WBCS Examination 2026
Complete Guide
The ultimate guide to the West Bengal Civil Service (Executive) etc. Examination
Public Service Commission, West Bengal (WBPSC) — the oldest PSC in India (est. 1937)
Source: WBCS Detailed Advertisement & New Scheme/Syllabus (effective WBCS 2025 onwards), psc.wb.gov.in • Updated: April 2026
1What is the WBCS Examination?
The West Bengal Civil Service (Executive) etc. Examination — popularly WBCS — is conducted by the Public Service Commission, West Bengal (WBPSC) for administrative, police, revenue, cooperative, labour, food & supplies and allied services under the Government of West Bengal. WBPSC is the OLDEST Public Service Commission in India (established 1937), operating from 161 A, S. P. Mukherjee Road, Kolkata-700026.
What makes WBCS unique: it is a single combined examination recruiting across FOUR service groups (A, B, C and D) with one application form, one Preliminary Examination and one Main Examination. Each group has its own age limit, pay scale and exam structure (Groups A & B require an optional subject in Mains; Groups C & D do not). A candidate may apply for one or more groups on the same form, indicating a preference order. The West Bengal Civil Service (Executive) is the state-level analogue of the IAS.
1.1 WBCS at a Glance
| Particular | Detail |
|---|---|
| Full Name | West Bengal Civil Service (Executive) etc. Examination |
| Conducting Authority | Public Service Commission, West Bengal (WBPSC) — est. 1937 |
| Service Groups | Group A, B, C, D — one combined exam, one form |
| Total Services & Posts | 18+ services and posts across the four groups |
| Selection Stages | Three — Preliminary + Main + Personality Test |
| Exam Pattern | NEW Scheme effective from WBCS 2025 onwards |
| Application Mode | Online only via psc.wb.gov.in (One Time Registration) |
| Languages | Bilingual (English/Bengali); answers mostly in English or Bengali |
| Mandatory Language | Bengali — read/write/speak (Nepali mother-tongue exempt); tested at interview |
| Headquarters | 161 A, S. P. Mukherjee Road, Kolkata-700026 |
| Education | Bachelor's degree (final-year students NOT eligible — degree must be complete) |
| Age | 21–36 (Group A/C); 20–36 (Group B Police); 21–39 (Group D) — cut-off 1 Jan |
| Mains Structure | 10 papers (2 qualifying language + 6 compulsory + 2 optional for Group A/B) |
2Current Cycle — Notification & Dates
Verified milestones for the current WBCS cycle (NEW Scheme). The Prelims date is tentative pending official confirmation.
| Event | Date / Detail |
|---|---|
| Notification Released | 14 November 2025 |
| Online Application | 18 November – 16 December 2025 (3:00 PM) |
| Edit Window | 22 December 2025 – 7 January 2026 (closed) |
| Age Cut-off Date | 1 January 2024 (current cycle) |
| Prelims Admit Card | ~2–3 weeks before (expected late May 2026) |
| Preliminary Examination (Tentative) | 14 June 2026 — awaiting official confirmation |
| Prelims Result | Awaited (typically 4–5 weeks after Prelims) |
| Main Examination | Date awaited — Kolkata only |
| Personality Test | After Mains result — WBPSC office, Kolkata |
| Vacancies | To be announced by Government in due time |
| Next Cycle | Indicative Advertisement released 29 Nov 2025; detailed advert awaited |
3Eligibility Criteria
A. Nationality
A citizen of India (by birth or registration), or such other nationals as declared eligible by the Government of India (the latter need a GoI eligibility certificate, and appointment follows only after it is issued).
B. Educational Qualification
C. Language Proficiency (Bengali Mandatory)
D. Other Mandatory Requirements
- Good health, character and suitability for Government service; medical board fitness and police verification before appointment.
- Only ONE application per candidate — multiple applications are cancelled.
- Age proof: the age recorded in the Madhyamik (or equivalent) certificate ONLY — no Passport, Birth Certificate, Aadhaar, etc. is accepted as age proof.
