SSC CHSL 205 Tier 1 exam is ongoing and it will last on 30th November 2025. As the exam is ongoing so most of you might have appeared in the exam, and some of you will appear as per your exam dates. Those who have taken the exam are strongly advised to start their preparation now. Don’t wait for the Tier 2 result and exam dates. The difficulty level of the Tier 2 exam will be much higher than the Tier 1 exam. You can expect the conduct of Tier 2 exam in January/ February 2025. So you can say that you have only 2-3 months to prepare for this exam. Many of you might be confused about how to start preparing for SSC CHSL 2025 Tier 2. So, don’t worry, we are here for you, and we will provide you with the guidance to start your preparation systematically. Before it, if you take a mock test, then it will be good for you because you will get an idea about the SSC CHSL Tier 2 exam. Below, we have provided a direct link for a free mock test.
Get Familiar with the Syllabus and Exam Pattern
This is the most important first step. Many candidates think Tier 2 is just a “harder Tier 1.” This is not true. The pattern is completely different. If you start preparing without understanding this new pattern, you might be wasting your time. So, before starting your preparation for the Tier 2 exam, we suggest you to first understand the syllabus and exam pattern.
Session 1 (The Main Exam – 2 Hours 15 Minutes)
This session is where all your marks come from. It is divided into three sections.
| Section | Subjects | No. of Questions | Total Marks | Time |
| Section 1 | 1. Maths 2. Reasoning | 30 30 | 60 Qs x 3 Marks = 180 | 1 Hour |
| Section 2 | 1. English 2. General Awareness | 40 20 | 60 Qs x 3 Marks = 180 | 1 Hour |
| Section 3 | Computer Knowledge | 15 | 15 Qs x 3 Marks = 45 | 15 Mins |
Note:
- Your Rank Comes From 360 Marks: Your final merit list (your rank and your job) will be made only from the marks of Section 1 (Maths + Reasoning) and Section 2 (English + GA). (Total = 180 + 180 = 360 Marks).
- Computer Knowledge Section is Mandatory to Pass: Section 3 (Computers) is qualifying in nature. This means you must pass this section. If you fail in Computers, you will fail the whole exam, even if you score 350/360 in the other sections. Its marks are not added to your final rank.
- Negative Marking: There will be a negative marking of 1 mark for every wrong answer in Sections 1, 2, and 3.
Session 2 (The Skill Test – On the same day)
Right after Session 1, you will have to give this test. This is also a qualifying test. If you fail this, you fail the whole exam.
- For LDC/JSA: This is a Typing Test. You need to have a typing speed of 35 words per minute (w.p.m.) in English or 30 w.p.m. in Hindi.
- For DEO (Data Entry Operator): This is a Skill Test for data entry speed.
You are strongly advised not to ignore the Computer and Typing tests. Start practicing for 30 minutes every single day from Day 1.
Create a Study Plan for Systematic Preparation
After knowing the syllabus and pattern, your second step is to make a plan. Many candidates fail because they study randomly. One day, they study Maths for 6 hours, and then they don’t touch it for a week. A regular revision, practice, and preparation is important systematically. To avoid this, you must create a study plan. A good plan will make sure you cover the whole syllabus, have time for practice, and have time for revision.
SSC CHSL Tier 2 Study Plan – Will Be Updated Soon
Choose the Best Study Materials
This is where most aspirants make mistakes. They buy 10 different books for one subject and end up completing none. You do not need a library to pass this exam. For Tier 2, you have to just choose the best books, and the strategy should change. Your Tier 1 books are good for basics, but now you need to practice high-level questions. Below, we have mentioned some good books that you can choose:
| Section | Recommended Book(s) |
| Mathematics | Quantitative Aptitude by R.S. Aggarwal OR Play with Advanced Maths by Abhinay Sharma. (And a Tier 2 PYQ Book) |
| Reasoning | A Modern Approach to Verbal & Non-Verbal Reasoning by R.S. Aggarwal OR any Tier 2 PYQ Book (practice is key) |
| English | Plinth to Paramount (Vol 1) by Neetu Singh (for grammar) + Word Power Made Easy (for vocab) + Daily Newspaper Reading (for comprehension) |
| General Awareness | Lucent’s General Knowledge (for static GK) + PracticeMock’s free Weekly Current Affairs Quizzes |
| Computers (Qualifying) | Lucent’s Computer OR any basic computer awareness book. (Don’t overdo it, just clear the basics.) |
Build Your Foundation (Subject-wise for Tier 2)
If we talk about sections and topics, then you will see that mostly they are the same from Tier 1, except for computer knowledge. But there is a difference in only the difficulty level. You cannot build a strong building on a weak foundation. Your preparation needs to be deeper for Tier 2. Below, we have mentioned some section-wise tips after an in-depth analysis of the exams.
