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The CSAT is a qualifying paper. You only need 66.67 marks out of 200 to clear it — nothing more. The right strategy is therefore not to attempt every question, but to pick the questions that are meant for you, attempt them with quiet confidence, and skip the rest. Every wrong answer costs you 0.83 marks. Attempt out of preparation and time-readiness, never out of ego. Whether you finish with 70 marks or 100 marks, the result is identical — you qualify and move on.

 

Introduction: Why Skipping Is a Skill, Not a Weakness

 

The CSAT paper is the silent eliminator of UPSC aspirants. Although it is only a qualifying paper requiring a modest 33 per cent to clear, thousands of well-prepared candidates fall short every year. The reason is rarely a lack of preparation — it is the mismanagement of attempts and the marks quietly drained away by negative marking.

At Fortune IAS Academy, we have observed across hundreds of mock test analyses that the gap between a candidate who comfortably qualifies and one who narrowly misses out is rarely intellectual. It almost always comes down to one decisive skill: knowing when to skip a question.

In this guide, we shall walk you through the precise negative marking formula, the pass-focused mindset that experienced toppers carry into the examination hall, and a practical decision framework you can apply on the day of the test.

 

Understanding the CSAT Paper at a Glance

 

Before we discuss the skipping strategy, let us first lay out the scoring architecture of the CSAT paper. A clear grasp of this structure is the foundation of every strategic choice you will make.

Parameter

Details

Paper Name

CSAT (Paper 2 of UPSC Prelims)

Total Questions

80 questions

Total Marks

200 marks

Marks per Correct Answer

+2.5 marks

Penalty per Wrong Answer

-0.83 marks (one-third of 2.5)

Qualifying Marks

66.67 marks (33 per cent)

Duration

2 hours (120 minutes)

Nature of Paper

Qualifying only — marks not counted in merit

Note: Although the CSAT is a qualifying paper, the consequence of failing it is severe — your General Studies Paper 1 score, no matter how strong, will not be evaluated. Treating CSAT casually is the single most expensive mistake an aspirant can make.

 

The Negative Marking Formula in CSAT

 

The negative marking rule in the CSAT paper is straightforward but consequential.

“For every incorrect answer, one-third of the marks allotted to that question shall be deducted as a penalty.”

Translated into numbers:

  • Marks per correct answer: +2.5
  • Penalty per wrong answer: − (1/3) × 2.5 = −0.83 marks
  • Unattempted questions: 0 marks (no penalty)

Two practical implications follow from this formula:

  1. Three wrong answers cancel out one correct answer: 3 × 0.83 ≈ 2.5 marks.
  2. Every wrong answer is a small, quiet erosion of the marks you have already earned on questions you actually knew.

The examiner, in other words, has built a trap of overconfidence into the paper. Candidates who attempt aggressively, hoping to maximise their score, often end up below the qualifying threshold — not because they lacked knowledge, but because they lacked restraint.

 

The Calculated Attempt Mindset: Pick Your Questions, Not Every Question

 

Here is the single most important truth about the CSAT paper, and the one most aspirants fail to fully internalise:

CSAT is a qualifying paper. You do not need to top it. You do not need to maximise your score. You need 66.67 marks out of 200 — and not one mark more.

This single fact should rewire your entire approach to the paper. The goal is not to attack the question paper; the goal is to walk out of the examination hall with the door to Mains comfortably open.

 

The Arithmetic of Passing

Let us look at exactly what it takes to clear the CSAT paper. The table below sets out a range of realistic outcomes — every one of which clears the qualifying threshold of 66.67 marks.

 

Correct

Wrong

Skipped

Final Score

Status

27

0

53

67.5

Qualified

30

3

47

72.5

Qualified

35

8

37

80.9

Comfortable

40

10

30

91.7

Strong margin

45

15

20

100

Excellent

Read that table carefully. You need only 27 correct answers out of 80 — roughly one-third of the paper — to qualify. The remaining two-thirds are noise. They are questions designed to tempt you, drain your time, and lure you into negative marking. Your job on examination day is not to conquer them. It is to ignore them.

