Important Topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 – Subject-Wise Complete Guide

Important Topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 – Subject-Wise Complete Guide | Legacy IAS Bangalore

Important Topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 — Complete Subject-Wise Guide with High-Weightage Areas

The most authoritative subject-wise breakdown of important topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 — History, Geography, Polity, Economy, Environment, Science & Technology, and CSAT. Based on PYQ analysis and curated by Legacy IAS faculty, Bangalore.

⚡ Quick Summary
UPSC Prelims 2026 GS Paper 1 has 7 subject areas. By weightage priority: Environment & Ecology (12–15 Qs) = Polity (12–15 Qs) > History (10–12 Qs) = Economy (10–12 Qs) > Geography (8–10 Qs) = Science & Technology (8–10 Qs) > Current Affairs (integrated, 8–12 Qs). CSAT requires 33% to qualify — do not neglect it. Every subject has evolved to test conceptual application + current affairs integration, not just fact recall.

UPSC Prelims 2026 — Subject-Wise Weightage at a Glance

The UPSC Prelims GS Paper 1 has 100 questions worth 200 marks. Understanding where those questions come from — and how that distribution has evolved — is the first step to intelligent preparation. Here is the data-driven weightage based on PYQ analysis from 2013 to 2025:

Environment & Ecology 12–15 questions
Indian Polity & Governance 12–15 questions
History & Art & Culture 10–12 questions
Economy & Schemes 10–12 questions
Geography 8–10 questions
Science & Technology 8–10 questions
Current Affairs (integrated) 8–12 questions
100
GS Paper 1 Questions
200
Total Marks GS P1
7
Subject Areas
33%
CSAT Qualifying Marks

🏛️
Subject 1 · 10–12 Questions
History, Art & Culture
~11
Avg. Questions

History questions in UPSC Prelims are increasingly analytical, map-based, and linked with Art & Culture and current affairs. Rote memorisation is insufficient — UPSC tests conceptual and contextual understanding.

A. Ancient History — High-Priority Topics

Indus Valley Civilization Buddhism & Jainism Mauryan Empire & Ashoka Gupta Period (Golden Age) Vedic Period & Mahajanapadas Sangam Age Rock-cut Architecture

B. Medieval History — Key Themes

Bhakti & Sufi Movements Mughal Administration & Architecture Temple Architecture Styles (Nagara, Dravida, Vesara) Delhi Sultanate Vijayanagara Kingdom Mansabdari & Revenue Systems

C. Modern History — Highest Priority

Indian National Movement (1885–1947) Gandhian Movements (NCM, CDM, QIM) Revolt of 1857 Socio-Religious Reform Movements Constitutional Developments (1773–1947) Advent of Europeans & Colonial Policies Subhas Chandra Bose & INA

D. Art & Culture — Do Not Skip

UNESCO World Heritage Sites in India Temple Architecture (Stupa, Rock-cut, Medieval) Classical Dances & Music Traditions Indian Paintings (Ajanta, Mughal, Rajput) Indo-Islamic Architecture GI Tags & Cultural Festivals (current)
📌 Legacy IAS Tip: Art & Culture alone contributes 3–5 questions every year and is often neglected. Cover Nitin Singhania’s book and link every heritage site that appears in news to its historical and architectural context.
🌍
Subject 2 · 8–10 Questions
Geography — Physical & Indian
~9
Avg. Questions

Geography questions are increasingly map-based, current affairs-linked (disasters, climate events, new projects), and concept-heavy. Indian Geography consistently gets more questions than World/Physical Geography.

A. Physical Geography — Concept Builders

Plate Tectonics & Continental Drift Earthquakes & Volcanoes Climatology — Monsoon Mechanism El Niño & La Niña Ocean Currents (Warm & Cold) Atmospheric Structure & Pressure Belts Rock Types & Rock Cycle

B. Indian Geography — Highest Priority

Indian Rivers & Their Tributaries Soils of India (Alluvial, Black, Laterite) Himalayan Divisions & Mountain Passes Agriculture — Cropping Seasons & Major Crops Mineral Resources & Distribution Physiography of India Major Dams & Reservoirs Coastal Plains & Islands

C. Human Geography

Demographic Transition Model Migration & Urbanization Industrial Corridors & SEZs Major Ports & Transport Routes
📌 Legacy IAS Tip: Always link Geography to current affairs — new National Waterways, river interlinking projects, disaster-prone regions in news (cyclones, floods), and newly designated Ramsar sites are frequently asked.
⚖️
Subject 3 · 12–15 Questions
Indian Polity & Governance
~13
Avg. Questions

Indian Polity is one of the most scoring subjects because the source is fixed — the Constitution. Questions are largely statement-based and conceptual, directly drawn from constitutional provisions, amendments, and governance structures.

