Q1. How should I use UPSC PYQs for Prelims prep?
Start by solving year-wise PYQs to understand question style and recurring topics. Note the themes that repeat, revise those subjects, and then re-attempt PYQs as self-tests.
Q2. How many years of PYQs should I solve?
Focus on at least the last 10 years in detail. For trend spotting, you can look at 15–20 years, but for in-depth practice the recent 8–10 years matter most.
Q3. When should I use PYQs versus mock tests?
Begin with PYQs to understand UPSC’s language and priorities. Once you’re comfortable, shift to test series for speed and exam temperament. In the final months, cycle back to PYQs for focused revision.
Q4. How often should I re-attempt PYQs?
After covering a good number of PYQs, keep revisiting the topics where you made mistakes or felt unsure every 2–3 weeks. In the weeks before Prelims, re-attempt a selected set of important PYQs in exam conditions for final practice.
Q5. Should I only solve PYQs from Books or PDFs, or in exam-like conditions?
Do both. First solve them untimed to understand logic, then re-solve a curated set in exam-like timed conditions to practice accuracy and speed.
Q6. Can PYQs replace test series?
No. PYQs align you with UPSC’s mindset, but test series build exam stamina, time management, and coverage of new areas. Both are needed.
Q7. How can I record learnings from PYQs effectively?
Maintain a short notebook or spreadsheet where you note the question, correct answer logic, source, and recurring tags. This makes revision faster and topic-wise.
Q8. Where can I get structured help to use PYQs effectively?
Guided mentorship shows you how to prioritise, analyse, and integrate PYQs into your preparation. Explore the UPSC PYQ Mentorship Program at Kalam IAS.