SSC MTS 2026 Complete Guide

SSC MTS 2026: Complete Guide — Notification, Eligibility, Exam Pattern, Salary and Preparation Strategy

If you have passed Class 10 and want a permanent central government job with a monthly salary, job security, pension, free medical benefits, and a structured career path — SSC MTS 2026 is one of the most important opportunities available to you this year. The Staff Selection Commission (SSC) has officially released the SSC MTS 2026 Notification on June 30, 2026, opening applications for Multi-Tasking Staff (Non-Technical) and Havaldar posts across central government departments all over India. The application window is open until July 31, 2026, and the Computer Based Examination (CBE) is scheduled between September and November 2026.

SSC MTS is one of the few central government recruitment exams in India that requires only a Class 10 pass certificate — no degree, no diploma, no age bar beyond the standard 18–27 years. And yet, it offers everything that lakhs of aspirants look for in a government career: a permanent central government job, a monthly in-hand salary of Rs. 27,000 to Rs. 34,000 depending on city of posting, free railway travel benefits, medical facilities for the entire family, and a clear promotion path that can eventually take you from MTS to a gazetted level officer over a career spanning 25–30 years.

In the last recruitment cycle, SSC announced 7,948 vacancies — 6,810 for MTS posts and 1,138 for Havaldar (CBIC & CBN). The 2026 vacancy count will be officially announced with the notification on June 30, but based on historical trends and departmental manpower requirements, a similar or higher count is expected. This complete guide covers everything you need to know — from eligibility and important dates to exam pattern, syllabus, salary breakdown, Havaldar PET/PST physical standards, previous year cut-offs, and a month-by-month preparation strategy to clear SSC MTS 2026 in your very first attempt.


What is SSC MTS? Overview

SSC MTS stands for Staff Selection Commission Multi-Tasking Staff (Non-Technical) Examination. It is conducted by the Staff Selection Commission — the central government body that recruits personnel for various Group B and Group C posts under the Government of India.

ParameterDetails
Full FormStaff Selection Commission — Multi-Tasking Staff (Non-Technical)
Conducting BodyStaff Selection Commission (SSC)
Post TypeGroup C — Non-Gazetted, Non-Ministerial
Posts RecruitedMulti-Tasking Staff (MTS) + Havaldar (CBIC & CBN)
Minimum QualificationClass 10 Pass (Matriculation)
Age Limit18 to 27 years (relaxation for reserved categories)
Pay LevelLevel 1 (7th CPC) — Basic Pay Rs. 18,000
Exam ModeComputer Based Examination (CBE)
Official Websitessc.gov.in

MTS recruits are posted across central government ministries, departments, and offices all over India — Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Home Affairs, Ministry of Defence, Railways Board, various PSUs attached to central ministries, and more. The Havaldar posts are specifically under the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) and the Central Bureau of Narcotics (CBN) — both under the Ministry of Finance.

MTS vs Havaldar — What Is the Difference?

FactorMTS (Multi-Tasking Staff)Havaldar (CBIC & CBN)
PostingVarious central government departmentsCBIC and CBN offices only
Work NatureClerical support, office maintenance, peon, dispatch, record keepingWatch and ward duties, custodial work, escorting goods
Physical TestNot requiredPET/PST mandatory after CBE
Age Limit18–25 or 18–27 (post-wise)18–25 years
Pay LevelLevel 1 (Rs. 18,000 basic)Level 1 (Rs. 18,000 basic)
UniformNoYes — uniform provided
Promotion PathLDC → UDC → Assistant → Section OfficerHavaldar → Head Havaldar → Inspector (customs/narcotics)
Additional AllowancesStandard central govt allowancesUniform allowance + risk allowance (specific to department)

SSC MTS 2026: Important Dates

EventDate
Official Notification ReleasedJune 30, 2026
Online Application OpensJune 30, 2026
Last Date to Apply OnlineJuly 31, 2026
Application Fee Payment DeadlineJuly 31, 2026
Application Correction WindowFirst week of August 2026 (expected)
Admit Card / Hall Ticket Release2–3 weeks before CBE (August–September 2026)
CBE (Computer Based Examination)September to November 2026
CBE Result DeclarationDecember 2026 – January 2027 (expected)
Havaldar PET/PSTAfter CBE result — February–March 2027 (expected)
Document VerificationAfter PET/PST or final merit
Final Result and Appointment2027

🚨 Critical Deadline: The application closes on July 31, 2026. Do not wait for the last day — SSC portals experience heavy traffic near deadlines and technical issues are common. Apply within the first week of July.