A. Constitution — Foundation Topics

Fundamental Rights (Articles 12–35) Directive Principles of State Policy Fundamental Duties Constitutional Amendments (42nd, 44th, 73rd, 74th, 101st) Basic Structure Doctrine Schedules of the Constitution Sources of the Indian Constitution

B. Parliament — Very High Priority

Types of Bills — Money Bill, Constitutional Amendment Bill Parliamentary Procedures — Question Hour, Zero Hour Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) Parliamentary Committees Joint Sitting Budget Process & Financial Bills

C. Union Executive & Judiciary

President — Powers & Veto Types Collegium System & Judicial Appointments Writs — Habeas Corpus, Mandamus, Certiorari Prime Minister — Powers & Functions Judicial Review & PIL

D. Constitutional & Non-Constitutional Bodies

Election Commission of India CAG — Powers & Functions Finance Commission UPSC — Role & Provisions Lokpal & Lokayukta NITI Aayog vs Planning Commission NHRC, CVC, CIC

E. Federalism, Emergency & Local Bodies

Seventh Schedule — Union, State, Concurrent Lists Emergency Provisions (National, State, Financial) 73rd & 74th Amendments — Local Governance GST Council Inter-State Council RTI Act & E-Governance
📌 Legacy IAS Tip: Read M. Laxmikant’s Indian Polity cover to cover. For every constitutional body, know its composition, appointment process, removal process, and key powers. Landmark Supreme Court judgments (Kesavananda Bharati, Minerva Mills) are increasingly tested.
📈
Subject 4 · 10–12 Questions
Economy & Economic Development
~11
Avg. Questions

Economy questions in Prelims are increasingly conceptual, application-based, and linked with current economic developments — Union Budget, RBI monetary policy, and global economic trends. Static concepts must be linked with real-world events.

A. Basic Economic Concepts

GDP, GNP, NDP — Differences & Calculation Inflation — CPI vs WPI, Core Inflation, Stagflation Fiscal Deficit, Revenue Deficit, Primary Deficit Types of Unemployment Balance of Payments — Current & Capital Account Real vs Nominal GDP & GDP Deflator

B. Banking & Monetary Policy — Very High Priority

RBI Functions & Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) Repo Rate, Reverse Repo, MSF, Bank Rate CRR & SLR Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) & Basel Norms Open Market Operations (OMO) Digital Currency (CBDC) Financial Inclusion Initiatives

C. Fiscal Policy & Union Budget

Union Budget Structure Consolidated Fund, Contingency Fund, Public Account GST — Structure & GST Council FRBM Act Direct vs Indirect Taxes Government Subsidies — Food, Fertilizer, Fuel

D. External Sector & International Institutions

IMF Functions & SDR World Bank Group Institutions WTO Structure & Agreements FDI & FII Differences Exchange Rate Systems

E. Agriculture & Inclusive Growth

MSP Mechanism & Food Security Government Schemes — PM-KISAN, MGNREGS, PM Awas Crop Insurance Schemes SHGs & Microfinance Agricultural Credit & NABARD
🌿
Subject 5 · 12–15 Questions · HIGHEST PRIORITY
Environment & Ecology
~13
Avg. Questions

Environment and Ecology has emerged as the joint highest-weightage subject in UPSC Prelims — rivalling Polity. Questions are a mix of conceptual ecology, biodiversity conservation, climate change conventions, and current environmental news. This is the one subject where current affairs and static knowledge blend most intensely.

