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“I’ll start next month. I’ll start after this. I’ll join the upcoming batch.”

 

Sound familiar? Most aspirants have had this conversation with themselves — sometimes more than once.

But here’s the truth: if UPSC 2027 is your goal and you haven’t started yet, the clock is already running. And May 2026 is the moment that changes everything.

Every week you delay is a week of preparation you don’t get back. Every month that passes is a month less to revise, practise, and grow confident before the exam. Time in UPSC preparation doesn’t pause — it moves, whether you’re ready or not.

 

Every Second You Wait is a Second of Preparation Gone

 

UPSC preparation has a fixed destination: the Prelims, usually in May. Everything you do — every class, every revision, every test, every answer you write — is building towards that date. The syllabus doesn’t shrink because you joined late. The exam doesn’t adjust because you needed more time. The clock runs regardless of when you press start. And here’s the thing — it’s not just about having ‘enough’ time. It’s about having time to do things properly.

 

→  Start May 2026  →  Roughly 12 months before Prelims 2027

→  Start August 2026  →  Roughly 9 months before Prelims 2027

→  Start November 2026  →  Roughly 6 months before Prelims 2027


The syllabus stays the same. The exam stays the same.

Only the time you give yourself changes — and that makes all the difference.

 

With 12 months, you can build your NCERT foundation at a comfortable pace, cover the GS syllabus properly, write answers regularly, revise multiple times, and appear for full-length mock tests with enough time to act on the feedback.

With fewer months, you can still do all of this — but everything gets tighter. Revision gets squeezed. Answer writing practice gets shortened. The foundation sometimes gets skipped.

May gives you the room to prepare the right way.

 

Don’t Go Into Your First Attempt Hoping for the Best

A lot of aspirants quietly treat the first attempt as a warm-up. A chance to see what the exam feels like. Something to ‘get out of the way’ before the real preparation begins.

But that mindset has a cost. Every attempt takes months of preparation. Every attempt has an emotional weight. And every attempt that’s treated as a trial run is an attempt that could have been a winning one.

Look at what happened in UPSC CSE 2026 with Fortune IAS students who decided their first attempt would be their best attempt:

 

AIR 57

Sreeja J S

First Attempt

AIR 362

Amal Kampiyil

First Attempt

AIR 451

Athidhi Krishnadev B

First Attempt

AIR 576

Asna Anwar

First Attempt

 

Four aspirants. Four first attempts. Four civil servants.

Sreeja J S didn’t just clear — she became Kerala’s Rank 1 on her very first try. These weren’t people with a decade of preparation behind them. They were people who started with a clear goal, took preparation seriously from day one, and didn’t treat the first attempt as a trial run.

That kind of result starts with a decision — the decision to manifest success in the first attempt itself. And that decision, in practical terms, means starting early enough to be truly ready.

 

What “Starting in May” Actually Looks Like

 

When you join the PCM Batch in May 2026, you’re not just getting a seat in a class. You’re getting a carefully structured 12-month journey.

 

You Begin With a Strong Foundation

The PCM Batch at Fortune IAS begins with the NCERT Foundation Course — recorded sessions, curated booklets, and a test series that builds your understanding of every GS subject from the ground up.

This foundation is what makes everything else easier. History makes more sense. Geography connects. Polity becomes logical rather than something to memorise. And when you’ve done this foundation well, advanced topics in the GS syllabus stop feeling overwhelming.

This phase takes several weeks. It deserves that time. And a May start gives it that time.

 

You Build Answer Writing Into Your Daily Routine

Mains preparation isn’t a switch you flip after Prelims. It’s a habit you build — slowly, over months. The PCM Batch includes daily and weekly answer writing from the very beginning of the course.

Writing a good UPSC Mains answer is a skill. Structure, content, language, time management — all of this improves with practice. A 12-month start gives you a full year of this practice. That’s a very different answer writer from someone who starts writing three months before the exam.

 

You Revise — Properly, More Than Once

 

UPSC is not an exam where you study something once and retain it. The syllabus is vast, and retention requires revisiting topics multiple times. Experts recommend going through the full syllabus at least three to four times before Prelims.

If you complete the syllabus by November or December — which a structured May start allows — you have five to six months for revision, mock tests, and sharpening your weak areas before Prelims 2027.

 

You Use the Test Series Fully

The PCM Batch includes the Prelims Test Series with a Study Planner, the Mains Test Series, and the Quality Improvement Programme (QIP) for answer writing. There’s also the Prelims Last Lap — a peer group discussion format for final revision before the exam.