SSC MTS 2026: Eligibility Criteria

Educational Qualification

PostMinimum Qualification
MTS (Multi-Tasking Staff)Matriculation (Class 10) pass from a recognised board
Havaldar (CBIC & CBN)Matriculation (Class 10) pass from a recognised board

Any recognised board is acceptable — CBSE, ICSE, all state boards (Gujarat Board / GSEB, UP Board, Maharashtra Board, Rajasthan Board, etc.), NIOS, and open school certificates. There is no minimum percentage requirement. A simple pass in Class 10 is sufficient.

Important: Candidates who are appearing in Class 10 exams in 2026 are not eligible to apply. You must have your Class 10 pass certificate in hand at the time of document verification.

Age Limit (As on January 1, 2026)

PostAge GroupAge Limit
MTSGroup A18 to 25 years
MTSGroup B18 to 27 years
Havaldar (CBIC & CBN)18 to 25 years

Age relaxation for reserved categories:

CategoryAge RelaxationEffective Upper Age (MTS Group A)
OBC (Non-Creamy Layer)+3 years28 years
SC / ST+5 years30 years
PwBD (General)+10 years35 years
PwBD (OBC)+13 years38 years
PwBD (SC/ST)+15 years40 years
Ex-ServicemenReduction of military service + 3 yearsAs per guidelines
J&K Domicile (1980–89)+5 years30 years

Note: Age is calculated as on January 1, 2026 for SSC MTS 2026. Verify your exact date of birth calculation against this cut-off date in the official notification.

Nationality

Candidates must be citizens of India, subjects of Nepal or Bhutan, Tibetan refugees settled in India before January 1, 1962, or persons of Indian origin from specified countries who have obtained eligibility certificates from the Government of India.


SSC MTS 2026: Vacancies

The official vacancy count for 2026 will be released with the notification on June 30, 2026. Based on the previous cycle and departmental requirements:

Previous Year Vacancy Trend

YearMTS VacanciesHavaldar VacanciesTotal
20205,8956676,562
20217,3015557,856
202210,8801,19812,078
20238,3261,0109,336
2024–256,8101,1387,948
2026 (Expected)7,000 – 9,0001,000 – 1,200~8,000 – 10,000

MTS 2024–25 Vacancy Breakdown by Age Group:

Age CategoryVacancies
MTS (Age group 18–25)6,078
MTS (Age group 18–27)732
Havaldar (CBIC)Majority of 1,138
Havaldar (CBN)Minority of 1,138

The post preference and department preference system means candidates who score higher in the CBE can choose preferred departments during document verification. Popular department choices among MTS candidates include Ministry of Finance offices, Income Tax departments, and Ministry of Home Affairs postings in metro cities.


SSC MTS 2026: Application Process (Step by Step)

Step 1: Register on SSC OTR Portal

Before applying, all candidates must complete One Time Registration (OTR) on the SSC official portal at ssc.gov.in. If you have previously registered for any SSC exam (CGL, CHSL, GD), your OTR is already active — do not re-register.

Step 2: Fill the Application Form

Information RequiredDetails
Personal detailsName, Date of Birth, Father/Mother name, Gender, Category
Educational detailsBoard name, passing year, percentage/grade
Contact informationMobile number, email ID (active — all notifications sent here)
Identity documentAadhaar / PAN / Voter ID / Passport — one mandatory
Post preferenceMTS, Havaldar (CBIC), Havaldar (CBN) — rank your preference
Exam centre preferenceUp to 3 cities — choose carefully, changes rarely permitted
Photo uploadRecent passport size, white background, clear face
Signature uploadBlack ink on white paper

Step 3: Pay Application Fee

CategoryApplication Fee
General / EWS / OBCRs. 100
SC / STExempt (no fee)
Female (all categories)Exempt (no fee)
PwBDExempt (no fee)
Ex-ServicemenExempt (no fee)

Payment modes: Net Banking, Credit Card, Debit Card, UPI. Keep the transaction receipt — it serves as proof of payment if any issue arises.

