Daily Current Affairs Quiz – Free MCQs with Answers

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

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Test your daily current affairs preparation with JobsMe's free Daily Current Affairs Quizzes. Each quiz is published every day and contains carefully selected multiple-choice questions (MCQs) based on that day's most important news events. Designed in the exact pattern of questions asked in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, IBPS PO, SBI Clerk, RRB NTPC, NDA, and State PSC examinations, these quizzes help you transform passive reading into active retention. Every quiz on this page is completely free, requires no login, and can be attempted directly from your browser or mobile device.


Why Taking a Daily Current Affairs Quiz Is Essential for Exam Success

Reading current affairs every day is important. But reading without testing is like studying without practice — you may feel prepared, but you will struggle when questions appear under exam conditions. A daily quiz serves multiple critical purposes in your preparation strategy.

Reinforces What You Read

The brain retains information far more effectively when it is retrieved shortly after learning. This effect, known as the testing effect, is one of the most well-established findings in cognitive psychology. When you attempt a quiz on the same day's current affairs, you force your brain to actively recall the information you just read, strengthening the memory trace significantly compared to passive re-reading.

Trains Your Exam-Taking Speed and Accuracy

Competitive exams are timed. The ability to read an MCQ, eliminate wrong options, and arrive at the correct answer quickly is a skill that must be practised — it does not come automatically from reading. Daily quiz practice builds the specific mental muscle needed to perform well under time pressure, with a target speed of approximately 20 seconds per question.

Identifies Your Weak Areas

Nobody retains everything they read equally well. Regular quiz attempts reveal which categories — Economy, Environment, Defence, Science, etc. — are your weaker areas. Knowing this allows you to spend extra revision time on specific topics before your exam.

Builds Exam Confidence

Walking into an exam hall having attempted hundreds of current affairs MCQs is a very different experience from walking in having only read articles. Daily quiz practice builds familiarity with question patterns, trap options, and correct answer phrasing, directly translating into higher scores.


Structure of JobsMe's Daily Current Affairs Quiz

Number of Questions and Time Limit

Each daily quiz contains 15 multiple-choice questions with a 5–8 minute suggested time limit, matching the time-per-question ratio of most competitive exams. Questions carry no negative marking, so you are encouraged to attempt all questions.

Question Categories Covered

Questions in each quiz are drawn from the most important current affairs of that day, covering:

  • National News (Government Policies, Schemes, Parliament)
  • International News (Diplomacy, UN, Treaties, Summits)
  • Economy and Banking (RBI, SEBI, Budget, Trade)
  • Science and Technology (ISRO, DRDO, AI, Health)
  • Environment (Wildlife, Climate, Renewable Energy)
  • Defence (Military Exercises, Acquisitions, Border)
  • Sports (Tournaments, Awards, Rankings)
  • Appointments and Obituaries
  • Important Days and Themes

Difficulty Level and Question Pattern

Questions are framed at the level of SSC CGL, IBPS PO, and UPSC Prelims. Each question involves either factual recall of key details or application-based identification (e.g., "Which of the following correctly pairs the scheme with its implementing ministry?"). Distractor options are carefully chosen to reflect common mistakes and near-correct alternatives, helping you develop sharp discrimination skills.


How to Use the Quiz Archive for Maximum Benefit

Attempt Quizzes Daily

The most effective approach is to attempt each quiz on the same day it is published, immediately after reading the corresponding current affairs post. This same-day testing pattern produces the best retention outcomes and keeps you on schedule with your preparation.

Revisit Old Quizzes for Revision

The quiz archive on this page stores every quiz ever published. During exam revision weeks, go back and attempt quizzes from the past 30–60 days without referring to the news post first. This simulates actual exam conditions and is one of the highest-quality last-mile revision activities available.

Track Your Score Trends

Make a note of your quiz scores in a simple tracker (date, score out of 15, weak category). Over time, this record will show you whether your preparation is improving and where you still need to focus.

Combine with Monthly and Weekly Quizzes

In addition to daily quizzes, use the weekly and monthly current affairs quizzes (available separately on JobsMe) for cumulative revision. The daily quiz tests that specific day; the weekly quiz tests the entire week; the monthly quiz is a complete revision tool for all 30 days.


Exam-Wise Relevance of Daily Current Affairs Quizzes

Current Affairs Quizzes for UPSC Prelims

UPSC Prelims GS Paper I typically includes 15–20 questions that are either directly from current affairs or are static GK topics that were in the news during the preceding year. Daily quiz practice ensures that you have covered every likely question multiple times before the exam. Special focus on government schemes, environment conventions, science & space, and appointments is recommended.

Current Affairs Quizzes for SSC Exams

SSC CGL, CHSL, MTS, and other SSC exams include a General Awareness section of 25 questions. Approximately 40–50% of these are current-affairs based, covering recent events from the preceding 6–12 months. Daily quiz practice builds a comprehensive bank of tested knowledge that can be directly applied in SSC papers.