A. Ecology Basics — Core Concepts

Ecosystem Components & Functions Food Chains, Food Webs & Ecological Pyramids Biodiversity — Genetic, Species, Ecosystem Levels Biomes of the World Keystone & Flagship Species Ecological Succession & Ecotone

B. Biodiversity & Conservation — Very High Priority

Biodiversity Hotspots IUCN Red List Categories Biosphere Reserves — UNESCO MAB National Parks, Wildlife Sanctuaries & Tiger Reserves Project Tiger, Project Cheetah, Project Elephant In-situ vs Ex-situ Conservation Wildlife Corridors Ramsar Sites in India

C. Climate Change & International Conventions

Paris Agreement & NDCs UNFCCC & COP Meetings Greenhouse Gases & Global Warming Potential REDD+ Mechanism Kyoto Protocol Carbon Trading & Carbon Sequestration IPCC Reports

D. Environmental Laws in India

Environment Protection Act 1986 Wildlife Protection Act 1972 National Green Tribunal (NGT) Forest Conservation Act Biological Diversity Act Forest Rights Act 2006

E. Environmental Pollution

Air Pollutants — Primary & Secondary Eutrophication & Water Pollution Plastic Pollution & Solid Waste Management Noise Pollution Standards
📌 Legacy IAS Tip: Use Shankar IAS Environment book as the primary reference. Follow environment-related news daily — new Ramsar sites, newly designated National Parks, COP decisions, and conservation project updates are guaranteed Prelims questions within a year of their announcement.
🔬
Subject 6 · 8–10 Questions
Science & Technology
~9
Avg. Questions

Science & Technology questions in UPSC Prelims are almost entirely application-based and current affairs-linked. Static theory alone is insufficient — every S&T topic must be connected to recent developments, government missions, and policy applications.

A. Space Technology

ISRO Missions — Chandrayaan, Gaganyaan, Aditya-L1 PSLV vs GSLV Differences Satellite Types & Applications NavIC Navigation System Cryogenic Engine Technology International Space Programs (NASA, ESA)

B. Biotechnology

CRISPR-Cas9 Technology mRNA Vaccines & Vaccine Technologies GM Crops & Biofortification Recombinant DNA Technology Stem Cells — Types & Applications

C. Information Technology & Emerging Tech

Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning Blockchain Technology Quantum Computing 5G Technology & Applications Cybersecurity — Key Concepts Nanotechnology Applications

D. Defence & Nuclear Technology

Nuclear Fission vs Fusion Types of Nuclear Reactors Ballistic & Hypersonic Missiles DRDO & Defence Research Organisations

E. Energy & Health

Hydrogen Fuel — Green, Blue, Grey Renewable Energy Technologies Robotics & Automation
📌 Legacy IAS Tip: For S&T, your primary source is current affairs. Read about every major ISRO launch, every new technology policy, every health-tech development reported in the news. Static textbook reading alone will not score marks in this section.
🧠
GS Paper 2 · Qualifying · 33% Required
CSAT — Civil Services Aptitude Test
66.66
Qualifying Marks

CSAT is qualifying — you need only 33% (66.66 out of 200 marks) to be eligible. However, do not underestimate it. Every year, thousands of well-prepared candidates fail CSAT due to neglect. A CSAT failure eliminates you from Prelims entirely — regardless of your GS score.

A. Reading Comprehension — Highest Weightage in CSAT

Central Idea Identification Tone & Inference-Based Questions Fact vs Opinion Distinction Logical Conclusions from Passage Author’s Perspective Analysis Statement Strengthening & Weakening Assumption-Based Questions

B. Logical Reasoning & Analytical Ability

Syllogism Statement & Conclusion Seating Arrangement (Linear & Circular) Blood Relations Coding-Decoding Direction Sense Data Sufficiency Cause & Effect

C. Basic Numeracy (Class X Level)

Percentages Time & Work Time, Speed & Distance Ratio & Proportion Simple & Compound Interest Profit & Loss Probability & Permutation-Combination

D. Data Interpretation

Bar Graphs & Pie Charts Line Graphs & Tables Caselets
🚫 Warning: CSAT is not optional. Candidates who fail CSAT (<67 marks) are eliminated from Prelims regardless of their GS Paper 1 score — even if they scored 130+ in GS. Solve at least 3–4 previous year CSAT papers under timed conditions to ensure you are safe.

