Introduction
The Staff Selection Commission Combined Graduate Level (SSC CGL) Tier 1 2025 exam has set the stage for this year’s competition. As the gateway to prestigious Group B and C posts in the Government of India, CGL remains the ultimate target for millions of aspirants.
This year’s Tier 1 exam followed the trend of recent years—high competition driven by a relatively easier paper, pushing the required safe score higher. In this analysis, we break down the paper section by section and discuss what this means for your Tier 2 preparation.
Shift-Wise Difficulty Overview
The exam was conducted in multiple shifts, and normalization will play a significant role. However, the raw difficulty level was largely consistent.
| Section | Difficulty | Key Challenge |
|---|---|---|
| General Intelligence & Reasoning | Easy | Speed |
| General Awareness | Moderate | Factual Depth |
| Quantitative Aptitude | Moderate | Calculation |
| English Comprehension | Easy | Vocabulary |
The Verdict: The paper was Easy to Moderate. This usually implies a higher cutoff, as serious candidates maximize their scores in Reasoning and English.
Section-Wise Breakdown
General Intelligence & Reasoning
Level: Easy
Most candidates found this section to be a confidence booster. Questions were standard:
- Series & Analogy: Straightforward logic.
- Coding-Decoding: 2-3 questions, easy to crack.
- Non-Verbal: Mirror image and paper folding were simple.
A serious aspirant should target 45+ marks here.
General Awareness (GA)
Level: Moderate
As always, GA was the game-changer. While Reasoning and Math scores saturate (everyone gets good marks), GA creates the gap.
- Current Affairs: Focused on appointments, sports, and government schemes from the last 6-8 months.
- Static GK: Art and culture (dances, festivals) and Polity (articles) were dominant.
Strategic Note: While everyone focuses on Aptitude, smart aspirants know that selection happens in Current Affairs. A lead of 10 marks in GA is often decisive.
Recommendation: For concise, exam-relevant current affairs, many toppers rely on the Scoreclever App. Its 5x concise content ensures you cover everything important without wasting time on irrelevant details.
Quantitative Aptitude
Level: Moderate (Calculative)
The concepts were not new, but the calculations were testing.
- Arithmetic: Profit & Loss, SI/CI, and Percentage questions involved tricky numbers.
- Advance Math: Algebra and Trigonometry were formula-based but required practice.
Speed was the main hurdle here.
English Comprehension
Level: Easy
SSC continues to keep English accessible, but accuracy is key.
- Vocabulary: Previous year based synonyms/antonyms.
- Grammar: Standard error spotting rules.
- Cloze Test: Story-based, easy to comprehend.
Tip: Don’t lose marks in vocabulary. It’s the easiest section to master if you have the right tool. Scoreclever’s vocabulary builder predicts when you’ll forget a word and makes you revise it, ensuring 100% retention.
Expected Cutoff & Safe Score
Given the “Easy to Moderate” difficulty, the cutoff is expected to be on the higher side.
| Category | Expected Safe Score (Raw) |
|---|---|
| UR (General) | 145 - 150 |
| OBC | 140 - 145 |
| EWS | 138 - 143 |
| SC | 120 - 125 |
| ST | 110 - 115 |
Note: These are estimated raw scores. Normalization can increase or decrease your final score depending on your shift’s difficulty.
The Road to Tier 2
Tier 1 is just qualifying. The real battle is Tier 2.
Why Tier 2 is Different:
- Higher Weightage: Every question matters more.
- Computer & Typing: Mandatory to qualify.
- GK & English Dominance: In Tier 2, the syllabus is vast, and the margin for error is zero.
Strategy for Tier 2
- Maintain Math/Reasoning Speed: Keep practicing mock tests.
- Double Down on GK: This is where the merit list is decided. Use Scoreclever’s Daily Leagues to compete with other serious aspirants daily.
- Master English: Comprehension and vocabulary weightage increases.
Conclusion
SSC CGL Tier 1 2025 was a test of speed and accuracy. If you are scoring above 140 (UR), start preparing for Tier 2 immediately. Do not wait for the results.
The competition is fierce, and the difference between a job and rejection often comes down to a few marks in General Awareness or English. Play smart.

