logo
UPSC Prelims Result 2025 Declared, 14,161 Candidates Shortlisted For Mains

UPSC Prelims Result 2025 Declared, 14,161 Candidates Shortlisted For Mains

NDTV11-06-2025

UPSC Prelims Result 2025 OUT: The Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) has declared the results of the Civil Services Examination (CSE) Preliminary 2025. Candidates who appeared in the examination can now check their roll numbers on the UPSC's official websites - upsc.gov.in and upsconline.gov.in. A total of 14,161 candidates have qualified for the next stage - (Mains). The preliminary exam was conducted on May 25, 2025, with Paper 1 (General Studies) held in the morning and Paper 2 (CSAT) in the afternoon.
The roll numbers of the qualified candidates have been published in the PDF format. Their candidature is provisional and subject to further verification during the next stages of the recruitment process.
Here is the direct link to access Result PDF containing roll numbers of qualified candidates
Qualified candidates will be required to submit additional details between June 16 and June 25, 2025, including:
Payment of Rs 200 examination fee, except for exempted categories (female, PwBD, SC, ST).
Submission/updation of scribe details, assistive device and question paper in large font (for Mains Examination).
Submission of gazette notification (in case a candidate has changed name after matriculation and/or there is a mismatch with the name given in his/her matriculation or higher educational certificate vis a vis name given by him/her in the CSE-2025 online application).
The marks, cut-off scores, and final answer keys will be published only after the conclusion of the entire examination cycle, including the Indian Forest Service Examination.
For queries related to the result, candidates may visit the Facilitation Counter at UPSC's Dholpur House office in New Delhi, or contact the helpline numbers: 011-23385271, 011-23098543, 011-23381125 on working days between 10 AM and 5 PM.
The Commission has withheld the results of four candidates - Roll Numbers: 7004555, 6305469, 6413314, and 6610122 - due to ongoing court matters.
The recruitment drive is being conducted to fill 979 vacancies under the Civil Services Examination 2025.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elderly couple face eviction from makeshift shed after house attachment
Elderly couple face eviction from makeshift shed after house attachment

Time of India

time37 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Elderly couple face eviction from makeshift shed after house attachment

Kozhikode: An elderly couple living in a makeshift shed outside their house, which was attached by a public sector bank in 2023 for loan default, are now facing eviction from the temporary shelter in Pallikkara, Kasaragod. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Padmanabhan and Devi said Union Bank officials have given them an ultimatum to vacate the premises by Monday. The couple had availed a loan of Rs 16 lakh in 2015 by pledging their property to fund their daughter's marriage and to renovate their house. Devi said they repaid Rs 13 lakh but were unable to clear the remaining dues after Padmanabhan fell seriously ill and required ongoing treatment. "Now the bank is saying that we still owe Rs 25 lakh. We are in no position to repay it and they are not even allowing us to stay on the property. We have nowhere else to go. The only option left is to end our lives," Devi said. Their daughter is employed at Pariyaram medical college and their son lives nearby in a rented house, the couple added. The bank has deployed security personnel in front of the attached property.

CM announces community hall & library in Dharapur
CM announces community hall & library in Dharapur

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

CM announces community hall & library in Dharapur

Guwahati: After years of anticipation by locals, chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Sunday announced the construction of a community hall and a modern library in the Dharapur area, on the city's outskirts. The project worth around Rs 3 crore aims to provide a dedicated space for social gatherings, cultural activities and educational pursuits for people in and around the area. Speaking at the foundation laying ceremony Sarma said, "During Durga Puja celebrations organised by the residents of Dharapur, they had submitted a proposal for a community hall and a library. Today, acting upon that proposal, state govt has initiated the first phase of the project, with an investment of Rs 60 lakh, corresponding to 5000 square feet in the first phase, with further expansion by an additional 10,000 square feet. Moreover, an extra Rs 40 lakh will soon be sanctioned to ensure the timely completion of this phase."

Lion Numbers Surge In Gujarat – But Is India Running Out Of Space For The Big Cat?
Lion Numbers Surge In Gujarat – But Is India Running Out Of Space For The Big Cat?

India.com

timean hour ago

  • India.com

Lion Numbers Surge In Gujarat – But Is India Running Out Of Space For The Big Cat?

Ahmedabad: The lions of Gujarat are growing in number. India's latest census shows a sharp rise. From 674 in 2020 to 891 in 2025, it has witnessed an increase of 32 percent. Gujarat remains the only state with wild lions. Once found across Asia. Now limited to a single pocket. Once limited to the Gir forests. Now found in cities, farms, coasts and thorny shrub lands. More lions now live outside Gir than inside. A shift never recorded before. Nine satellite populations now hold the majority. Some are newly discovered, including lions around Jetpur, Babra and Barda Wildlife Sanctuary. Barda is now being shaped into a second refuge. The government says it is the new hope. Project Lion, worth over Rs 29,000 crore, aims to support that. But the sharp rise in numbers has triggered concern. Conservationists say the landscape is full. Lions are venturing into villages. Onto roads. Into homes. Some sleep under bridges. Some cross railway tracks. Accidents are rising. Conflicts, too. A five-year-old child was killed last week. Mauled in a farming field. Lions are no longer distant. They live near humans. In shared spaces. The counting was done in May across 735 zones over two days. Hundreds of field staff recorded sightings. Many stayed awake all night. Photographs were taken. Maps drawn. But the method is facing criticism. Some experts doubt the reliability. They say lions need to be identified by patterns. Like stripes. Like whiskers. Unique to each one. Still, the numbers are likely close to accurate. So what is fueling the rise? Experts point to food. Water. Space. The lions are adapting. They hunt feral cattle. They scavenge carcasses. Gujarat's policy helps, too. The state pays compensation when livestock is killed. Quickly. Often at full value. That keeps tensions low. But peaceful coexistence has limits. Nearly half of the lions now live outside forests. In farmlands. In towns. Among people. Open wells, power lines, fast roads – all deadly for lions. Some conservationists say the land is overburdened. They call it saturated. Lions, they warn, are pushing into places they do not belong. There is pressure on people as well. Livestock losses are rising. More villages are reporting attacks. People are changing how they live. No night walks. No open grazing. Children are kept indoors. Many say this is unsustainable. So why not move lions to another state? That question remains unanswered. In 2013, the Supreme Court ordered some lions to be relocated. Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh was chosen. Forests are wide. Prey is plenty. Twelve years later, no lions have moved. Gujarat says it is working on it. But nothing has happened. Instead, cheetahs were brought into Kuno. From Namibia. From South Africa. A historic project. But it triggered confusion. Could lions still come? Experts say yes. Cheetahs and lions can live together. They share space in Africa. Kuno is big enough. Leopards are the real threat to cheetahs. Lions can actually help by keeping leopard numbers in check. Yet some believe the cheetah project was a distraction. A way to stall lion relocation. Barda, the proposed 'second home', is close to Gir. Only 100 km away. Only 200 sq km wide. Too small. Too close. Experts say lions need distance. One outbreak. One disaster. One disease. And the entire population could collapse. India's lions once roamed from Persia to Bengal. Today, they are boxed into one corner. The growth is real. The story is inspiring. But the risks are growing. India may be saving the lion. But is it saving the species?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store