 

Pick Your Questions — Do Not Let the Paper Pick You

 

The most powerful skill in CSAT is question selection. Walk into the examination hall not asking “How many can I attempt?” but rather, “Which questions in this paper are mine?”

Every CSAT paper contains three types of questions. Recognising which is which, within the first thirty seconds of reading a question, is the entire game.

 

Question Type

Recognition Signal

Your Action

Your Questions

You see the solution path within 30 seconds; the topic is familiar; the wording is clean

Attempt with confidence

Possible Questions

You can eliminate one or two options through reasoning, but the full answer needs work

Mark; return only if time remains

The “Must-Skips” 

Unfamiliar topic, deliberately ambiguous wording, options that all look right, or calculation traps

Skip without hesitation

Your task is simple: find your questions, attempt them with quiet confidence, mark the possible ones for a second pass, and leave the rest untouched. The paper is a buffet, not a contest — you are not obliged to taste everything.

 

The Ego Trap: The Reason Most Aspirants Fail CSAT

 

This is where the majority of well-prepared aspirants come undone. After months of practising comprehension passages, reasoning puzzles, and arithmetic problems, the mind plays a cruel trick. It whispers that because you have studied a topic, you must attempt every question on that topic. To skip such a question feels like a betrayal of your own preparation.

This is not strategy. This is ego.

A question on a topic you have prepared can still be:

  • Phrased ambiguously, with two options that both look defensible
  • Designed with a deliberate calculation trap in the options
  • Drafted to consume four or five minutes of your time
  • Worded in a way that is unfamiliar even though the underlying concept is not

You have nothing to prove to the examiner. You have nothing to prove to yourself either. You only need 66.67 marks. A question skipped out of discipline is worth more, on examination day, than a question attempted out of pride.

 

Time Is the Real Currency in CSAT

 

You have 120 minutes for 80 questions. That works out to 90 seconds per question on average — but that average is misleading. A clean comprehension question might take 45 seconds. A tangled reasoning puzzle, if you allow it to, can swallow five minutes. Candidates who fail are almost always the ones who allowed two or three time-traps to consume the minutes they needed for easier questions later in the paper.

Treat your time as the scarcest resource on the desk:

  • 30 seconds is your first-glance budget. Can you see your way to a solution?
  • If yes, attempt it now and move on. If no, mark it and move on.
  • Never let a single question consume more than 2 minutes on your first pass.
  • Reserve the final 10 to 15 minutes for revisiting the questions you marked, not for fresh attempts.

 

What a Calculated Attempt Actually Looks Like

 

A calculated attempt is not the same as a guess that happens to feel confident. A calculated attempt has four defining features:

  1. You have read the question fully and understood what is being asked.
  2. You can see a clear path to the answer — not just a feeling about it.
  3. You have eliminated at least one option through reasoning, not intuition.
  4. The time the question demands is proportionate to the marks at stake.

If even one of these features is missing, it is not a calculated attempt. It is a gamble dressed in the clothing of effort. And on a paper with negative marking, the difference matters.

 

The Liberating Mantra: 70 or 100, the Result Is Identical

 

The most freeing realisation an aspirant can have about CSAT is this:

Whether I score 70 or 100 in CSAT, the outcome is exactly the same — I qualify, and my General Studies Paper 1 is evaluated.

Your General Studies Paper 1 score is what determines your Prelims cut-off and your eventual rank. The CSAT score does not contribute a single mark to the merit list. It simply opens the door. A 100 in CSAT is not worth one rupee more than a 70.

Once you accept this fact at a deep level, the urge to attempt one more question, then one more, then one more — the urge that has destroyed so many otherwise excellent candidates — quietly dissolves. You walk into the paper with one calm goal: cross 66.67 marks with margin to spare, and leave.

 

The Skip-or-Attempt Decision Framework

 

The mindset above can be distilled into a simple, examination-ready framework. Memorise this — and use it in every mock test until it becomes instinctive on the day of the paper.

