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100+ Free GPSC Class 1 & 2 Practice Questions

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The Harappan (Indus Valley) site of Lothal, an important dockyard town, is located in which present-day Indian state?

A
B
C
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2026 Statistics

Key Facts: GPSC Class 1 & 2 Exam

400

Total Prelims MCQs (200 per paper)

Gujarat Public Service Commission

2 papers

Objective GS Papers (GS-I & GS-II)

GPSC

3 hours

Duration per Paper

GPSC

1/3

Negative Marking per Wrong Answer

GPSC

Rs 100

Application Fee (General)

GPSC notification

20-35 yrs

General-Category Age Range

GPSC

The GPSC Class-1 & Class-2 Preliminary Examination has two objective General Studies papers (GS-I and GS-II), each with 200 multiple-choice questions worth 200 marks, for a total of 400 questions and 400 marks. Each paper lasts 3 hours, with one-third negative marking per wrong answer. The application fee is Rs 100 for General candidates and is exempted for reserved categories of Gujarat origin. The prelims are a screening test only — marks are not counted in the final merit, which is decided by the Main Examination and Interview.

Sample GPSC Class 1 & 2 Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your GPSC Class 1 & 2 exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1The Harappan (Indus Valley) site of Lothal, an important dockyard town, is located in which present-day Indian state?
A.Gujarat
B.Punjab
C.Rajasthan
D.Haryana
Explanation: Lothal, excavated by S. R. Rao, lies in the Bhal region of Gujarat near the Gulf of Khambhat and is famous for its tidal dockyard, bead-making workshops, and a fire altar. It is one of the most prominent Harappan sites in Gujarat, which the GPSC syllabus emphasizes under 'Indus Valley Civilisation and Gujarat'.
2The Bardoli Satyagraha of 1928, a no-tax campaign against an enhanced land revenue assessment, was led by which leader, earning him the title 'Sardar'?
A.Vallabhbhai Patel
B.Mahatma Gandhi
C.Morarji Desai
D.Indulal Yagnik
Explanation: Vallabhbhai Patel led the Bardoli Satyagraha in Surat district against a steep hike in land revenue; the women of Bardoli conferred on him the title 'Sardar' (chief). The campaign forced the Bombay government to appoint the Broomfield-Maxwell inquiry, which rolled back most of the increase.
3Mahmud Begada, the most famous Sultan of the Gujarat Sultanate, is credited with founding which fortified city that later became Gujarat's first capital after statehood in 1960?
A.Ahmedabad
B.Champaner
C.Junagadh
D.Patan
Explanation: While Ahmedabad was founded by Ahmed Shah I in 1411, it became the first capital of the newly created Gujarat state in 1960 before Gandhinagar was built. Mahmud Begada strengthened and expanded the Sultanate's reach, conquering Junagadh and Champaner. Note: the question tests linkage of Sultanate history with modern statehood.
4Which dynasty ruled Gujarat from Anhilwad Patan and reached its zenith under Siddhraj Jaysinh and Kumarpal in the 11th-12th centuries?
A.Solanki (Chaulukya)
B.Vaghela
C.Chavda
D.Rashtrakuta
Explanation: The Solanki (Chaulukya) dynasty ruled Gujarat from Anhilwad Patan; Siddhraj Jaysinh and his successor Kumarpal presided over a golden age of temple building (e.g., the Rudra Mahalaya and Sahasralinga Talav). This period is a core GPSC topic on Gujarat's medieval dynasties.
5The Maha Gujarat Movement, which demanded a separate Gujarati-speaking state from bilingual Bombay State, was led prominently by which leader?
A.Indulal Yagnik
B.Morarji Desai
C.Ravishankar Maharaj
D.Jivraj Mehta
Explanation: Indulal Yagnik (popularly 'Indu Chacha') led the Maha Gujarat Movement, which culminated in the bifurcation of Bombay State and the creation of Gujarat on 1 May 1960. The movement is a key GPSC topic under 'India after Independence — Reorganization of the States'.
6Who was the first Governor-General of independent India (1947-48), succeeding Lord Mountbatten as the last British Governor-General?
A.C. Rajagopalachari
B.Rajendra Prasad
C.Sardar Patel
D.Jawaharlal Nehru
Explanation: C. Rajagopalachari (Rajaji) was the first and only Indian Governor-General of India, serving from June 1948 until the office was abolished when India became a republic in January 1950. Lord Mountbatten was the last British Governor-General of independent India until June 1948.
7The Dandi March (Salt Satyagraha) of 1930 began from Sabarmati Ashram and ended at Dandi, a coastal village in which present-day Gujarat district?
A.Navsari
B.Surat
C.Bharuch
D.Valsad
Explanation: Gandhi's 1930 Salt March covered about 385 km from Sabarmati Ashram (Ahmedabad) to Dandi, which lies in present-day Navsari district. There, on 6 April 1930, Gandhi broke the salt law by making salt from seawater, launching the nationwide Civil Disobedience Movement.
8The Mauryan emperor Ashoka issued a famous rock edict at Junagadh in Gujarat. Which Mauryan governor is associated with building the Sudarshan Lake near Girnar mentioned in later inscriptions there?
A.Pushyagupta
B.Tushaspa
C.Chandragupta Maurya
D.Bindusara
Explanation: The Junagadh Rock Inscription of Rudradaman records that the Sudarshan Lake was originally built by Pushyagupta, a provincial governor (Rashtriya) under Chandragupta Maurya, and later improved by Tushaspa (a Yavana governor under Ashoka). This is a classic GPSC item linking Mauryan rule to Gujarat.
9Sayajirao Gaekwad III, the reformist ruler associated with progressive measures such as compulsory primary education and a public library system, ruled which princely state?
A.Baroda
B.Rajkot
C.Bhavnagar
D.Gondal
Explanation: Sayajirao Gaekwad III ruled the princely state of Baroda (Vadodara) and introduced free and compulsory primary education, a network of libraries, and the Baroda State Bank. The GPSC syllabus specifically names him among reformist princely rulers of Gujarat.
10Which Indian National Congress session, held in 1924 in Belgaum, was the only one presided over by Mahatma Gandhi?
A.Belgaum (1924)
B.Lahore (1929)
C.Karachi (1931)
D.Tripuri (1939)
Explanation: Gandhi presided over the Indian National Congress only once, at the Belgaum session of 1924. This is a frequently asked static GK item in the freedom-movement portion of GS-I.

