UPSC Prelims 2026
Rapid CA Revision
Months of current affairs, re-summarised and regrouped into 40 daily swipe decks. About an hour a day to cover every high-priority event.
Start Today’s Mission — Day 3040 days · 1,200+ events · 14 domains
How this plan works
Everything you need to confidently conquer Current Affairs.
One clean collection
Months of daily current affairs, re-summarised and regrouped so you revise as one set instead of hunting through feeds.
Priority made clear
Every event marked Priority, Important, or Skim — you always know where to focus first.
Three depths per event
Overview for the what. Detailed for the why. Advanced links to NCERT and flags common traps.
Dedicated daily quiz
Each day has its own quiz section with UPSC-style MCQs you haven't seen during revise.
About an hour a day
40 days of focused revision — walk into Prelims having touched every area the exam tends to ask about.
Every MCQ format
How-many-correct, match-the-following, assertion-reason — the three formats UPSC actually uses.
Browse 40-Day Archive
swipe →Frequently Asked Questions
When is UPSC Prelims 2026?
UPSC Civil Services Prelims 2026 is scheduled for 24 May 2026.
How do I revise current affairs in the last 40 days before UPSC Prelims 2026?
Pick one curated daily deck, revise every event at three depths (overview, detailed, advanced), then take the day's quiz. PrepDose's 40-day rapid revision turns months of news into one daily collection that takes about an hour.
How many current affairs events are in the PrepDose revision plan?
Around 1,200 priority events distributed across 40 daily decks, covering 14 domains: Polity & Governance, Economy & Budget, International Relations, Environment & Climate, Science & Technology, Geography & Biodiversity, Judiciary, History & Culture, Defence, Reports & Indices, Health, Agriculture, International Reports, and Sports & Awards.
What does each revision day include?
Every day has an Overview page (domain mix, priority counts), a Revise deck (swipe through each event at three depths with NCERT connections and memory hooks), and a Quiz (UPSC-style MCQs across how-many-correct, match-the-following, and assertion-reason formats).
How is this different from a daily current affairs feed?
A daily feed gives one day at a time. This revision plan brings back months of current affairs, re-summarised and reorganised into one clean daily collection mixed across domains — so you revise as a single focused pass instead of hunting through past feeds.