Current Affairs Quiz – All Free MCQ Tests

Test your knowledge and level up your skills with our futuristic challenges.

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15 Questions
8 mins
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Free
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15 Questions
8 mins
Start Now
Free
Details
15 Questions
8 mins
Start Now
Free
Details
15 Questions
8 mins
Start Now
Free
Details
15 Questions
8 mins
Start Now
Free
Details
15 Questions
8 mins
Start Now
Free
Details
15 Questions
8 mins
Start Now

Introduction

JobsMe's Current Affairs Quiz archive is the most comprehensive free MCQ practice resource for competitive exam aspirants in India. This master quiz archive brings together every current affairs quiz published on the platform — daily quizzes (15 questions), weekly quizzes (20–25 questions), and monthly quizzes (40–50 questions) — in one chronological list. All quizzes are completely free, require no login, and are designed to match the exact question pattern, difficulty level, and category distribution of UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, IBPS PO, RRB NTPC, NDA, CDS, and State PSC examinations.

Read the news first, then test yourself:


Why Regular Current Affairs Quiz Practice Is Non-Negotiable

Reading current affairs daily is necessary. But without regular testing, reading alone will not translate into exam marks. The gap between "I read this" and "I can answer a question on this under time pressure" is bridged only by deliberate, consistent quiz practice. Here is the evidence behind this claim.

The Testing Effect

Cognitive science research consistently shows that retrieving information from memory — as happens when you answer a quiz question — strengthens that memory trace far more than re-reading the same material. This phenomenon, known as the testing effect or retrieval practice effect, is one of the most robust findings in learning science. Every quiz attempt on this page is not just a test — it is a memory-strengthening exercise.

Exam-Condition Training

Competitive exams impose two pressures simultaneously: breadth (covering many topics) and speed (answering quickly with no time to think). Regular quiz practice is the only way to train both dimensions. Over weeks and months of daily and weekly quiz practice, aspirants develop the ability to scan questions rapidly, eliminate wrong options confidently, and commit to answers without second-guessing — skills that directly translate to higher scores.

Honest Self-Assessment

Quiz scores are an objective measure of your preparation, unlike the subjective feeling of "I read a lot today." A daily quiz score of 10 out of 15 tells you exactly what you know and what you do not — and the explanations tell you precisely what you missed and why. This honesty is uncomfortable but invaluable for targeting your preparation efficiently.


Understanding the Three Quiz Levels

Daily Quiz — 15 Questions, 5–8 Minutes

Daily current affairs quizzes test the most important events of a single day. At 15 questions per day, a full week of daily quizzes covers approximately 90–100 unique current affairs questions. This is the highest-frequency practice format available on JobsMe and the best tool for building daily exam-readiness.

Attempt immediately after reading the daily current affairs post for maximum retention benefit.

Weekly Quiz — 20–25 Questions, 10–12 Minutes

Weekly current affairs quizzes test retention across seven days of news. The weekly quiz is a stronger memory test than any daily quiz because it requires you to recall information from up to a week ago — much closer to the conditions of an actual exam, where questions can come from events months earlier. Attempt every Sunday after reading the weekly compilation.

Monthly Quiz — 40–50 Questions, 20–25 Minutes

Monthly current affairs quizzes are the most complete exam simulation available on JobsMe. Testing 30 days of current affairs in one timed session, the monthly quiz closely mirrors the General Awareness section of most competitive exams in both length and category distribution. Attempt after reading the monthly compilation, and re-attempt without notes 5–7 days later for maximum consolidation.


How to Build a Quiz Practice Routine

The Daily Minimum

The minimum effective quiz practice is one daily quiz per day — 15 questions, 5–8 minutes. This is achievable by virtually any aspirant regardless of schedule. Even on days when you cannot read the full daily post, attempt the quiz to maintain your testing habit. The explanations will effectively teach you the material you missed.

The Weekly Review

Every Sunday, add one weekly quiz to your routine. This 10–12 minute session tests your recall across the full week and provides category-level feedback on your weakest areas. If you score below 75%, revisit the weekly compilation for the categories where you fell short.

The Monthly Benchmark

At the end of each month, attempt the monthly quiz cold — without reviewing the monthly post first. Your score is your preparation benchmark for that month. Target: 75–80% or above. Below 65%: the monthly post needs a full read-through before re-attempting. Above 80%: your preparation for that month is exam-ready.