Step 4: Submit and Download Confirmation

After submission, download and print the application confirmation page. Keep it safely — the application number / registration ID is required for all future correspondence including admit card download, result checking, and document verification.


SSC MTS 2026: Selection Process

The selection process has two stages for MTS and three stages for Havaldar:

For MTS Posts

StageNameNature
Stage 1Computer Based Examination (CBE)Merit-determining
Stage 2Document VerificationQualifying

For Havaldar Posts (CBIC & CBN)

StageNameNature
Stage 1Computer Based Examination (CBE)Merit-determining
Stage 2Physical Efficiency Test (PET) + Physical Standard Test (PST)Qualifying
Stage 3Document VerificationFinal

SSC MTS 2026: Exam Pattern (CBE)

The Computer Based Examination is divided into two separate sessions conducted on the same day. Both sessions are compulsory — missing either session results in automatic disqualification.

Session I — Qualifying in Nature

SubjectNumber of QuestionsTotal MarksDuration
Numerical and Mathematical Ability2060
Reasoning Ability and Problem Solving2060
Total Session I4012045 minutes

Critical rules for Session I:

  • Each correct answer: +3 marks
  • Wrong answer: No negative marking
  • Session I is qualifying in nature — marks do not count toward final merit
  • Minimum qualifying marks determined by SSC based on category
  • Attempt all 40 questions since there is no penalty for wrong answers

Session II — Merit Determining

SubjectNumber of QuestionsTotal MarksDuration
English Language and Comprehension2575
General Awareness2575
Total Session II5015045 minutes

Critical rules for Session II:

  • Each correct answer: +3 marks
  • Each wrong answer: −1 mark (negative marking applies ⚠️)
  • Session II marks determine your final merit list and ranking
  • No negative marking in Session I but Session II is the real battle
  • Total CBE marks: Session I (120) + Session II (150) = 270 marks

CBE vs Previous Pattern — What Changed

FactorOld Pattern (up to 2022)New Pattern (2023 onwards)
StagesPaper 1 (Objective) + Paper 2 (Descriptive)Single CBE — two sessions on same day
Paper 2English descriptive writing — 25 marksAbolished — no descriptive paper
MarkingPaper 1: -0.25/wrongSession 1: No negative marking; Session 2: -1/wrong
LanguageBilingual15 languages (English, Hindi + 13 regional)
ModeOMR based earlierFully computer based

Important shift: The new pattern is entirely objective (MCQ) — no essay writing, no letter writing. This benefits candidates who were struggling with descriptive paper writing but have solid subject knowledge.


SSC MTS 2026: Complete Syllabus

Session I — Numerical and Mathematical Ability

TopicExpected QuestionsDifficulty
Number System, LCM and HCF2–3Easy
BODMAS and Simplification2–3Easy
Fractions and Decimals1–2Easy
Percentage2–3Easy–Moderate
Ratio and Proportion1–2Easy
Profit and Loss2–3Easy–Moderate
Simple Interest and Compound Interest1–2Moderate
Averages1–2Easy
Time and Work1–2Moderate
Time and Distance / Speed1–2Moderate
Mensuration (Area, Perimeter, Volume)1–2Moderate
Data Interpretation — Tables, Bar Graphs1–2Moderate

Syllabus standard: Class 8–10 level NCERT Mathematics. No trigonometry, no algebra beyond basic equations, no coordinate geometry. Pure arithmetic — fast calculation matters more than complex concepts.

Session I — Reasoning Ability and Problem Solving

TopicExpected QuestionsDifficulty
Number Series2–3Easy
Alphabetical Series2–3Easy
Coding and Decoding2–3Easy–Moderate
Analogies (Number, Letter, Word)2–3Easy
Odd One Out2Easy
Blood Relations1–2Moderate
Direction and Distance1–2Moderate
Mirror Images1–2Easy
Embedded Figures1–2Easy–Moderate
Syllogism1–2Moderate
Venn Diagrams1–2Easy
Mathematical Operations1–2Easy

Key insight: SSC MTS reasoning is significantly easier than SSC CGL or CHSL reasoning. Questions are standard, pattern-based, and predictable. Practice 30–40 questions per day for 30 days and this section becomes your highest-scoring zone.