Current Affairs Quizzes for Banking Exams

IBPS PO, SBI PO, SBI Clerk, IBPS Clerk, RBI Grade B, and other banking exams include a General/Financial Awareness section. Banking exams tend to focus heavily on RBI announcements, government economic schemes, international financial organisations, and financial market news. The daily quiz ensures you stay updated on all of these without falling behind.

Current Affairs Quizzes for Railways (RRB NTPC, Group D)

RRB exams include a General Awareness section covering science, geography, history, polity, and current affairs. Our daily quiz covers all relevant current affairs topics from the Railways exam syllabus, with particular attention to science & technology, government schemes, sports, and appointments.

Current Affairs Quizzes for Defence Exams (NDA, CDS)

Defence exams require knowledge of current affairs related to India's foreign policy, international relations, defence acquisitions, military exercises, geography, and science. Our daily quiz specifically tags defence-related questions to help NDA and CDS aspirants build targeted current affairs knowledge.

Current Affairs Quizzes for State PSC Exams

State PSC examinations include both national and state-specific current affairs. Our quiz covers major national developments every day. For state-specific updates, refer to the daily post which includes state-level governance news relevant to major State PSC exams.


Tips to Score Full Marks in Current Affairs MCQs

Never Skip National Scheme and Policy News

Government scheme launches, modifications, and budget allocations are among the most frequently asked current affairs topics across all exams. Never skip any scheme-related news, no matter how minor it may seem.

Focus on Numbers and Rankings

International rankings (Global Hunger Index, Human Development Index, Global Peace Index, World Happiness Report, Ease of Doing Business), financial statistics (repo rate, CRR, GDP growth), and award lists are high-probability quiz topics. Make it a habit to note down any number or ranking you encounter.

Pay Attention to Firsts, Largests, and Superlatives

Any news item involving India's "first," "largest," "highest," or "only" in a particular context is almost certain to appear in a quiz or exam. These items are high-frequency, easy-to-frame question types.

Learn Full Names of Organisations and Schemes

One of the most common tricks in competitive exam MCQs is to test whether you know the full form of an abbreviation or the full name of a scheme. For example, "RELIEF" scheme, "BHAVYA" scheme, "Kavach 4.0" — make sure you always note the full name.

Note the Associated Ministry

Almost every scheme, programme, and initiative is linked to a specific ministry. Questions frequently ask "Which ministry launched..." or "Which ministry is responsible for...". Always note the implementing ministry when reading any scheme-related news.

Quiz FAQs – Daily Current Affairs

Are the daily current affairs quizzes on JobsMe free?
Yes, every quiz on this page is completely free. You do not need to create an account or subscribe to any plan to attempt any quiz.
How many questions are in each daily quiz?
Each daily quiz contains 15 multiple-choice questions, with a suggested time limit of 5–8 minutes, reflecting the time constraints of actual competitive exams.
Is there negative marking in the quizzes?
No. JobsMe's daily quizzes do not carry negative marking. You are encouraged to attempt all questions and learn from the explanations provided.
Can I attempt the same quiz multiple times?
Yes. You can re-attempt any quiz from the archive as many times as you need. Re-attempting quizzes from previous weeks without referring to the notes is an excellent exam-revision strategy.
How are the quiz questions prepared?
Questions are prepared by our team of subject matter experts based on the most important news of each day. Each question is reviewed against the pattern of questions asked in recent editions of UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, IBPS PO, and RRB NTPC papers.
Do the quizzes provide explanations for the answers?
Yes. Each question includes a correct answer and an explanation to help you understand why that option is correct and why the other options are incorrect.
How do these quizzes help for UPSC Prelims specifically?
UPSC Prelims requires both breadth and accuracy. Daily quiz practice builds breadth by covering all categories of current affairs every day. The MCQ format trains accuracy by helping you practice elimination strategies and distinguish between similar-sounding options — exactly the skills required to score above the UPSC cutoff.
Are quizzes based only on Indian news or international news too?
Both. Each daily quiz includes a mix of questions on national developments (government schemes, policy decisions, appointments) and international events (summits, bilateral agreements, international organisations, global rankings). The proportion reflects the actual question distribution in major competitive exams.
Is there a way to get notified when a new quiz is published?
Yes. Join the JobsMe Telegram channel or WhatsApp broadcast to receive daily notifications as soon as a new current affairs quiz is published.
How many days of quizzes are available in the archive?
The archive contains quizzes from every day since JobsMe launched. You can browse through older quizzes using the pagination at the bottom of this page, making it a comprehensive practice repository for last-minute revision.
What should I do if I score low in a quiz?
First, review the explanations for every question you got wrong. Then go back to the corresponding daily current affairs post and re-read the topics you missed. If a particular category (e.g., Economy or Environment) consistently shows lower scores, spend additional revision time on those topics in your weekly study plan.