About the GPSC Class 1 & 2 Exam

The GPSC Class-1 & Class-2 Examination is conducted by the Gujarat Public Service Commission to recruit officers for the Gujarat Administrative Service (Class-1), Gujarat Civil Services (Class-1 & Class-2), and the Gujarat Municipal Chief Officer Service (Class-2), filling posts such as Deputy Collector, Deputy Superintendent of Police, Taluka Development Officer, and Mamlatdar. Selection is a three-stage process: a Preliminary Examination, a Main (descriptive) Examination, and a Personal Interview. The Preliminary stage consists of two objective General Studies papers, each with 200 multiple-choice questions worth 200 marks and a 3-hour duration. There is one-third negative marking for every wrong answer, and the prelims serve only as a screening test whose marks do not count in the final merit.

Questions

400 scored questions

Time Limit

3 hours (180 minutes) per paper; two papers

Passing Score

Qualifying/screening only — category-wise cutoffs decide shortlisting

Exam Fee

Rs 100 for General/Unreserved candidates; exempted for reserved categories of Gujarat origin, PwD, and Ex-Servicemen (Gujarat Public Service Commission (GPSC), Gandhinagar)

GPSC Class 1 & 2 Exam Content Outline

~22%

General Mental Ability (Reasoning & Quant)

Number series, coding-decoding, blood relations, clocks and calendars, percentages, ratio and proportion, time-speed-distance, interest, mensuration, BODMAS, data interpretation, and probability

~15%

Polity, Constitution & Governance

Indian Constitution, fundamental rights and duties, DPSP, federalism, Panchayati Raj, constitutional bodies, RTI, ethics in public service, and international relations

~15%

Geography (World, India & Gujarat)

Earth structure, monsoon and climate, rivers and ports of Gujarat, soils and resources, national parks, demography, economic geography, and disasters

~14%

History (India & Gujarat)