Situation

Action

You can see the path to the answer in under 30 seconds

Attempt — this is one of your questions

You have eliminated two options through reasoning

Attempt — a calculated, defensible try

You have eliminated one option

Attempt only if time allows; otherwise mark and move on

You feel you should attempt because you studied the topic

Skip — this is the ego trap, not a strategy

All four options look equally plausible

Skip without guilt — this is not your question

The question is consuming more than 2 minutes

Mark for review, move on, return only if time remains

The golden rule: if the question is not yours — by topic, by clarity, or by time — it does not deserve your ink. Move on.

 

Section-Wise Selection Strategy

Although the mindset is universal, the practical signals that tell you when to skip differ from section to section. Here is how to read each.

 

1. Reading Comprehension

 

Reading Comprehension is the lowest-risk section in the entire paper. Because the answer must lie within the passage itself, even a partial understanding usually permits you to identify the correct option. Provided you have read the passage carefully, most RC questions will fall into your “yours” bucket.

  • Skip only when: The passage genuinely baffles you, or the question hinges on a sentence you could not interpret.
  • Otherwise: Attempt with confidence. This is where most of your 27 correct answers will come from.

 

2. Logical Reasoning and Analytical Ability

 

Reasoning questions reward partial work. If you have set up the problem and narrowed down to two plausible answers, attempt. If, on the other hand, you cannot even frame the relationships within the first 60 seconds, skip without guilt and move on.

  • Skip when: You cannot even set up the structure of the problem in your head.
  • Attempt when: You have a clear logical path and have eliminated at least one option.

 

3. Quantitative Aptitude (Basic Numeracy)

 

Quantitative questions are the most unforgiving in CSAT. They tend to yield either a clean numerical answer or none at all. Avoid the temptation of “almost solved” gambles in arithmetic — the options are specifically designed to punish calculation slips.

  • Skip when: You have not actually solved the question; the options simply look familiar.
  • Attempt when: You have a verified numerical answer that matches one of the options.

 

4. Decision-Making Questions

Decision-making questions in the CSAT paper carry no negative marking. Every single one of them must be attempted — even by reasoned guess. Leaving a decision-making question blank is an unrecoverable loss of free marks.

 

Common Mistakes That Cost Aspirants the Qualifying Mark

 

Across our years of mentoring candidates, the same handful of errors recur in nearly every failed CSAT attempt. Avoiding them is half the battle won.

  1. Treating CSAT like a competitive paper and chasing a high score instead of a comfortable pass.
  2. Over-attempting in the final fifteen minutes out of panic, turning a comfortable lead into a borderline score.
  3. The ego attempt — attempting a question simply because you studied the topic, regardless of how the question is actually framed.
  4. Guessing on Maths without actually solving the problem; the calculation traps in the options are designed precisely for this.
  5. Skipping entire Reading Comprehension passages because of their length, despite RC being the highest-accuracy section.
  6. Ignoring or missing decision-making questions, which are penalty-free and ought to be attempted in full.
  7. Not tracking accuracy section by section during mock tests, leaving you unaware of your own weak spots.

Pro Tips from Fortune IAS Academy Faculty

  • Walk in with a single goal: cross 66.67 marks comfortably. Nothing else.
  • Make two full passes through the paper. First pass: only your questions. Second pass: revisit the possible ones.
  • Mark every question during the first pass as one of three: Solved, Try Later, or Skip. Do not get stuck on any one question.
  • Aim for around 35 to 45 calculated attempts at 75 per cent or higher accuracy. That clears the threshold with a strong margin.
  • Attempt every decision-making question. They are free marks by design.
  • Never trade accuracy for attempt count. On a qualifying paper, restraint is the strategy.
  • In the last week before the examination, take at least three full-length CSAT mocks under strict timing. Conditioning your decisions matters as much as content.
  • Read each question once with full attention, not three times in a panic. The first reading is when selection happens.

 

A Worked Example: Two Mindsets, Two Outcomes

 

Consider two candidates sitting the same CSAT paper. Both have prepared equally well. The only difference is the mindset they walk in with.

Candidate A treats the paper as a competition. He tries to attempt as many questions as he can, often pushing through questions he is not sure of “because he studied that topic”. He ends up attempting 70 questions — around 40 of them correct and 30 wrong.