4Age Limit & Attempts
WBCS has DIFFERENT age limits by service group — unusual among state PSCs. Age is reckoned as on 1 January of the examination year.
| Group | Min Age | Max Age | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group A & Group C | 21 | 36 | Most administrative posts |
| Group B — West Bengal Police Service | 20 | 36 | Lower minimum age allowed |
| Group D | 21 | 39 | Higher maximum age allowed |
4.1 Category-wise Age Relaxation (Upper Limit)
| Category | Max Age After Relaxation |
|---|---|
| Unreserved (General) | No relaxation — 36 (Group A/B/C); 39 (Group D) |
| SC / ST of West Bengal | +5 years — 41 (A/B/C); 44 (D) |
| OBC (Non-Creamy Layer) of West Bengal | +3 years — 39 (A/B/C); 42 (D) |
| Persons with Benchmark Disabilities (40%+) | Relaxable up to 45 years |
| SC / ST / OBC of OTHER states | No relaxation — considered for Unreserved posts only |
5Reservation & Qualifying Marks
Reservation follows GoWB policy and applies ONLY to candidates with a valid West Bengal domicile and the relevant category certificate. Vertical: UR, SC, ST, OBC-A/OBC-B (Non-Creamy Layer), EWS of West Bengal. Horizontal: PwBD (40%+) and Meritorious Sportspersons (MSP — Group D posts only, across 20 recognised sports).
5.1 Category-wise Qualifying Marks (Mains + Personality Test aggregate)
| Category | Minimum Qualifying Marks (aggregate) |
|---|---|
| Unreserved (UR) & EWS | 40% |
| OBC (A & B) | 38% |
| SC | 35% |
| ST & PwBD | 30% |
| Meritorious Sportsperson (MSP) | 40% |
6Posts & Salary (by Group)
Pay scales below show basic pay (West Bengal Pay Matrix). All officers also receive DA, Medical Allowance, HRA, Travel Allowance and other GoWB allowances, so in-hand is meaningfully higher.
6.1 Group A — Senior Administrative Services (6 services)
| Service | Pay Scale |
|---|---|
| West Bengal Civil Service (Executive) | ₹56,100 – 1,44,300 |
| Assistant Commissioner of Revenue (WB Revenue Service) | ₹56,100 – 1,44,300 |
| West Bengal Co-operative Service | ₹56,100 – 1,44,300 |
| West Bengal Labour Service | ₹56,100 – 1,44,300 |
| West Bengal Food & Supplies Service | ₹56,100 – 1,44,300 |
| West Bengal Employment Service (except Employment Officer Technical) | ₹56,100 – 1,44,300 |
The WBCS (Executive) is the premier service — career path: SDO → Additional District Magistrate → District Magistrate → senior Secretariat, with some officers inducted into the IAS via the State Civil Service quota.
6.2 Group B — West Bengal Police Service (1 service)
| Service | Pay Scale |
|---|---|
| West Bengal Police Service (WBPS) | ₹56,100 – 1,44,300 |
WBPS officers are gazetted Group A officers equivalent to Deputy Superintendent of Police — leading sub-divisions, supervising investigations, law & order and VIP security. Path: SP → Senior SP → DIG; IPS induction possible via the State Police Service quota. A minimum height applies (Section 9).