Session II — English Language and Comprehension

TopicExpected QuestionsDifficulty
Reading Comprehension5–7Moderate
Fill in the Blanks (Grammar)3–4Easy–Moderate
Synonyms and Antonyms3–4Easy
One Word Substitution2–3Moderate
Spotting Errors3–4Moderate
Sentence Rearrangement / Jumbled Sentences2–3Moderate
Idioms and Phrases2–3Moderate
Cloze Test3–5Moderate
Spelling Correction1–2Easy

Standard: Class 10 English level. No advanced grammar. Focus heavily on vocabulary, basic grammar rules, and reading comprehension strategies. Session II English has negative marking — do not guess.

Session II — General Awareness

TopicExpected QuestionsDifficulty
History — Ancient, Medieval, Modern India3–5Easy–Moderate
Geography — Physical, Economic India3–4Easy–Moderate
Indian Polity and Constitution3–4Easy
Indian Economy — Basics2–3Easy
General Science — Physics, Chemistry, Biology4–6Easy–Moderate
Current Affairs — last 6–12 months5–7Variable
Static GK — Awards, Books, Sports, Days3–4Easy
Science and Technology2–3Easy–Moderate
Computer Basics1–2Easy
Indian Culture and Heritage1–2Easy

Most important section of Session II. 25 questions, 75 marks, and these are often the most predictable questions in the paper. A candidate who reads daily current affairs for 20 minutes and covers Class 10 NCERT History, Geography, Science, and Polity can score 20+ out of 25 in this section consistently.


Havaldar PET/PST Physical Standards (CBIC & CBN)

For Havaldar posts only, candidates who qualify the CBE must also clear a Physical Efficiency Test (PET) and Physical Standard Test (PST). These are qualifying — no marks are added to your CBE score.

Physical Standard Test (PST) — Height and Chest

CategoryHeight (Male)Height (Female)Chest (Male — unexpanded / expanded)
General / OBC / EWS157.5 cm152 cm76 cm / 81 cm
SC / ST152 cm147 cm74 cm / 79 cm
Hill Areas / Tribal152 cm147 cm74 cm / 79 cm

Physical Efficiency Test (PET) — Running

GenderDistanceTime Limit
Male candidates1,600 metres (1.6 km)Within 15 minutes
Female candidates1 km (1,000 metres)Within 20 minutes

PET exemptions: PwBD candidates who are orthopedically handicapped (OH) are exempted from PET as per SSC guidelines. Other PwBD categories must verify exemption status in the official notification.

Important for Havaldar aspirants: If you plan to apply for Havaldar posts, start physical preparation now — 1.6 km in 15 minutes requires a consistent jogging routine, especially for candidates who are not regularly active. Do not leave physical preparation until after the CBE result.


SSC MTS 2026: Salary Structure

SSC MTS and Havaldar posts fall under Pay Level 1 of the 7th Central Pay Commission (7th CPC) Pay Matrix. Here is the complete salary breakdown:

Basic Pay Structure (Pay Level 1)

ParameterDetails
Pay LevelLevel 1 (7th CPC Pay Matrix)
Entry Basic PayRs. 18,000 per month
Maximum Basic PayRs. 56,900 per month (after full career increments)
Annual Increment3% of basic pay — added every July 1
Grade Pay (old structure)Rs. 1,800 (reference only — now replaced by Pay Level system)

In-Hand Salary by City Category (2026)

ComponentX Cities (Metro)Y Cities (Big)Z Cities (Small)
Basic PayRs. 18,000Rs. 18,000Rs. 18,000
Dearness Allowance (DA @ ~58–60%)Rs. 10,440 – 10,800Rs. 10,440 – 10,800Rs. 10,440 – 10,800
House Rent Allowance (HRA)Rs. 4,320 (24%)Rs. 2,880 (16%)Rs. 1,440 (8%)
Transport Allowance (TA)Rs. 1,350Rs. 900Rs. 900
Gross Salary~Rs. 34,110~Rs. 32,220~Rs. 30,780
Deductions (NPS ~10%, CGEGIS, CGHS)~Rs. 2,500 – 3,500~Rs. 2,200 – 3,000~Rs. 2,000 – 2,800
Net In-Hand Salary~Rs. 30,000 – 32,000~Rs. 28,000 – 30,000~Rs. 27,000 – 29,000

X cities: Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Pune Y cities: Lucknow, Jaipur, Chandigarh, Bhopal, Patna, Surat, Vadodara, Nagpur, Indore, and other major cities Z cities: All remaining smaller towns and cities