Smart Preparation Strategy for UPSC Prelims 2026

📚
Prioritise by Weightage
Start with Environment + Polity (joint highest, ~25–30 questions combined). Then History + Economy. Geography and S&T last. Never start with low-weightage topics.
📰
Daily Current Affairs
Read The Hindu or Indian Express daily for 45 minutes. Every month, revise a current affairs consolidation. Link every news event to the static subject it belongs to.
📝
PYQ-First Approach
After completing each topic, solve all PYQs from that topic across 25 years. PYQs are the best guide to what UPSC actually tests and how it tests it.
🔄
Regular Revision Cycles
Complete each subject once in depth, then revise 3–4 times using shorter notes. The final 2 months should be 80% revision and 20% new learning.
⏱️
Timed Mock Tests
Solve one full previous year paper (GS + CSAT) every 2 weeks in the final 3 months. Analyse every mistake — do not just check the score.
🧩
Integrate Across Subjects
UPSC integrates subjects in questions — an Environment question may test Geography + Science + current affairs simultaneously. Study connections, not subjects in isolation.
SubjectPrimary SourceSupplementary
History & Art/CultureNCERTs (Old) — Class 6–12 + Nitin Singhania (Art & Culture)Tamil Nadu State Board History, Bipin Chandra (Modern India)
GeographyNCERTs — Class 11–12 Physical & Human Geography + Certificate Physical & Human Geography (G.C. Leong)NCERT India Physical Environment
Indian PolityM. Laxmikant — Indian Polity (all editions)Constitution bare text, Landmark SC Judgments
EconomyRamesh Singh — Indian Economy + NCERT Class 11–12 EconomicsEconomic Survey, Union Budget documents
EnvironmentShankar IAS Environment bookNCERT Biology (Class 12 — Ecology chapter), MoEFCC reports
Science & TechnologyCurrent affairs — daily newspaper S&T coverageNCERT Science (Class 9–10), PIB Science releases
CSATPrevious year CSAT papers (last 10 years)RS Aggarwal Verbal & Non-Verbal Reasoning

Important Topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 — Top 10 FAQs

The most searched questions about UPSC Prelims 2026 topics and preparation strategy. Tap any question to expand.

The most important topics for UPSC Prelims 2026 in GS Paper 1 by priority:

Highest (12–15 questions each): Environment & Ecology — biodiversity, conservation, climate agreements, Environmental Laws; Indian Polity — Fundamental Rights, Parliament, Constitutional Bodies, Emergency Provisions

High (10–12 questions each): History — Modern Indian History, Art & Culture, Revolt of 1857, Socio-Religious Reforms; Economy — RBI & Monetary Policy, Budget, GST, MSP

Moderate (8–10 questions each): Geography — Indian rivers, soils, agriculture; Science & Technology — ISRO, CRISPR, AI, Blockchain
Environment & Ecology and Indian Polity are jointly the highest-weightage subjects, each contributing 12–15 questions out of 100 in GS Paper 1. Together they account for approximately 25–30 questions — more than a quarter of the entire paper.

This is why any serious UPSC aspirant must master these two subjects first. A candidate who scores well in both Environment and Polity is already positioned significantly above the expected cutoff of 95–110 marks.
The most important History topics for UPSC Prelims 2026:

Modern History (Highest Priority): Indian National Movement, Gandhian Movements (NCM, CDM, Quit India), Revolt of 1857, Socio-Religious Reform Movements, Constitutional Acts and Developments

Ancient History: Indus Valley Civilization, Buddhism and Jainism (teachings, councils, spread), Mauryan Empire and Ashokan edicts, Gupta Period

Art & Culture (Do Not Skip): UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Temple Architecture styles (Nagara, Dravida, Vesara), Classical Dances, Indian Paintings, GI Tags in news

Art & Culture alone contributes 3–5 questions annually and is consistently underestimated by aspirants.
The highest-priority Polity topics for UPSC Prelims 2026:

Fundamental Rights — Articles 12–35, writs (Habeas Corpus, Mandamus, Certiorari, Prohibition, Quo Warranto)
Parliament — types of bills, procedures, anti-defection law, joint sitting, parliamentary committees
Directive Principles of State Policy and relationship with Fundamental Rights
Constitutional Bodies — Election Commission, CAG, Finance Commission, UPSC, SC/ST Commissions
Constitutional Amendments — 42nd, 44th, 73rd, 74th, 86th, 101st
Emergency Provisions — National, State, Financial Emergency
Federalism — Seventh Schedule, Centre-State relations, GST Council
Landmark Judgments — Basic Structure, Kesavananda Bharati, Minerva Mills
Environment and Ecology typically contributes 12–15 questions in UPSC Prelims GS Paper 1 — making it the joint highest-weightage subject along with Polity.

