Current Affairs – Latest Posts & Notes
Hand-picked updates, explainers, and notifications for Current Affairs aspirants.

Current Affairs – 3 January 2026 | Daily GK Update for Government Exams
The Current Affairs of 3 January 2026 covers major national, international, banking, economy, science & technology, and appointments updates crucial for SSC, Banking, UPSC, Railways, Defence, PSU, and State PSC exams.

Current Affairs 1 & 2 January 2026
The Current Affairs of 1st & 2nd January 2026 cover major national policies, defence deals, economic milestones, banking regulations, science & technology developments, sports, awards, and key appointments. These updates are highly relevant for SSC, Banking, UPSC, Railways, Defence, PSU, and State PSC exams, with strong coverage for both Prelims facts and Mains-oriented analysis.
Current Affairs – 31 December 2025 | Complete Exam-Oriented GK Update
The Current Affairs of 31 December 2025 covers major national, international, banking, defence, science, economy, sports, and appointments-related developments. These updates are highly relevant for SSC, Banking, UPSC, Railways, Defence, PSU, and State PSC exams, with strong coverage for Prelims facts and Mains answer enrichment.
Current Affairs 30 December 2025 – Daily GK Update for Government Exams
The Current Affairs of 30 December 2025 cover major national, international, defence, science & technology, environment, and state-level developments. These updates are highly relevant for SSC, Banking, UPSC, Railways, Defence, Insurance, and State PSC exams, with strong coverage for Prelims facts and Mains answer enrichment.
Daily Current Affairs – 29 December 2025
The Daily Current Affairs of 29th December 2025 covers important national, international, banking, defence, economy, science, sports, and schemes-related developments. These updates are crucial for SSC, Banking, UPSC, Railways, Defence, and State PSC exams, with high relevance for prelims facts and mains answer enrichment.

Daily Current Affairs – 27 December 2025
Stay updated with the Daily Current Affairs of 27th December 2025, covering National News, State News, International Affairs, Business & Economy, Appointments, Awards, Sports, Science & Technology, and Important Days.

Daily Current Affairs – 26 December 2025
Current Affairs play a crucial role in exams like Banking, SSC, UPSC, and State Government exams. Regular revision of daily news helps candidates score better in General Awareness, Banking Awareness, Economy, and Static GK sections.
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Introduction
This is JobsMe's complete current affairs post archive — every daily, weekly, and monthly current affairs article published on the platform, listed in one place by date. Whether you are looking for today's latest updates, a specific week's compiled analysis, or a full month's revision document, you will find it here. All posts are written in an analytical, exam-focused format and are completely free to access. After reading any post, head to the Current Affairs Quiz archive to test your retention with free MCQ practice.
Want to browse by format? Jump directly to:
Three Types of Posts, One Complete Preparation System
Every post in this archive belongs to one of three formats, each designed for a specific role in your preparation strategy. Understanding which format to use at which stage is key to efficient preparation.
Daily Posts — Read Every Day, Test Every Day
Daily current affairs posts are the backbone of consistent preparation. Published every day without exception, each post covers the most important events of the day across all major categories — Economy, Polity, International Relations, Science, Environment, Defence, Sports, and Appointments. The posts are written analytically, going beyond what happened to explain why it happened and how it connects to your exam syllabus.
Daily posts are ideal for: aspirants with 20–30 minutes per day, those more than 2 months from their exam, and UPSC, Banking, and State PSC candidates who need comprehensive daily coverage.
→ Explore Daily Current Affairs Posts → → Attempt Daily Current Affairs Quiz →
Weekly Posts — Consolidate Every Sunday
Weekly current affairs posts synthesise 7 days of news into a single structured review document. Each weekly post identifies the most important developments of the week, explains how connected events unfolded over multiple days, and maps each topic explicitly to exam syllabi. The weekly format also surfaces themes that are only visible across a full week of news — not in any single day's reading.
Weekly posts are ideal for: working professionals, aspirants who missed some daily reading, those seeking a structured Sunday revision session, and candidates 1–2 months from their exam.
→ Explore Weekly Current Affairs Posts → → Attempt Weekly Current Affairs Quiz →
Monthly Posts — Revise the Whole Month, Ace the Exam
Monthly current affairs compilations are the most comprehensive posts in this archive. Each monthly post covers all major events of the calendar month, organised by category, presented analytically, and concluded with a one-liner quick revision section for last-day preparation. Monthly posts are the primary revision tool for aspirants in the final 4–6 weeks before their exam.
Monthly posts are ideal for: aspirants in the final exam preparation phase, those needing to catch up on missed months, UPSC candidates building a 12-month revision archive, and all Banking and SSC aspirants in the pre-exam window.
→ Explore Monthly Current Affairs Posts → → Attempt Monthly Current Affairs Quiz →
What Makes JobsMe's Current Affairs Posts Stand Out
Analytical Depth, Not Just News Summaries
Most current affairs websites republish news headlines with minimal analysis. JobsMe posts are written with the exam in mind from the first sentence. Each development is explained with background context, the policy or statutory framework it relates to, the government's stated objectives, and how a question on this topic is likely to be framed in UPSC Prelims, SSC, or Banking papers. This analytical approach is what converts passive reading into genuine exam-readiness.
Consistent Category Structure Across All Formats
Whether you read a daily, weekly, or monthly post, the category structure is identical — National Affairs, Economy & Finance, International Relations, Science & Technology, Environment, Defence, Sports & Awards, and Appointments. This consistency means you always know where to find what you need, and your revision becomes faster and more organised over time.
Cross-Links to Static GK
Current events frequently connect to static GK concepts. JobsMe posts flag these connections explicitly. A news item about a new national park connects to wildlife protection laws from Static GK. An RBI policy update connects to the constitutional basis of monetary policy. These cross-references ensure that your current affairs reading reinforces, rather than competes with, your static preparation.
Written from Verified Primary Sources
All posts are based on The Hindu, Indian Express, PIB (Press Information Bureau), government ministry press releases, PRS Legislative Research, Livemint, Business Standard, and other primary sources. No rumour, social media speculation, or unverified claim is included.
How to Read Current Affairs Posts Effectively
Read with an Exam Lens
Before reading any post, remind yourself which exam you are preparing for and what that exam tests. UPSC aspirants should pay attention to analytical connections; Banking aspirants should focus on Economy and Finance; SSC aspirants should prioritise National Affairs, Science, and Sports. This targeting makes your reading more efficient and your retention more targeted.
Make Your Own Notes
Do not just read and move on. For any fact, appointment, scheme, or ranking that you encounter, add a brief note to your own running current affairs diary. Whether you maintain a physical notebook, a Google Doc, or a notes app, the act of writing key facts in your own words dramatically improves retention compared to passive reading.
Always Attempt the Quiz After Reading
Every post on this page has a corresponding quiz — daily, weekly, or monthly. Attempting the quiz within the same session as reading the post is the single most effective retention strategy available. The quiz forces active recall of what you just read, converting short-term reading comprehension into longer-term exam memory.