Salary Growth Over Career

Years of ServiceBasic PayApprox. Gross Salary
Entry LevelRs. 18,000Rs. 30,000 – 34,000
After 3 yearsRs. 19,700Rs. 33,000 – 37,000
After 5 yearsRs. 20,900Rs. 35,000 – 40,000
After 10 yearsRs. 24,200Rs. 40,000 – 45,000
After 20 years (promotion to LDC)Rs. 25,500 (Level 2)Rs. 45,000 – 52,000
Maximum (end of career)Rs. 56,900Rs. 80,000 – 90,000

Benefits and Perks Beyond Salary

BenefitDetails
National Pension System (NPS)Government contributes 14% of basic pay; employee contributes 10%
CGHS (Central Govt Health Scheme)Self + dependent family — OPD, hospitalisation, medicines
Leave30 days Earned Leave + 8 days Casual Leave + Medical Leave per year
LTC (Leave Travel Concession)Subsidised travel for self and family to home town — every 2 years
CGEGISCentral Government Employees Group Insurance Scheme
Children Education AllowanceUp to 2 children per year
Government AccommodationOn availability — or HRA in lieu
Job SecurityPermanent central government employee — cannot be removed without due process
Pension (Pre-2004 joiners rule does not apply — NPS for new joiners)NPS with government 14% contribution — still a strong retirement corpus

SSC MTS 2026: Career Growth and Promotion Path

One of SSC MTS’s most underappreciated aspects is the promotion path. Many candidates assume MTS is a dead-end entry level post. It is not. Here is the complete promotion ladder:

MTS Promotion Path

StageDesignationPay LevelTimeline
EntryMulti-Tasking Staff (MTS)Level 1On joining
Promotion 1Lower Division Clerk (LDC)Level 25–8 years (LDCE/DPC)
Promotion 2Upper Division Clerk (UDC)Level 45–8 more years
Promotion 3Assistant Section Officer (ASO)Level 68–12 more years
Promotion 4Section OfficerLevel 710–15 more years
ExceptionalUnder Secretary / Deputy SecretaryLevel 10–11Through DOPT seniority

MTS → LDC promotion route: MTS employees can appear for the Limited Departmental Competitive Examination (LDCE) for promotion to LDC posts. This is the most common and fastest promotion route. Candidates who appear consistently and score well can reach LDC within 5 years of joining.

Havaldar Promotion Path (CBIC/CBN)

StageDesignationPay LevelTimeline
EntryHavaldarLevel 1On joining
Promotion 1Head HavaldarLevel 25–8 years
Promotion 2Tax Assistant / Inspector (Customs/Central Excise)Level 4–710–15 years via LDCE
Promotion 3SuperintendentLevel 8Further seniority

Previous Year Cut-offs: SSC MTS

Understanding previous cut-offs is essential for setting a realistic target score. All cut-offs below are for Session II (the merit-determining session), out of 150 marks.

SSC MTS Cut-off (CBE Session II) — 2023 Cycle

CategoryExpected Range (out of 150)Score Required
General / UR95 – 110Aim for 120+
EWS90 – 105Aim for 115+
OBC85 – 100Aim for 110+
SC75 – 90Aim for 100+
ST65 – 80Aim for 90+

SSC MTS Cut-off Trend (2019 – 2023)

YearGeneral (Approx.)OBC (Approx.)SC (Approx.)ST (Approx.)
2019100.8889.2779.5863.02
2020–21114.42103.8793.1480.27
2022117.50108.0096.7582.50
2023105.0095.0083.0072.00
2026 Target (General)110 – 120

Key observation: Cut-offs fluctuate based on total candidates, number of vacancies, and exam difficulty. A score of 120+ out of 150 in Session II puts General category candidates in a comfortable position in most zones. In high-competition states like UP, Bihar, Rajasthan, and MP, aim for 125+ to be safe.


Preparation Strategy: How to Clear SSC MTS 2026 in First Attempt

Study Plan Overview (July – November 2026)

PhasePeriodFocus
Phase 1: FoundationJuly 2026 (4 weeks)NCERT revision, basic concepts, topic-wise study
Phase 2: Intensive PracticeAugust 2026 (5 weeks)Chapter-wise questions, previous year papers, timed practice
Phase 3: Full Mock TestsSeptember–October 20262 full mocks per week, weak area revision
Phase 4: Revision Sprint10 days before examOnly revision, GK updates, error diary

How to Prepare: General Awareness (Highest Return Section)

General Awareness has 25 questions worth 75 marks in Session II — the highest marks per question of any section. This is where toppers separate themselves from the crowd.

