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G. H. P. Raju
"Public service is not merely a career. It is a responsibility to uphold justice, integrity and compassion."
A retired Indian Police Service officer with over 33 years of distinguished service in policing and governance, GHP Raju now dedicates his experience to guiding UPSC aspirants — especially in Ethics & Integrity (GS Paper IV).
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Data-Backed Strategy · CSE 2026
Cracking the Code: How Top 100 Rankers Actually Win UPSC Mains
Every year, lakhs of aspirants sit the UPSC Civil Services examination. Fewer than 12,500 make the Mains list. And every year, the top 100 rankers — the ones who walk away with the IAS, IFS, and premier IPS services — do something the rest do not: they allocate their time, energy, and attention where the marks actually are, not where convention says they should be.
The Examination: What the Numbers Actually Say
The UPSC Civil Services Mains carries 2,025 marks in total: 1,750 in the Mains written examination across seven papers of 250 marks each (Essay, GS-1, GS-2, GS-3, GS-4, and two Optional papers), and 275 marks in the Personality Test. On paper, every subject appears equal. In reality, they are not.
An analysis of AIR 1 to 100 marksheets compiled over the last decade — drawn from topper-shared data, reputed coaching institute analyses, and UPSC's own aggregate publications — reveals a consistent and striking pattern:
Average scores of AIR 1–100 rankers, 2013–2024
| Paper | Max Marks | Avg % (Top 100) | Focus Index |
|---|---|---|---|
| Essay | 250 | 54–56% | |
| GS-1 (History, Geography, Society) | 250 | 44–46% | |
| GS-2 (Polity, Governance, IR) | 250 | 44–46% | |
| GS-3 (Economy, S&T, Environment) | 250 | 41–43% | |
| GS-4 (Ethics, Integrity) | 250 | 47–50% | |
| Optional Paper 1 | 250 | 61–64% | |
| Optional Paper 2 | 250 | 63–65% | |
| Personality Test | 275 | 66–68% |
Source: Compiled from AIR 1–100 marksheets, 2013–2024.
The Focus Index: A Smarter Way to Allocate Time
The Focus Index is not a marking scheme. It is a strategic signal. It answers a precise question: given how much this paper actually contributes to a top-100 finish, and given how reliably top rankers score well here, how much preparation priority does it deserve?
The index is calculated by combining two factors — the average percentage that top rankers actually score (which reveals the paper's scoring ceiling for well-prepared candidates) and the effective contribution of that paper to the final total compared to its nominal weight. A high index means the paper is both scoreable and impactful. A low index means it is either hard to score well in, or relatively lower in its actual rank impact — or both.
The results are revealing. Optional Papers and the Personality Test are not just nominally important — they are where the top 100 ranks are genuinely won. The four GS papers, on the other hand, function more as a qualifying floor. You must not fall below a threshold in GS, but you are unlikely to vault into the top 100 because of GS alone.
The Three Strategic Truths Behind the Data
Optional Is Where the Race Is Run
Top 100 rankers average 61–65% in their Optional papers — a full 15 to 20 percentage points higher than in most GS papers. Combined, the two Optional papers deliver roughly 310–330 marks for top performers, against a GS paper average of around 110–120 marks. Candidates who reach the top 100 almost universally do so on the strength of a well-chosen, deeply prepared Optional subject. If your Optional is weak, nothing else compensates.
GS-3 Is the Systematic Risk
GS-3 — covering economy, agriculture, science and technology, environment, and internal security — is the consistently lowest-scoring paper even among top 100 rankers. In multiple recent years, AIR-1 holders scored below 100 out of 250. For aspirants targeting the top 100, GS-3 is not where you win marks; it is where you must stop losing them. Risk control, not brilliance, is the right frame for this paper.
The Personality Test Delivers Disproportionate Returns
At 275 marks with an average scoring of 66–68% among top rankers, the Personality Test is the single highest-index component in the entire examination. Top 100 candidates routinely score 185–205 marks here. Yet most aspirants treat PT as an afterthought, spending three weeks on it after nine months on Mains. The PT is teachable, it rewards preparation, and a ten-mark swing here — entirely achievable through structured mock boards — can move you fifteen to twenty ranks.
The Recommended Time Allocation
Translating the Focus Index into a practical preparation schedule, the recommended weekly time allocation for a candidate targeting the top 100 in CSE 2026 is:
The Four Markers That Separate Top 100 from Top 500
- Answer writing discipline. Top rankers write more answers under timed conditions than any other category of candidates. Two peer-reviewed answers per day, across rotating papers, is a minimum — not a target.
- Optional mastery over breadth. Rather than covering every GS topic superficially, top rankers go deep in Optional. Scoring 320–340 in two Optional papers is worth more to your rank than gaining 30 marks across four GS papers.
- A living data bank for GS-3. Economy, agriculture, and S&T answers live or die on specific facts and figures. Top rankers maintain a rolling bank of 20–25 key statistics, updated weekly from the Economic Survey, Budget, and ministry reports. This alone is worth 10–15 marks in GS-3.
- Personality Test as a structured paper. Every noun in your DAF is a potential question. Top rankers prepare structured responses — not memorised scripts, but thought-through positions — on every significant entry in their biography. Five diverse mock boards with honest feedback is the minimum before the actual interview.
The Bottom Line
The UPSC examination does not reward those who work the most. It rewards those who allocate their work most intelligently. The data from a decade of top-100 marksheets is unambiguous: Optional Papers and the Personality Test are the decisive levers. The GS papers are the qualifying floor. GS-3 is the silent threat.
If you are preparing for CSE 2026 with serious rank ambitions, the first question to answer is not 'How many hours am I putting in?' It is: 'What proportion of those hours are going where the marks actually are?'
Answer that question correctly, and your strategy will already be better than most.
— Written from three decades of observing what discipline, strategy, and honest self-assessment look like in high-stakes selection.
GS Paper IV
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The five pillars that underpin ethical conduct in public administration — as taught by GHP Raju through 33 years of lived experience.
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Ethics Core
UPSC · GS Paper IV
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