The Pre-Exam Revision Sprint

In the 4–6 weeks before your exam, go through the monthly quizzes for the past 6 months in sequence, attempting each one without notes. This simulates the actual exam's range of question dates and is the most effective pre-exam preparation strategy for the General Awareness section.


Quiz Performance Benchmarks by Exam

Quiz TypeMinimum Target ScoreStrong Preparation Score
Daily Quiz (15 Qs)10/15 (67%)13/15 (87%)
Weekly Quiz (25 Qs)17/25 (68%)21/25 (84%)
Monthly Quiz (50 Qs)35/50 (70%)42/50 (84%)

These benchmarks are calibrated to the actual cutoff-equivalent scores in General Awareness sections across major competitive exams. Consistently scoring at the "strong" level across multiple months of quizzes indicates that your current affairs preparation is exam-ready.


Exam-Wise Quiz Recommendations

UPSC Civil Services Prelims

Attempt all three quiz levels consistently. UPSC tests breadth (12–18 months of current affairs) and depth (contextual understanding). Daily quizzes build breadth through consistent exposure. Monthly quizzes build the long-window recall that UPSC demands. Pair with Static GK revision for complete Prelims preparation.

SSC CGL, CHSL, MTS

Daily and weekly quizzes are most valuable here. SSC current affairs questions are typically from the preceding 6–12 months, with an emphasis on National Affairs, Science, Sports, and Appointments. Target at least 87% on daily quizzes and 80% on weekly quizzes for SSC-level exam-readiness.

IBPS PO, SBI PO, RBI Grade B

Daily quizzes with particular attention to Economy and Banking category questions. Monthly quizzes for GA section simulation — RBI Grade B Phase II aspirants should treat monthly quizzes as their primary mock GA test.

RRB NTPC, RRB Group D

Weekly and monthly quizzes are most efficient for Railways aspirants. The broad coverage of weekly and monthly quizzes matches the wide-ranging nature of RRB General Awareness sections.

NDA, CDS, AFCAT

Daily quizzes with focus on Defence and International Relations categories. Supplement with weekly compilations that include geopolitical and military developments.

State PSC Exams

Monthly quizzes covering the national current affairs component. Supplement with state-specific sources for the local current affairs portion of state PSC papers.

Quiz FAQs – Current Affairs

Are all current affairs quizzes on JobsMe free?
Yes. Every quiz on this page — daily, weekly, and monthly — is completely free to attempt. No registration, login, or payment is required.
What is the difference between this master quiz archive and the Daily, Weekly, and Monthly quiz archives?
This master archive shows all quizzes in one chronological list regardless of format. The Daily, Weekly, and Monthly quiz archives show only their specific format. Use this master archive to browse across all quiz types, and the sub-archives when you want to attempt a specific format.
Can I attempt old quizzes from the archive?
Yes. All quizzes remain available in the archive indefinitely. Attempting quizzes from past weeks and months — without consulting notes — is one of the most effective pre-exam revision strategies for General Awareness sections.
Is there negative marking in any of the quizzes?
No. None of JobsMe's quizzes carry negative marking. Attempt all questions in every quiz and use the answer explanations to learn from any mistakes.
How often are new quizzes added to this archive?
A new daily quiz is added every day, a new weekly quiz is added every week, and a new monthly quiz is added at the end of each month. The archive grows continuously.
Do the quizzes cover both Indian and international current affairs?
Yes. All quizzes include a balanced mix of national and international current affairs, reflecting the actual distribution of questions in competitive exam GA sections.
Are the quizzes mobile-friendly?
Yes. All quizzes on JobsMe are fully responsive and work on any smartphone, tablet, or desktop without any app download required.
What should I do if I score consistently low on current affairs quizzes?
First, identify the category where you score lowest (Economy, Environment, International Relations, etc.). Then increase the time spent reading those categories in your daily posts. After 2–3 weeks of targeted reading in that category, re-attempt the quiz to confirm improvement.
How do quizzes help with UPSC Mains, not just Prelims?
While the quiz format is MCQ-based, the understanding of context and connections built through regular quiz practice improves analytical writing for Mains. When you know current events deeply enough to answer MCQs correctly, you know them well enough to incorporate them as examples in GS Mains answers.
Is there a way to receive notifications when new quizzes are published?
Yes. Join the JobsMe Telegram channel or WhatsApp broadcast for daily notifications when new quizzes go live.