
New Delhi, February 6, 2026
UPSC Announces Major Changes in Civil Services Exam Rules
The Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) has introduced a significant rule change in the Civil Services Examination (CSE) 2026, tightening norms for candidates already in service. As per the newly released notification, serving officers will now get only one opportunity to reappear in the exam to improve their rank.
Until now, candidates selected into services were allowed to attempt the examination multiple times while in service. This provision has now been withdrawn from 2026 onwards, marking one of the most notable reforms in recent years.
📘 UPSC CSE 2026 Notification Released
UPSC released the Civil Services Examination 2026 notification on Wednesday, announcing recruitment for a total of 933 posts across various central services.
📌 Key Dates
Application deadline: February 24, 2026
Mode of application: Online
Eligible candidates are advised to apply early and carefully review the updated eligibility and attempt-related rules.
🚫 Only One Chance for Rank Improvement
Under the new rule:
Candidates already selected into a civil service will be allowed only one additional attempt to improve their rank
Repeated attempts while continuing in service will no longer be permitted
The move is aimed at ensuring administrative stability and fairness for fresh aspirants
This change is expected to significantly impact preparation strategies for candidates already serving in Group A or Group B services.
🧑💻 Face Authentication Mandatory at Exam Centers
UPSC has also introduced face authentication-based entry at examination centers starting with CSE 2026.
Candidates will be allowed entry only after facial verification
The move is aimed at preventing impersonation and exam malpractice
This comes in addition to existing identity verification processes
📋 Other Important Changes Candidates Must Know
Apart from rank-improvement restrictions, UPSC has tightened:
Attempt limits
Eligibility conditions
Verification procedures
Candidates are strongly advised to read the official notification in detail before applying to avoid disqualification at later stages.
📊 Why This Change Matters
Education and policy experts believe the reforms are intended to:
Reduce repeated exam-taking by serving officers
Provide more opportunities for first-time aspirants
Improve efficiency and continuity in civil services
However, the move has also sparked debate among aspirants who view multiple attempts as a legitimate career-improvement path.