6.3 Group C — Mid-level Administrative Posts (9 posts)
| Post | Pay Scale |
|---|---|
| Superintendent / Deputy Superintendent, Correctional Homes | ₹42,600 – 1,09,800 |
| Joint Block Development Officer (Joint BDO) | ₹39,900 – 1,02,800 |
| Deputy Assistant Director, Consumer Affairs & Fair Business Practices | ₹39,900 – 1,02,800 |
| West Bengal Junior Social Welfare Service | ₹39,900 – 1,02,800 |
| WB Subordinate Land Revenue Service, Grade-I | ₹39,900 – 1,02,800 |
| Assistant Commercial Tax Officer | ₹39,900 – 1,02,800 |
| Registrar / Joint Registrar, Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | ₹39,900 – 1,02,800 |
| Assistant Canal Revenue Officer (Irrigation) | ₹35,800 – 92,100 |
| Chief Controller of Correctional Services | ₹35,800 – 92,100 |
6.4 Group D — Field-level Posts (3 posts)
| Post | Pay Scale |
|---|---|
| Inspector of Co-operative Societies | ₹32,100 – 82,900 |
| Panchayat Development Officer | ₹32,100 – 82,900 |
| Rehabilitation Officer | ₹32,100 – 82,900 |
7Exam Pattern (New Scheme)
Stage 1: Preliminary Examination (screening only)
| Paper | Subject | Marks | Duration | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paper-I | General Studies-I (200 MCQs) | 200 | 2 hrs | Counted for screening |
| Paper-II | General Studies-II / CSAT (200 MCQs) | 200 | 2 hrs | Qualifying at 33% |
| TOTAL | 400 | — |
- BOTH papers are mandatory — failing to appear in both disqualifies. Negative marking applies (exact deduction stated in the booklet on the day).
- Prelims marks are NOT counted in final selection — they only decide who advances to the Mains.
Prelims Subject Distribution
| GS Paper-I (200) | Marks | GS Paper-II / CSAT (200) | Marks |
|---|---|---|---|
| English Composition | 20 | Comprehension | 60 |
| General Science | 20 | Interpersonal & Communication Skills | 10 |
| Current Events (National & International) | 20 | Logical Reasoning & Analytical Ability | 35 |
| History of India | 20 | Decision Making & Problem Solving | 30 |
| Geography of India (esp. West Bengal) | 20 | General Mental Ability | 30 |
| Indian Polity & Economy | 40 | Basic Numeracy & Data Interpretation (Class X) | 35 |
| Indian National Movement | 20 | — | — |
| Environment, Ecology, Biodiversity, Climate Change | 40 | — | — |
Stage 2: Main Examination (10 papers, Kolkata only)
Two qualifying language papers (marks NOT counted in merit):
| Paper | Subject | Marks |
|---|---|---|
| Paper-A | Bengali / Nepali — letter, drafting, precis, comprehension, translation, short essay | 300 (qualifying 30%) |
| Paper-B | English — comprehension, precis, vocabulary, short essay, letter | 300 (qualifying 30%) |
Six compulsory papers (counted in merit — all groups):
| Paper | Subject | Marks |
|---|---|---|
| Paper-I | English Essay | 250 |
| Paper-II | Tradition and Culture of Bengal (NEW paper) | 250 |
| Paper-III | General Studies-I (History & Geography) | 250 |
| Paper-IV | General Studies-II (Polity, India & World, Economy) | 250 |
| Paper-V | General Studies-III (Society, Science & Technology) | 250 |
| Paper-VI | General Studies-IV (Ethics, Integrity & Aptitude) | 250 |
| Sub-total (compulsory) | 1,500 |
Two optional papers (Group A & B only — one subject from 37, two papers):
| Paper | Subject | Marks |
|---|---|---|
| Paper-VII | Optional Subject — Paper 1 | 250 |
| Paper-VIII | Optional Subject — Paper 2 (same optional) | 250 |
| Sub-total (optional) | 500 |
Stage 3: Personality Test (group-wise marks)
| Group | Personality Test Marks |
|---|---|
| Group A & B | 200 |
| Group C | 150 |
| Group D | 100 |
One Personality Test is held for all groups; marks are awarded by the group(s) applied for. Knowledge of Bengali is tested here for non-native speakers (mother tongue other than Bengali/Nepali).