- For Mathematics: In Tier 1, speed was everything. In Tier 2, concepts are everything. Questions will be tougher. You will also see new topics like Statistics and Probability. You must study these new topics first, as they are very scoring.
- For Reasoning: The questions will be longer. You will see more “Statement-Assumption” or “Course of Action” questions. Practice complex puzzles and series. Your Tier 1 tricks are good, but now you need a calm mind to read and understand the big questions.
- For English (The Game Changer): Look at the pattern again. English has 40 questions—more than any other subject! This section will decide your rank. Do not just rely on grammar rules. You must practice:
- Reading Comprehension (Passages)
- Cloze Test (Fill in the blanks in a passage)
- Para Jumbles (Rearranging sentences)
- How to improve? Read a newspaper editorial for 30 minutes every single day.
- For General Awareness: This is similar to Tier 1, but the questions might be deeper. Don’t just read headlines. Understand the “why” behind the news. Keep your focus on Current Affairs from the last 6 months.
- For Typing/Skill Test: I will say it again: Practice this for 30 minutes every day. Use free software like “TypingMaster” or online websites to build your speed and accuracy.
Create a Daily Routine (Timetable)
A study plan tells you what to study. A daily timetable tells you when to study. A 6-hour plan that you follow every day is 100 times better than a 14-hour plan that you quit after two days. Below, we have provided a detailed daily routine or timetable for full-time and working professionals.
For Full-Time Students (7–8 Hours Study)
| Time | Study Focus |
| 7:00 AM – 8:00 AM | Current Affairs + Newspaper Reading |
| 8:00 AM – 8:30 AM | Typing Practice |
| 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM | Mathematics (Concepts + Practice) |
| 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM | Reasoning (PYQ Practice) |
| 3:00 PM – 4:30 PM | English (Grammar + Vocab + Reading) |
| 4:30 PM – 5:30 PM | General Awareness (Static GK) |
| 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM | Computer Basics (3 days a week) / Revision |
For Working Professionals (3–4 Hours Study)
| Time | Study Focus |
| 6:00 AM – 7:30 AM | Maths OR Reasoning (alternate days) |
| 7:30 AM – 8:00 AM | Current Affairs / Newspaper |
| 7:00 PM – 7:30 PM | Typing Practice |
| 7:30 PM – 8:30 PM | English OR General Awareness (alternate days) |
| 9:00 PM – 10:00 PM | Revision / Weak Topics |
Solve Previous Year Question Papers and Analyze
After you have covered 50-60% of the syllabus, start solving previous year question papers. This will show you the real level of the exam and the most important topics. Don’t just solve them. Analyze them carefully and check “Why did I get this question wrong?” (Silly mistake? Concept problem?), “Why did I get this question right?” (Did I guess? Or did I know the method?), “Why did this question take so much time?”, and so on. This analysis will make your preparation more focused.
Attempt Mock Tests Regularly and Analyze Them
This is the final and most important step. Mock tests are like a mirror. They show you the truth about your preparation.
- You must attempt a full-length Tier 2 mock test at least once a week.
- A mock test teaches you time management. How to move from Maths to Reasoning? How much time to give English? You will only learn this in a mock test.
- Analyze your mock test for at least 2 hours. A mock test is not just about the score. It is a “doctor’s report” that tells you your weak areas.
- Your goal: For the next 3 days, work only on the weak topics you found in your mock test.
This cycle of Learn -> Practice -> Mock Test -> Analyze -> Improve is the only secret to success.
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| Other Related Article SSC CHSL | |
| SSC CHSL Notification | SSC CHSL Study Plan |
| SSC CHSL Previous Year Question Paper | SSC CHSL Salary |
| SSC CHSL Cut Off | SSC CHSL Selection Process |
| SSC CHSL Syllabus | |
FAQs: How to Start Your Preparation for SSC CHSL 2025 Tier 2 Exam?
Start by understanding the new, detailed exam pattern for Tier 2. Then, make a study plan that includes all subjects, plus daily computer and typing practice.
If you have prepared well for Tier 1, you will get around 2-3 months after Tier 1. With a consistent 6-7 hours of daily study, you can cover the entire syllabus and practice well.
The exam is of 2 hours 15 minutes and carries 360 marks (excluding the qualifying Computer section).
Yes, there is a negative marking of 1 mark for every wrong answer in Sections 1, 2, and 3.
If you study consistently for 2–3 months with a proper plan and practice mock tests, you can easily complete your preparation.
- Sign Up on Practicemock for Updated Current Affairs, Topic Tests and Mini Mocks
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