  • Correct: 40 × 2.5 = 100 marks
  • Wrong: 30 × 0.83 = −24.9 marks
  • Final score: approximately 75.1 marks — he qualifies, but only just

Candidate B walks in with the calculated-attempt mindset. She makes a first pass selecting only her questions — 35 of them — attempting each with confidence. On her second pass, she revisits 10 “possible” questions where she could eliminate two options. She skips the remaining 35 without hesitation.

  • First pass: 32 correct, 3 wrong (out of 35 attempted)
  • Second pass: 6 correct, 4 wrong (out of 10 reasoned attempts)
  • Total correct: 38 × 2.5 = 95 marks
  • Total wrong: 7 × 0.83 = −5.8 marks
  • Final score: approximately 89.2 marks — she qualifies comfortably

Candidate B attempts fewer questions yet scores more marks and, crucially, with far less variance. She walked in to pass; she walked out having passed. Candidate A walked in to perform; he walked out exhausted and uncertain whether his guesses had survived the negative marking. That is the difference the right mindset makes.

 

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

 

Q1. Is there negative marking in CSAT?

Yes. The UPSC CSAT (Paper 2) carries negative marking. For every incorrect answer, one-third of the marks allotted to the question — that is, 0.83 marks — is deducted from your total.

Q2. How much do you lose per wrong answer in CSAT?

Each wrong answer in the CSAT paper costs you 0.83 marks. This is one-third of the 2.5 marks awarded for a correct answer.

Q3. How many wrong answers cancel one correct answer in CSAT?

Three wrong answers roughly cancel out one correct answer, since 3 × 0.83 ≈ 2.5 marks.

Q4. When should I skip a question in CSAT?

Skip a question whenever it is not yours — that is, when you cannot see a clear path to the answer within 30 seconds, when the topic is unfamiliar, when all four options look equally plausible, or when the question is consuming time disproportionate to its value. The aim is to qualify, not to attempt every question.

Q5. Is there negative marking on decision-making questions in CSAT?

No. Decision-making questions in the CSAT paper do not carry any negative marking. You should therefore attempt every single one of them, even if you have to guess.

Q6. How many questions should I attempt in CSAT?

Aim for 35 to 45 calculated attempts at 75 per cent or higher accuracy. That comfortably clears the qualifying mark of 66.67 marks with a healthy margin. Quality of attempts matters far more than quantity.

Q7. What is the qualifying mark in CSAT?

The qualifying mark in CSAT is 33 per cent, which works out to 66.67 marks out of 200. Failure to qualify means your General Studies Paper 1 will not be evaluated, regardless of how high you scored on it.

Q8. Does my CSAT score count in the final UPSC merit list?

No. The CSAT score is purely qualifying. It does not contribute to the Prelims cut-off (which is determined by General Studies Paper 1) or to the final merit list. Whether you score 70 or 100, the outcome is identical — you qualify and move on. This is precisely why a pass-focused mindset, rather than a score-maximising one, is the correct strategy.

Q9. Should I attempt a question simply because I studied that topic?

No. This is the ego trap. A question on a topic you have prepared can still be ambiguously worded, contain calculation traps, or consume disproportionate time. Attempt only when the question itself is yours — not merely the topic.

 

Conclusion: The Examiner Rewards Restraint

The CSAT paper is not won by attempting the most questions. It is won by attempting only the right ones — the ones meant for you. Once you internalise that this is a qualifying paper and that 70 marks is exactly as good as 100 marks, the examination becomes far less intimidating and far more manageable.

Practise this mindset in every mock test you take. Note which questions you attempted out of confidence and which out of ego. Refine the difference. By the time you sit for the actual Civil Services Preliminary Examination, the decision to skip or attempt should feel almost automatic — leaving your mental bandwidth free for the questions that genuinely deserve it.

At Fortune IAS Academy, our CSAT mentorship programme integrates this exact mindset with weekly mock testing, sectional analysis, and personalised feedback from senior faculty. We help every aspirant walk into the examination hall with both clarity of mind and confidence in approach.

Remember: in the CSAT paper, every skipped question you did not know is a small, quiet victory. Restraint is not weakness. It is the highest form of strategic intelligence — and on a qualifying paper, it is the difference between clearing and falling short.

 

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