Indus Valley, ancient/medieval/modern India, Gujarat dynasties, princely-state reformers, the freedom movement and Gujarat satyagrahas, and the Maha Gujarat Movement

~11%

Science & Technology

Space (ISRO) and defence (DRDO) technology, energy and nuclear policy, ICT and cyber security, biotechnology, environment, climate change, and everyday science

~10%

Indian Economy & Planning

NITI Aayog, 1991 economic reforms, GST, public finance and deficits, agriculture, industry and SEZs, development indicators, and the Gujarat economy

~9%

Cultural Heritage

Art forms, architecture, Patola and crafts, Bhavai folk theatre, Garba, festivals, Gujarati literature, saints, and tourist and pilgrimage places of Gujarat

~4%

Current Events & Gujarat GK

Regional, national, and international current affairs, government schemes, G20, GIFT City, Gujarat statehood, and static general knowledge of Gujarat

How to Pass the GPSC Class 1 & 2 Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: Qualifying/screening only — category-wise cutoffs decide shortlisting
  • Exam length: 400 questions
  • Time limit: 3 hours (180 minutes) per paper; two papers
  • Exam fee: Rs 100 for General/Unreserved candidates; exempted for reserved categories of Gujarat origin, PwD, and Ex-Servicemen

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

GPSC Class 1 & 2 Study Tips from Top Performers

1Treat Gujarat-specific history, geography, culture, and economy as high-yield — they distinguish GPSC from UPSC and recur heavily across both GS papers.
2Practice with one-third negative marking in mind: attempt questions only when you can confidently eliminate at least two options.
3Build a strong NCERT and GCERT base for history, polity, geography, and economy before moving to Gujarat-focused standard references.
4Drill General Mental Ability daily — number series, percentages, time-speed-distance, and data interpretation are scoring areas that reward speed.
5Maintain a running current-affairs note covering regional, national, and international events, government schemes, and Gujarat developments like GIFT City.
6Solve previous years' GPSC prelims papers under timed conditions to learn the question style and the depth of Gujarat-specific detail.
7Revise the Constitution's key articles, constitutional bodies, and Panchayati Raj amendments — polity is high-frequency and high-accuracy if memorized.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the GPSC Class 1 & 2 Examination?

It is the recruitment examination conducted by the Gujarat Public Service Commission for Gujarat Administrative Service (Class-1), Gujarat Civil Services (Class-1 & Class-2), and related posts such as Deputy Collector, Dy. SP, Taluka Development Officer, and Mamlatdar. Selection involves a Preliminary exam, a Main exam, and an Interview.

How is the Preliminary Examination structured?

The Preliminary stage has two objective General Studies papers — GS-I and GS-II — each with 200 multiple-choice questions worth 200 marks and a 3-hour duration, for a total of 400 questions and 400 marks. Both papers are set in English and Gujarati.

Is there negative marking in GPSC prelims?

Yes. As per the GPSC pattern, one-third (about 0.33) of the marks for a question is deducted for each incorrect answer in the objective Preliminary papers, so guessing carelessly can lower your score.

What is the application fee?

The application fee is Rs 100 for General/Unreserved candidates (plus service charges). Reserved-category candidates of Gujarat origin, Persons with Disabilities, and Ex-Servicemen are generally exempted from the fee.

Do Preliminary marks count toward final selection?

No. The Preliminary Examination is a screening test used only to shortlist candidates for the Main Examination. The final merit is prepared on the basis of the Main Examination marks plus the Personal Interview.

What are the eligibility requirements?

Candidates need a bachelor's degree in any discipline from a recognized university and are generally between 20 and 35 years old on the last date of application, with age relaxations for reserved categories, women, PwD, and ex-servicemen as per Gujarat government rules.

What subjects does the Preliminary syllabus cover?

GS-I covers History, Cultural Heritage, Constitution/Polity/Social Justice/International Relations, and General Mental Ability. GS-II covers Indian Economy and Planning, Geography, Science & Technology, and Current Events — with significant Gujarat-specific content throughout.

How many vacancies and how often is the exam held?

GPSC typically advertises the Class 1 & 2 recruitment cycle annually, with vacancies varying by cycle (often in the range of roughly 70 to 270 posts). Check the official GPSC website for the latest advertisement and vacancy numbers.