UPSC Ayurveda Medical Officer Coaching Online

Prepare for UPSC CMS Ayurveda with targeted MCQ practice.

UPSC CMS Ayurveda: MCQ and written paper together

UPSC's Combined Medical Services examination tests Ayurveda across two papers: a 120-question MCQ paper covering clinical and foundational subjects, and a written paper requiring structured descriptive answers. CEET Ayurveda covers both components through a dedicated UPSC track combining the MCQ bank, timed paper practice, and written-answer frameworks.

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120
MCQ QUESTIONS IN UPSC CMS PAPER I
2
PAPERS IN UPSC CMS AYURVEDA EXAM
Annual
UPSC CMS NOTIFICATION CYCLE

UPSC CMS syllabus coverage

The UPSC CMS Ayurveda syllabus covers all major clinical departments, Maulikasiddhantha, pharmacology, and public health. CEET maps every question in its bank to the UPSC syllabus headings, so preparation gaps are visible from the first mock attempt.

Written paper frameworks

The descriptive paper requires 150-200-word structured answers on clinical management and Panchakarma protocols. CEET provides model answer frameworks for 300 topic areas, with faculty review of student drafts available in the UPSC track.

Previous UPSC paper analysis

Five years of UPSC CMS Ayurveda previous papers are dissected by topic frequency. High-frequency topics across years account for approximately 65% of recurring question types; the preparation plan weights these accordingly.

MCQ accuracy tracking

After every timed MCQ practice session, the dashboard shows accuracy per UPSC syllabus heading. Students who fall below 60% in any heading before week 8 of the batch receive automated revision nudges.

Batch aligned to UPSC calendar

CEET's UPSC Ayurveda batch runs on a 20-week schedule timed to the typical UPSC CMS notification and exam cycle. The schedule accommodates candidates balancing preparation with internship or hospital duties.

Central Government posting advantage

UPSC CMS selection leads to Central Government Medical Officer posts with pan-India postings, pay-band advantages over state government posts, and access to central health scheme facilities. Faculty in the UPSC track advise on post-selection procedures alongside exam content.

How UPSC CMS Ayurveda Differs from State PSC Exams

UPSC CMS Ayurveda and State PSC Ayurveda MO exams share a common clinical knowledge base but differ in three ways that affect preparation strategy: exam format, selection volume, and posting consequences.

Format: two papers versus one

Most State PSC Ayurveda MO exams are single-paper MCQ tests. UPSC CMS has two papers. Paper I is 120 MCQs (no negative marking in the UPSC CMS format, unlike most PSC papers) and Paper II is a written paper with structured answers. Candidates who prepare only through MCQ practice under-prepare for the descriptive component, which accounts for a significant fraction of the final score.

Selection numbers and competition

UPSC CMS Ayurveda typically recruits 15-25 candidates per cycle across all Central Government Ayurveda posts. The candidate pool is smaller than for popular state PSC exams, but the preparation bar is higher because of the written paper component. State PSC exams recruit more candidates per cycle in states with large government Ayurveda networks (Kerala, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh).

Preparation overlap with State PSC exams

Candidates preparing for UPSC CMS can simultaneously prepare for State PSC exams using the same MCQ bank and clinical subject coverage. The additional effort for UPSC CMS is the written paper module, which adds approximately four weeks to the preparation timeline. Many CEET students pursue both UPSC and one or two State PSC targets concurrently; the batch schedule is structured to accommodate this. For the full landscape of Ayurveda government career options after BAMS, read Government Jobs After BAMS: Exam Pathways. For State PSC-specific preparation, see State PSC Ayurveda MO Exam Preparation.

Join the UPSC CMS Ayurveda preparation batch

CEET Ayurveda's UPSC track covers the 120-question MCQ paper and the written descriptive component with model frameworks, timed mock sessions, and faculty review — built for the UPSC CMS timeline.

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