What to study:

  • History: NCERT Class 6–10 History books — focus on Modern India (Freedom struggle, 1857 revolt, major leaders, important events). Ancient and Medieval history — 2–3 questions typically
  • Geography: NCERT Class 9–10 Geography — India’s rivers, mountains, states, agriculture, climate, wildlife sanctuaries, national parks
  • Polity: Class 9–10 Civics NCERT — fundamental rights, DPSP, Parliament structure, President vs PM powers, Panchayati Raj, Election Commission
  • Science: Class 9–10 Science NCERT — human body systems, diseases, physics laws (Newton, Archimedes), chemical reactions, periodic table basics
  • Current Affairs: June 2025 to October 2026 — read Adda247 monthly PDF, GK Today, or one national newspaper app daily (20 minutes maximum)
  • Static GK: India’s important dams, national symbols, first persons in Indian history, major awards (Bharat Ratna, Padma Awards, Nobel), capital cities, currencies, sports championships

Best resource for GK: Lucent’s General Knowledge (Hindi or English) — covers all static GK in one book. Combine with a monthly current affairs PDF.


How to Prepare: English Language (Session II — Negative Marking)

English is in Session II with negative marking. This means accuracy is more important than attempting all 25 questions blindly.

Topic-wise strategy:

TopicApproach
Reading ComprehensionRead the questions first, then find answers in the passage — saves time
Vocabulary (Synonyms/Antonyms)Learn 10 new words daily from Wren & Martin Word Power sections
Grammar (Fill in blanks, Spotting Errors)Study Wren and Martin Grammar — Chapters on Tenses, Subject-Verb Agreement, Articles
One Word SubstitutionMaintain a personal list — SSC repeats many OWS across exams
Idioms and PhrasesUse Kiran’s SSC English book — has comprehensive idioms list
Cloze TestPractice daily — understand the tone and context of the passage before filling

Golden rule for English Session II: Only attempt if you are at least 80% confident. Skip genuinely uncertain questions. Getting 18–20 correct with zero negatives is better than attempting all 25 and getting 22 correct with 5 wrong — the net difference can be 5 marks.


How to Prepare: Mathematics (Session I — No Negative Marking)

Since Session I has no negative marking, attempt all 20 maths questions. Even for topics you are uncertain about, an educated guess is always better than leaving it blank.

Focus on speed:

  • Number System: Practice 20 questions daily on HCF, LCM, BODMAS, fractions
  • Percentage and Ratio: Most frequently asked — master the formula and shortcut method
  • Profit and Loss: Learn percentage-based shortcuts — most MTS questions use 10%, 20%, 25% figures
  • Time and Work: Fraction method and LCM method — practice 10 questions daily
  • SI and CI: Direct formula application — CI vs SI difference questions appear often
  • Mensuration: Rectangle, square, circle, triangle areas and perimeters — quick formula recall

Target: Complete all 20 maths questions in 15–18 minutes, leaving time for reasoning.


How to Prepare: Reasoning (Session I — No Negative Marking)

Reasoning is the highest-scoring section in Session I for most prepared candidates. The questions are standard, pattern-based, and predictable.

Daily practice plan:

  • Series (Number and Alphabet): 10 questions daily — after 15 days you will recognise all pattern types
  • Coding-Decoding: 5 types — letter shift, reversal, number coding, symbol coding, mixed coding — master all 5
  • Analogies: Pair relationship — same as SSC CGL but simpler. Practice 10 daily
  • Direction-Distance: Draw the path on paper — never solve mentally for complex questions
  • Blood Relations: Family tree method — draw it every time

Target: Solve all 20 reasoning questions in 20–22 minutes.


