for context:

Exam YearCSE VacanciesFinal Recommended
CSE 2022861933
CSE 20231,1051,016
CSE 20241,105~1,000
CSE 20251,087958
CSE 2026933TBA

For aspirants, fewer vacancies mean higher cut-offs at every stage. The Prelims cut-off for General category, Mains threshold, and interview marks all tend to compress when vacancies fall.


What Changed in the 2026 Notification (Key Reforms)

The 2026 notification introduced approximately 21 significant changes from the 2025 cycle. The most important:

  1. Provisional Answer Key after Prelims (Major Reform): For the first time in UPSC history, a provisional answer key will be released within days of the Prelims exam via the QPRep portal. Candidates can raise objections with at least three credible references. This follows Supreme Court observations on transparency and is a landmark shift from the earlier practice of publishing keys only after results.

  2. No post-submission corrections: Unlike 2025, which allowed a 7-day correction window after application submission, CSE 2026 allows no corrections after submission. Date of birth, category, and name fields are permanently locked at submission.

  3. Service preference at Prelims application stage: Candidates must indicate their service preferences when applying for Prelims, not just at the DAF-I stage after clearing Prelims. A separate update window will be available after Mains results for those who qualify.

  4. URN system with live photo and triple signature: Unique Registration Number system with enhanced biometric verification.

  5. Restrictions for already-selected IAS/IFS members: A candidate who has been appointed to IAS or IFS and remains a serving member of that service is now ineligible to sit for CSE 2026.


Prelims-Specific Advice: 8 Days to 24 May 2026

With Prelims just 8 days away (as of 16 May 2026), here is what matters most:

  • Paper I (GS): Do not attempt new topics. Consolidate your revision of Polity, Economy, Environment, and Science and Technology — the four highest-yield areas. Target attempting 75–80 questions with high confidence rather than attempting 95+ with guessing.
  • Paper II (CSAT): CSAT is only qualifying (33 marks / 83 out of 200). If you are comfortable with Reading Comprehension and basic maths, prioritise Paper I entirely. If CSAT is a concern, do one full mock today.
  • The new provisional answer key: After 24 May, the QPRep portal will release the key. Do not celebrate or panic on exam day based on unofficial coaching institute keys — wait for the official key and consider filing objections only if you have three strong academic/official references.
  • Admit card and documents: Carry your original admit card, a valid photo ID (passport/Aadhaar/driving licence), and two passport photographs. The exam hall will not admit you without these.
  • Mindset: At this stage, mental state matters more than marginal content revision. Sleep 7–8 hours the night before. Arrive at the centre 30 minutes early.
Revision
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