The value of a test series is in what you do with it — identifying weaknesses, reviewing mistakes, and improving. That takes time after each test. A May start gives you enough time to go through the test series, act on the feedback, and go through it again.

 

The People Who Teach You Matter

The PCM Batch is mentored with inputs from Dr D.P. Agrawal, IAS — the Former Chairman of UPSC. Who understands how the exam is designed better than the person who conducted it for six years? His guidance ensures that students prepare the way UPSC actually expects — not by guesswork.

Through the DISHA Programme, every student gets personal one-on-one mentorship — tailored to individual strengths, weaknesses, and preparation pace. No student is left to figure things out alone.

“Fortune IAS Academy transformed my childhood dream of civil services into reality. Starting with minimal knowledge in 2022, Nitin Sir mentored me tirelessly, supported by Sylesh Sir’s unwavering belief. Joining Fortune was one of my best life decisions.”

Fabi Rasheed, IAS — AIR 71, CSE 2023

First Attempt Topper 

 

“I joined Fortune IAS Academy immediately after my graduation and did my entire civil services preparation there. My heartfelt thanks to Sherin sir, Anton sir, Muni sir, Sylesh sir and everyone at Fortune for being my guiding light.”

Safna Nazarudeen, IAS — AIR 45, CSE 2019

Youngest Malayalee IAS Officer in Kerala Cadre  

 

The Learning Environment That Makes It All Work

It isn’t only the classes and the material that shape preparation. It’s the environment — the people you study alongside, the energy of the reading room, the conversations between classes.

Fortune IAS has a reading room with 700 individual cubicles — air-conditioned, with high-speed Wi-Fi — available exclusively for PCM batch students. This is where aspirants spend hours building their preparation, and where study partnerships form naturally.

Akhil V Menon, IAS (AIR 66, 2021) and Sreekumar R, IRS (AIR 192, 2021) were roommates who cleared UPSC together. Safna Nazarudeen, Mridul Darsan, and Devi Nandana were study partners who all cleared together in 2019. These aren’t coincidences — they’re what happens when serious aspirants prepare in the same space, pushing each other forward.

And once a year, the Fortune family steps away from the books for Fortune Fiesta — the Academy’s cultural fest that celebrates every student as more than just an exam candidate. Community, confidence, and a sense of belonging are part of what Fortune IAS builds.

 

A Quick Look at What the PCM Batch Includes

The PCM (Prelims Cum Mains) Batch starting 20th May 2026 includes:

  • 900+ hours of lectures — GS Papers 1 to 4, CSAT, and Current Affairs
  • Hybrid format — attend offline in Trivandrum or online from home
  • NCERT Foundation Course — recorded sessions, booklets, and test series
  • 16 printed books — 10 for Prelims (including CSAT) + 6 for Mains, authored by Fortune faculty
  • PRECISE — monthly printed Current Affairs magazine for Prelims
  • FWD (Fortune Weekly Digest) — weekly Mains-focused current affairs
  • FIND & FINDER — daily curated current affairs digest
  • Prelims Test Series with Study Planner, Mains Test Series, and QIP
  • Personal mentorship under the DISHA Programme
  • Toppers Talk and Strategy Sessions with civil servants
  • Interview preparation by former UPSC Board Members
  • Extra one year of online access after the batch ends

 

Classes are conducted in a combination of English and Malayalam. Interest-free instalment options are available.

 

One More Thing — Have You Checked the Scholarship Test?

Fortune IAS has guided the highest number of students into civil services through scholarship in Kerala. The 2026 Scholarship Test is on 24th May 2026. Meera K (AIR 6), Arya V M (AIR 36), Devi Nandana, IFS , Sandra Sunil  — among many others — joined Fortune through this programme. Financial constraints should never hold back a deserving aspirant.

 

So — Why May?

Because if UPSC 2027 is on your mind and you haven’t started yet, every month you wait is a month less to build the preparation you deserve.

May 2026 gives you 12 months — enough time to build a strong foundation, cover the full syllabus, revise multiple times, practise answer writing consistently, and walk into Prelims 2027 fully prepared.

Sreeja J S, Amal Kampiyil, Athidhi Krishnadev B, Asna Anwar — they all made the same choice. To take their first attempt seriously. To start with enough time. To walk into the exam room prepared, not hoping.

That choice is yours to make. And the time to make it is now.

 

📅  PCM Batch Begins: 20th May 2026

📝  Scholarship Test: 24th May 2026


👉  Visit:  www.fortuneias.com/pcm

👉  Book a free counselling session with our academic team

👉  Download the PCM Batch brochure or study material sample


📞  +91 94950 15888  |  +91 8138 940 888

📧  enquiries@fortuneias.com

 

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