Best Books for SSC MTS 2026 Preparation

SubjectBookAuthor / Publisher
MathematicsArithmetic (MTS level)R.S. Aggarwal
MathematicsKiran’s SSC Mathematics ChapterwiseKiran Publications
ReasoningA Modern Approach to Verbal & Non-Verbal ReasoningR.S. Aggarwal
EnglishObjective General EnglishS.P. Bakshi (Arihant)
EnglishPlinth to Paramount (English)Neetu Singh (KD Campus)
General AwarenessLucent’s General KnowledgeLucent Publications
General AwarenessMonthly Current Affairs PDFAdda247 / GK Today (Free)
NCERT (all subjects)Class 6–10 History, Geography, Science, CivicsNCERT (free at ncert.nic.in)
Previous PapersSSC MTS Previous Year Papers (10 Years)Kiran Publications
Complete GuideSSC MTS Complete GuideArihant
Mock TestsOnline test seriesTestbook / Adda247 / PW

Month-by-Month Study Timetable (3 Months)

WeekSession I FocusSession II FocusDaily Practice
Week 1–2 (July)Number System, BODMAS, FractionsGK — History (NCERT Class 6–8)50 questions/day
Week 3–4 (July)Percentage, Ratio, Profit-LossGK — History (NCERT Class 9–10), Current Affairs60 questions/day
Week 5–6 (August)SI/CI, Averages, Time-WorkGK — Geography (NCERT), Polity (NCERT)70 questions/day
Week 7–8 (August)Time-Distance, Mensuration, DIEnglish — Grammar, Vocabulary, RC75 questions/day
Week 9–10 (August–September)Series, Coding-Decoding, AnalogiesEnglish — One Word Sub, Idioms, Cloze80 questions/day
Week 11–12 (September)Full Revision Session I topicsFull Revision Session II + Current Affairs update2 full mocks/week
Exam Month (September–November)Mock analysis + targeted revisionCurrent Affairs daily, error diary review3 full mocks/week

Common Mistakes SSC MTS Aspirants Make

❌ Mistake 1: Attempting all questions in Session II without accuracy check Session II has negative marking of 1 mark per wrong answer. Attempting all 50 questions with 60% accuracy means getting 30 right (+90) and 20 wrong (-20) — net 70 out of 150. Attempting 38 with 85% accuracy means 32 right (+96) and 6 wrong (-6) — net 90. Accuracy beats blind coverage in Session II every time.

❌ Mistake 2: Ignoring Session I because it is “only qualifying” Session I is qualifying — but failing to qualify Session I means all your Session II marks are void. Qualify comfortably in Session I rather than just scraping through. Aim for 80+ out of 120 in Session I even though it does not count in merit.

❌ Mistake 3: Neglecting current affairs preparation Current affairs typically provides 5–7 questions in Session II General Awareness — that is 15–21 marks. Candidates who skip current affairs are leaving these marks on the table. Just 20 minutes of daily reading from a reliable source is enough.

❌ Mistake 4: Applying for Havaldar without checking physical standards first Many candidates apply for Havaldar preference without verifying whether they meet the height and chest requirements or can complete the running test. Check your physical measurements before applying.

❌ Mistake 5: Starting preparation only after the admit card The CBE is in September–November 2026. The notification is out now (June 30). That gives you 3–4 months of preparation time. Candidates who start on day one of the notification have a massive advantage over those who wait until 30 days before the exam.

❌ Mistake 6: Using outdated study material SSC MTS changed its exam pattern in 2023 — the descriptive Paper 2 was removed. Books and mock tests printed before 2023 follow the old pattern. Only use updated 2025–26 editions and online test series that reflect the current two-session CBE format.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. Is SSC MTS a good job? Is it worth it?

Yes — especially for 10th pass candidates or those who want a secure central government job without spending years in competitive exam preparation. SSC MTS offers a permanent central government post, monthly salary of Rs. 27,000–34,000 in-hand, free medical for family, annual increments, LTC benefits, and a clear promotion path to LDC and beyond. It is one of the best entry-level central government jobs available on a Class 10 qualification in India.

Q2. Can graduates apply for SSC MTS 2026?

Yes. The minimum qualification is Class 10 pass, but there is no maximum educational qualification bar. Graduates, post-graduates, and even engineers can and do apply for SSC MTS. However, if you hold a graduation degree, you should also explore SSC CHSL, SSC CGL, IBPS Clerk, and RRB NTPC, which offer higher pay levels suited to your qualification.

Q3. How many times can I apply for SSC MTS?

There is no restriction on the number of attempts for SSC MTS — you can apply every year as long as you meet the age and eligibility criteria. The only limit is age — once you cross the upper age limit (27 years for General category), you are no longer eligible regardless of how many times you have previously applied.