Total Marks & Final Merit (per group)
| Component | Group A | Group B | Group C | Group D |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 Compulsory Papers (I–VI) | 1,500 | 1,500 | 1,500 | 1,500 |
| 2 Optional Papers (VII–VIII) | 500 | 500 | — | — |
| Personality Test | 200 | 200 | 150 | 100 |
| TOTAL (Final Merit) | 2,200 | 2,200 | 1,650 | 1,600 |
8Detailed Mains Syllabus
NEW Scheme (WBCS 2025 onwards). Prelims distribution is in Section 7; below are the Mains compulsory papers and the optional list. Confirm against the full syllabus on psc.wb.gov.in.
Paper-I — English Essay (250 marks)
Essays on multiple topics chosen on exam day (no fixed syllabus), spanning current affairs, social issues, philosophy, governance and Bengal-specific themes. Marks reward clarity, precision, originality and economy of words. Write balanced, well-structured essays (introduction, body, conclusion) with analytical thinking and relevant examples.
Paper-II — Tradition and Culture of Bengal (250 marks) — NEW & unique to WBCS
A dedicated Bengal-culture paper not found in UPSC or other state PSCs — the biggest scoring differentiator. Marks break down as:
- Cultural Aspects (60): Bengal School of Art & nationalism; major painters/sculptors; Jatra; Bengali theatre (Lebedev to modern Group Theatre); Bengali cinema; fairs & festivals (Gangasagar, Poush Mela, Basanta Utsab, Kenduli, Rather Mela, Rash Mela)
- Folk Art & Music (60): Bishnupur Gharana; Baul, Bhawaiya, Bhatiali, Kabi Gan, Jhumur; Kirtan, Shyama Sangeet; Rabindra Sangeet, Nazrul Geeti, Adhunik; Chhau, Bhadu, Tusu, Gambhira; instruments (Ektara, Dotara, Khol, Dhak)
- Literature (70): Sadhubhasa & Chalitbhasa; dialects (Rarhi, Bangali, Varendri, Jharkhandi, Rajbanshi); periodization (Old 950–1350, Middle 1350–1800, Modern 1800–present); figures from Ram Mohan Roy & Vidyasagar through Tagore & Nazrul to Mahasweta Devi
- Architecture (60): Bishnupur terracotta temples; Buddhist sites (Chandraketugarh, Mogalmari); Islamic (Adina, Sona Masjid, Eklakhi); colonial (Hazarduari, Victoria Memorial); pottery centres (Krishnanagar Ghurni)
Paper-III — GS-I: History & Geography (250 marks)
Two sub-sections of 125 each. History: India from the mid-18th century, the freedom struggle (special emphasis on Undivided Bengal's contribution), post-independence consolidation, and world history from the 18th century. Geography: physical geography of India (esp. West Bengal), world physical geography, natural resources, geophysical phenomena, Indian agriculture & irrigation, environmental conservation and disaster management.
Paper-IV — GS-II: Polity, IR & Economy (250 marks)
Two sub-sections of 125 each. Polity & IR: the Constitution (evolution, features, amendments, basic structure), federalism, separation of powers, Parliament/Legislatures/Executive/Judiciary, constitutional & statutory bodies, India's neighbourhood, global groupings, border security. Economy: planning, growth, employment, RBI & regulators, budgeting, MSP & PDS, food security, infrastructure, land reforms in West Bengal, liberalisation, poverty, social sector and welfare schemes.
Paper-V — GS-III: Society, Science & Technology (250 marks)
Society (150): features & diversity of Indian society, women empowerment, population, urbanisation, communalism/regionalism/secularism, globalisation, NGOs & SHGs, development-extremism linkages, media & internal/cyber security. Science & Technology (100): everyday applications, Indian achievements, indigenisation, and frontiers — IT, space, robotics, AI, nanotech, biotech, IPR.
Paper-VI — GS-IV: Ethics, Integrity & Aptitude (250 marks)
Theory (150): role of civil services in democracy, ethics & human values, attitude, foundational values (integrity, impartiality, objectivity, empathy), emotional intelligence, moral thinkers, public-administration ethics, probity in governance (RTI, codes, citizen's charters, corruption), e-governance. Case Studies (100): real-world ethical scenarios — use one framework: stakeholders → conflict → options with consequences → recommendation with justification.