Key high-frequency areas within Environment:
✔ Biodiversity — hotspots, IUCN categories, keystone species, biosphere reserves
✔ Conservation projects — Project Tiger, Project Cheetah, newly designated Ramsar sites
✔ Climate Change — Paris Agreement, UNFCCC, COP decisions, REDD+
✔ Environmental Laws — EPA 1986, Wildlife Protection Act, NGT
✔ Pollution — types, sources, international agreements on pollution control
Important Economy topics for UPSC Prelims 2026:

Monetary Policy (Very High Priority): RBI functions, Monetary Policy Committee, Repo Rate, Reverse Repo, CRR, SLR, OMO, inflation targeting, NPAs, Basel norms

Basic Concepts: GDP vs GNP vs NDP, CPI vs WPI, types of deficits, types of unemployment

Fiscal Policy: Budget structure, Consolidated Fund, GST and GST Council, FRBM Act

External Sector: IMF, World Bank, WTO, FDI, Balance of Payments, SDR

Agriculture & Schemes: MSP mechanism, PM-KISAN, MGNREGS, crop insurance, food security
Important Geography topics for UPSC Prelims 2026:

Indian Geography (Highest Priority): Major rivers and tributaries, Himalayan divisions, soils of India (alluvial, black, laterite, red), agriculture — Kharif/Rabi/Zaid crops and major producing states, mineral resources distribution, important dams and reservoirs

Physical Geography: Plate tectonics and continental drift, earthquake and volcano distribution, Indian monsoon mechanism, El Niño and La Niña, ocean currents, atmospheric structure

Map-Based Questions: Regularly link rivers, national parks, important locations in news to maps — UPSC increasingly asks location-identification type questions.
CSAT requires only 33% (66.66 out of 200 marks) to qualify — which sounds easy, but is not as effortless as it appears.

Candidates who struggle with CSAT typically face issues with:
✘ Long, analytical reading comprehension passages
✘ Multi-step logical reasoning questions under time pressure
✘ Basic numeracy calculations (time and work, percentage, interest)

Strategy: Solve at least 5–6 previous year CSAT papers under strict timed conditions. Focus maximum time on Reading Comprehension (highest weightage) and Logical Reasoning. Basic Numeracy at Class 10 level is sufficient — do not over-invest here.

A CSAT failure eliminates you regardless of GS score. Never leave CSAT to chance.
Science and Technology in UPSC Prelims is almost entirely current affairs-driven. Static textbook S&T knowledge alone will not work.

Key focus areas:
✔ Space Technology — every major ISRO mission (Gaganyaan, Chandrayaan updates), PSLV vs GSLV differences, satellite applications
✔ Biotechnology — CRISPR-Cas9, mRNA vaccines, GM crops, biofortification
✔ Emerging Tech — AI/ML applications, Blockchain, Quantum computing, 5G
✔ Defence — new missile types, nuclear reactor technologies
✔ Health Tech — new vaccine technologies, nanotechnology

Best sources: PIB (Press Information Bureau) S&T releases, Science Reporters section in The Hindu, and monthly current affairs magazines’ technology sections.
Legacy IAS in Bangalore offers comprehensive, expert-led coaching for UPSC Prelims 2026 covering all subjects in GS Paper 1 and CSAT. Our preparation approach is built on:

PYQ-centred teaching — every topic taught through the lens of how UPSC has actually tested it
Current affairs integration — daily current affairs woven into static subject teaching
Regular mock tests — timed, analysed, and discussed with faculty
Personalised mentoring — weak area identification and targeted study plans

Start with our free UPSC Readiness Test to assess your current preparation level and receive a personalised study plan.

Start Your UPSC Prelims 2026 Preparation with Legacy IAS, Bangalore

Structured coaching, PYQ-centred teaching, current affairs integration, and personalised mentoring — all from Bangalore’s most trusted UPSC institute.

Enquire Now at Legacy IAS Take the Free UPSC Readiness Test →

Book a Free Demo Class

May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
Categories

Get free Counselling and ₹25,000 Discount

Fill the form – Our experts will call you within 30 mins.