Q4. What is the difference between SSC MTS and SSC CHSL?

FactorSSC MTSSSC CHSL
Minimum QualificationClass 10Class 12
Pay LevelLevel 1 (Rs. 18,000 basic)Level 4–5 (Rs. 25,500–29,200 basic)
PostsMTS, HavaldarLDC, JSA, PA, DEO
Exam DifficultyEasierModerately Harder
Typing RequirementNoYes (for LDC/JSA/DEO posts)

If you are 12th pass, apply for SSC CHSL — the higher pay level and clerical/ministerial posts are worth the additional effort.

Q5. Is there a medical test for SSC MTS?

Yes. All selected candidates undergo a medical examination before final appointment. For MTS posts, the standard is basic fitness — no colour blindness in certain departments, normal hearing, no major physical disability for operational roles. Havaldar posts have more stringent medical standards given the physical nature of the work.

Q6. Can SSC MTS employees work from home?

No. SSC MTS is a field/office-based central government posting. All work is done from the assigned government office. Work-from-home is generally not applicable to Group C non-gazetted positions under the central government.

Q7. What happens if I score well in CBE but fail the Havaldar PET/PST?

If you applied with Havaldar as your preference and fail the PET/PST, you lose the Havaldar post. However, if you also gave MTS as a preference and your CBE score is above the MTS cut-off, you may still be considered for MTS posts in that region, subject to vacancies. This is why it is recommended to keep MTS as your first preference if you are not physically certain about clearing the Havaldar PET/PST.


Current Status: SSC MTS 2026 at a Glance (June 2026)

StageStatus
SSC MTS 2026 NotificationReleased — June 30, 2026
Online Application🔄 OPEN — Till July 31, 2026
Application Fee Payment🔄 OPEN — Till July 31, 2026
CBE (Computer Based Exam)⏳ Scheduled — September to November 2026
Havaldar PET/PST⏳ After CBE result — 2027
Final Result⏳ 2027

If you have not applied yet — do it today. The window is open. The notification is fresh. Every day you delay is a day less for preparation. With 3–4 months between now and the exam, candidates starting preparation today have the best possible chance of clearing in the first attempt.


Your SSC MTS 2026 Action Plan

SSC MTS is often called the gateway government job — the entry point for lakhs of aspirants from Class 10 backgrounds into the central government. It is not the highest-paying government job. But it is one of the most accessible, most stable, and most life-changing opportunities available to a 10th pass candidate in India. A permanent central government job changes a family’s trajectory — education for children, medical security for parents, housing stability, social respect, and a pension at the end of a career.

Here is what to do right now:

  • Apply immediately — Go to ssc.gov.in, complete your OTR if not done, and submit the MTS 2026 application before July 31. Do not wait for the last day.
  • Buy Lucent’s GK and start reading today — GK preparation takes the most time and gives the most returns. Start with Modern India history and current events.
  • Download Class 10 NCERT PDFs — Free at ncert.nic.in — History, Geography, Science, Civics. These four books form the backbone of SSC MTS General Awareness.
  • Start 50 MCQs daily from day one — Mix of all four subjects. Consistency of 50 questions per day for 90 days = 4,500 questions before the exam. That is genuine preparation.
  • Join a free online test series — Testbook and Adda247 both offer free SSC MTS mock tests. Take one full mock per week from August onwards.
  • If targeting Havaldar — Start a daily morning run. 1.6 km in 15 minutes is achievable with 8–10 weeks of consistent practice.
  • Aim for 120+ in Session II — Do not settle for just clearing the cut-off. A high score gives you better department preference during document verification — and better departments often mean better cities and better working conditions.

Every great government career starts with one exam. For lakhs of people across India, SSC MTS is that exam. The notification is out. The window is open. Your preparation starts today.

Jai Hind! All the best! 🇮🇳


Related Exam Articles:

Related Job Articles:

Official Resources:

  • SSC Official Website: https://ssc.gov.in
  • SSC OTR Registration: https://ssc.gov.in/otr
  • SSC Exam Calendar 2026–27: https://ssc.gov.in/exam-calendar
  • SSC MTS Official Notification PDF: https://ssc.gov.in/notices
  • Employment News: https://employmentnews.gov.in

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