Paper-VII & VIII — Optional Subject (Group A & B only) + the 37 subjects
One optional from 37 subjects, two papers of 250 each (~Honours-degree standard; LLB for Law, MBBS for Medical Science, BE for engineering subjects). The list:
- Languages/Literature: Bengali, Hindi, Sanskrit, English, Pali, Arabic, Persian, French, Urdu, Santali, Comparative Literature
- Sciences: Botany, Chemistry, Physics, Physiology, Zoology, Geology, Mathematics, Statistics, Computer Science
- Social Sciences/Humanities: History, Geography, Economics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, Philosophy, Anthropology, Public-facing: Commerce & Accountancy, Management, Law
- Professional/Applied: Agriculture, Animal Husbandry & Veterinary Science, Civil/Electrical/Mechanical Engineering, Medical Science
Language of answers: all papers except English Essay and the language papers may be written in English or Bengali (use one language consistently per paper). Santali is answered in Olchiki script.
9Physical Standards (Group B Only)
| Particular | Minimum Height |
|---|---|
| Male candidates | 1.65 m (165 cm) |
| Female candidates | 1.50 m (150 cm) |
10How to Apply
Applications are online only via psc.wb.gov.in. Only ONE application per candidate is allowed.
10.1 Documents & Accepted Photo IDs
- Madhyamik (or equivalent) certificate (mandatory age proof — no other document accepted); Bachelor's degree; photo & signature.
- Category certificate from a WB Competent Authority (SC/ST/OBC/EWS); PwBD certificate from a Government hospital Medical Board; MSP certificate (Group D only).
- Accepted photo IDs (carry the original to the venue): Madhyamik certificate with photo, Passport, PAN, EPIC (Voter ID), Driving Licence, or any other Government-issued ID.
11Application Fee
| Category | Application Fee |
|---|---|
| General / Unreserved | ₹210 (plus service charges) |
| OBC (incl. Non-Creamy Layer) | ₹210 (plus service charges) |
| SC & ST of West Bengal | NIL (no fee) |
| PwBD (40%+) | NIL (no fee) |
| SC / ST / OBC of OTHER states | ₹210 (no exemption) |
12WBPSC Office, Centres & Contact
| Particular | Detail |
|---|---|
| Commission | Public Service Commission, West Bengal (WBPSC) — est. 1937 |
| Office Address | 161 A, S. P. Mukherjee Road, Kolkata-700026 |
| Official Website | https://psc.wb.gov.in |
| Email (WBCS queries) | pscwbit01@gmail.com (working days, 11 AM – 4 PM) |
| Constitutional Basis | Article 315 of the Constitution of India |
13Selection Process Summary
- Stage 1 — Prelims: two objective papers (GS-I + GS-II/CSAT, 200 each = 400). Both mandatory; GS-II qualifying at 33%; negative marking applies. Screening only — not counted in final merit. Model answers & objections follow.
- Stage 2 — Mains (Kolkata): ten papers — two qualifying language papers (Bengali/Nepali & English, 300 each, 30% each), six compulsory papers (1,500), and two optional papers for Group A/B (500). Each paper 3 hours.
- Stage 3 — Personality Test (Kolkata): 200 (A/B) / 150 (C) / 100 (D). Bengali tested for non-native speakers. Service preference is finalised here and cannot be changed later.
- Final Merit: compulsory + optional (A/B) + Personality Test = 2,200 (A/B), 1,650 (C), 1,600 (D). Tie-break: PT marks → compulsory aggregate → best-of-three/two/one compulsory papers → older age. Medical board & police verification precede appointment.
14Preparation Tips from Parcham Classes
WBCS rewards depth and a deep command of Bengal-specific content — organised into four phases.
01 Build a strong NCERT foundation
Spend the first 3–4 months on Class 6–12 NCERTs across History, Geography, Polity, Economy and Science. With negative marking and a huge two-paper Prelims under the New Scheme, weak concepts hurt you twice. The NCERT Advanced Batch 2026-27 structures this.
02 Master Bengal — the real differentiator
Mains has a 250-mark Tradition & Culture of Bengal paper, plus Bengal threads in GS-I (Undivided Bengal freedom struggle) and GS-II (WB land reforms). Build Bengal notes from Day One: the Renaissance, art/theatre/cinema, Baul/Bhawaiya/Chhau, Bishnupur architecture, literature periodization, GoWB schemes.
03 Decide your group strategy early
Group A/B need 8 Mains papers (incl. 2 optional); Group C/D need only 6 compulsory. Decide your target by Day 30 — if aiming for A/B, optional choice from the 37 subjects becomes critical. Most apply for all four groups to maximise chances.
04 Take CSAT (GS Paper-II) seriously
GS-II is qualifying at 33% and mandatory — comprehension alone is 60 marks. Many strong-GS candidates lose the cycle here. Practise comprehension and Class-X maths/DI consistently; use NCERT Class 9–10 maths as the base.
05 Build Bengali reading skills early
Bengali is tested at the Personality Test for non-native speakers — poor performance can cancel candidature. Start simple Bengali newspaper reading from the foundation phase; 12 months of practice clears this filter even if you write the Mains in English.
06 Build Bengal current affairs
WB Cabinet decisions, state schemes, Sundarbans cyclone management, North Bengal tea, jute, Bengal cinema awards and the Kolkata Book Fair feed the Bengal-culture paper and GS Bengal portions. The Current Affairs Complete Kit 2026 plus a Kolkata daily (The Telegraph, The Statesman or Anandabazar Patrika) is the combo.
07 Pick your optional wisely (Group A/B)
The optional carries 500 marks — nearly a quarter of merit. Choose on three filters: academic background/interest, study-material availability, and recent toppers' choices. Popular WBCS optionals: Bengali, Geography, History, Political Science, Sociology, Anthropology, Public Administration.
08 Take full-paper timed Mains mocks
Ten papers across consecutive days at Kolkata is endurance work. Begin Mains mocks at least four months out via the WBCS Pattern Mock Test Series. The Bengal-culture paper has no past papers — practise building answer skeletons straight from the syllabus.
09 Solve 5–10 years of WBCS PYQs
Bengal-specific stems repeat almost identically. The All State PSC One-Liner E-Book (16,000+ one-liners) supports high-volume revision; weight recent papers reflecting the New Scheme most.
10 Plan the long cycle & use the unlimited-attempt edge
A WBCS cycle runs 12–18 months. With no attempt cap (only the age limit applies), build a 2–3 cycle plan, keep a one-page error log per mock, and protect sleep, exercise and weekly breaks. Track psc.wb.gov.in weekly so you never miss an admit-card or schedule change.
The Parcham Stack for WBCS
| Programme | Best Suited For |
|---|---|
| All-in-One State PSC Batch 2026-27 (Flagship) | End-to-end Prelims + Mains for WBCS and other state PCS exams — lifetime access, with state-GK modules & Answer Writing Workshops |
| NCERT Advanced Batch 2026-27 | Foundation Phase — core concepts across History, Geography, Polity, Economy, Science |
| Current Affairs Complete Kit 2026 | Active Preparation — monthly e-magazine, daily headliners and MCQs with the Bengal angle |
| WBCS Pattern Mock Test Series | Mains Endgame — full-paper timed mocks across consecutive days, incl. the Bengal-culture paper |
| All State PSC One-Liner E-Book | Final-week revision — 16,000+ one-liners for high-volume recall |
15Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. When is the WBCS Prelims 2026?
Tentatively 14 June 2026 (per coaching sources; rescheduled from an earlier March 2026 indication and NOT yet officially confirmed by WBPSC). The Mains date is awaited and will be held in Kolkata only. Always verify on psc.wb.gov.in.
Q2. What is the New Scheme?
Effective WBCS 2025: (1) Prelims has TWO papers (GS-I & GS-II/CSAT, 200 each, GS-II qualifying at 33%, both mandatory); (2) Mains has TEN papers — two qualifying language papers, six compulsory (250 each), and two optional for Group A/B; (3) a NEW 250-mark Tradition & Culture of Bengal paper. Totals: 2,200 (A/B), 1,650 (C), 1,600 (D).
Q3. What are the four service groups?
Group A (6 senior services incl. WBCS Executive), Group B (West Bengal Police Service), Group C (9 mid-level posts), Group D (3 field-level posts). One combined exam and one form cover all four; you indicate a preference order. Groups A & B require an optional; C & D do not.
Q4. What is the age limit?
Group A & C: 21–36. Group B (Police): 20–36. Group D: 21–39. Cut-off 1 January of the exam year. Candidates aged 20–21 may apply for Group B only. Relaxations: +5 (SC/ST of WB), +3 (OBC-NCL of WB), up to 45 (PwBD).
Q5. Do I need to know Bengali?
Yes — ability to read, write and speak Bengali is mandatory (Nepali mother-tongue exempt). For non-native speakers, Bengali is tested at the Personality Test, and poor performance can cancel the candidature — so build Bengali skills even if you write the Mains in English.
Q6. Can final-year students apply?
No. Unlike many state PCS exams, WBCS requires the degree to be completed by the application closing date — final-year students awaiting results are not eligible.
Q7. Are optional subjects available?
Yes — for Group A & B only. One optional from 37 subjects, two papers of 250 marks each (500 total). Groups C & D do not appear at the optional papers.
Q8. Can I write the Mains in English?
Yes for most papers — all papers except the English Essay (Paper-I) and the language papers may be answered in English or Bengali (one language consistently per paper). Paper-A must be Bengali/Nepali; Paper-B must be English.
Q9. Is there negative marking in Prelims?
Yes — for each wrong MCQ answer; the exact deduction is stated in the question booklet on exam day. No deduction for unanswered questions, so avoid random guessing.
Q10. How many attempts can I make?
No separate cap — appear as many times as you wish, subject only to the upper age limit for your category and group. A significant advantage over UPSC and many state PSCs.
Q11. Can candidates from outside West Bengal apply?
Yes — any Indian graduate may apply, but reservation/age-relaxation apply only with valid WB domicile; outside-state candidates compete for Unreserved posts only. Bengali proficiency is still mandatory and tested at interview.
Q12. What is the application fee?
₹210 (plus service charges) for General/OBC; NIL for SC/ST/PwBD of West Bengal. SC/ST/OBC candidates from other states pay the full ₹210. Online payment only; non-refundable.
Q13. Where can I get official updates?
Always check psc.wb.gov.in — the advertisement, syllabus, dates, admit cards and results are released only there. Email queries: pscwbit01@gmail.com (working days, 11 AM–4 PM). Visit at least twice a week.
Start Your WBCS Journey with Parcham
Bengal Culture & GK • Bengali Practice • Daily Current Affairs • Answer Writing • Lifetime Validity
Explore CoursesDisclaimer & Source Citation
This document was prepared by Parcham Classes based exclusively on official WBPSC sources:
- WBPSC official website — https://psc.wb.gov.in
- Official WBCS Detailed Advertisement and Indicative Advertisement for the upcoming cycle
- Official WBCS Scheme & Syllabus Notification (effective from WBCS 2025 onwards)
- Official WBPSC email — pscwbit01@gmail.com
Tentative date: the 14 June 2026 Prelims date is the latest tentative date per multiple coaching sources and is not yet officially confirmed by WBPSC (the original notification indicated March 2026). Verify the latest dates on psc.wb.gov.in.
OBC note: the OBC reservation framework is subject to the outcome of pending proceedings before the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India and the Hon'ble High Court of Calcutta; the Commission will abide by any orders arising from those proceedings.
Verify: For all dates, vacancies, fees, eligibility, pay scale, pattern and syllabus, the official WBPSC notifications on psc.wb.gov.in are the final authority. Last updated: April 2026.
