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The annual · ships every March · ~76 pages · for the May exam

The booklet we'd hand to a Law Optional batch.
Now open to every aspirant.

Twelve months of pibtracker, distilled into the single document an aspirant carries into the last 60 days before Prelims. Theme-organised. Trap-watch consolidated. Every Cabinet decision, every summit outcome, every scheme launch from May 2025 through April 2026 that we judged exam-relevant — with editorial gloss, the source PRID, and the question pattern it is most likely to anchor.

pibtracker.
Annual booklet · 2026 edition

UPSC Prelims
2026 — The pre-Prelims compilation.

May 2025 – April 2026 · for the 24 May 2026 paper
P@10
72%
verified post-exam
Pages76
Releases curated1,180
Trap-watch flags82
Blind-spot items flagged32
Last 60-day capsule10 pages

2026 edition — shipped, scored, verifiable.

Posted Sun 8 March 2026 · 76 pages · paid subscribers only · annual

This is our flagship document. Subscribers can download it any time during their annual subscription; the file lives in the My Account page. The 2027 edition ships in March 2027 and covers May 2026 through April 2027.

The 2026 edition was published on 8 March 2026, ten weeks before the 24 May Prelims paper. The numbers we now publish on the backtest page — including 72% P@10 on the 2026 cohort — were verified after the paper was held, against the booklet's contents as it shipped.

Verifiable claim

The 2026 booklet caught 72% of the 2026 Prelims source releases in its top tier.

Of the 18 Current Affairs questions on UPSC Prelims 2026 with a verifiable PIB source, the 2026 pre-Prelims booklet had given top-tier prominence to 13 — including the India AI Impact Summit, Vizhinjam International Seaport, Matsya-6000 / Deep Ocean Mission, Zero FIR under BNSS, Sudarshan Chakra Mission, the BUR-4 climate report, Garba's UNESCO inscription, and the National Quantum Mission. Each of those releases is in our Verification Sheet PDF, with the question number, the source PRID, and a one-click link to the official PIB page.

72%
Top-10 hit rate · 2026 cohort
5
Median rank · 2026 source release
89%
Top-20 hit rate · 2026 cohort

A coaching CA digest making a similar claim would, in our experience, not publish the question-by-question verification. Ours sits in /backtest/2026 — every row clickable to pib.gov.in.

What's in the 2026 edition

Six parts · 22 chapters · 76 pages · ~1,180 release boxes · designed at A4 for print + annotation

Part I · pages 3–8

Editor's letter & the year in one essay

6 pages · ~12 min
  • What 2025-26 was about (the AI year, the maritime year)
  • The trap patterns UPSC used most often this cycle
  • How to read the rest of the booklet
Part II · pages 9–22

Cabinet decisions, mission launches, scheme expansions

14 pages · 220 boxes · ~28 min
  • All 47 Cabinet decisions of the year
  • National missions launched (8) and expanded (4)
  • Scheme rollouts & revisions (62 total)
Part III · pages 23–34

Foreign affairs & multilaterals

12 pages · 190 boxes · ~24 min
  • India as host: AI Summit, MILAN, G20-finance track
  • India abroad: 14 PM foreign visits, 22 joint statements
  • Multilateral memberships and chairmanships
Part IV · pages 35–48

Environment, science, technology, defence

14 pages · 220 boxes · ~28 min
  • BUR-4 + India's climate commitments
  • ISRO milestones · Bharat Forecast System · Quantum Mission
  • Sudarshan Chakra · Su-30 deals · Akula update
Part V · pages 49–60

Economy, finance, governance

12 pages · 190 boxes · ~24 min
  • Budget 2026-27 in detail, with last 3 budgets compared
  • RBI MPC, SEBI majors, FRBM glide-path
  • Election reforms, Lokpal, BNSS implementation
Part VI · pages 61–76

Trap-watch · blind-spot reading list · last 60 days

18 pages · 280 boxes + flags · ~36 min
  • 82 trap flags consolidated, indexed by topic
  • 32 blind-spot items with non-PIB sources
  • Last 60 days capsule — 10 pages, ~140 boxes, highest-yield section

Read the editor's letter

Part I · Chapter 0 · pp. 3–8 · ~12 min

The 2025–26 year in one essay

An opening note before the chapters, telling the year as a story so the rest of the booklet has shape.

Twelve months ago, when we sent the 2025 booklet to subscribers, the running joke in the De Facto IAS Law Optional WhatsApp group was that I had spent six pages of the editor's letter on the Paris AI Action Summit. Several students wrote back politely to ask whether one summit really merited that much space. We held the line and they got the question on Q95 — the Paris AI Action Summit, almost exactly as the booklet had previewed it. So this year, when we opened the editor's letter again with the India AI Impact Summit, no one wrote back. They had learned the pattern.

And the pattern is what this booklet is built around. UPSC's Current Affairs questions over the past six years cluster around a small set of release types — Cabinet approvals, summit declarations, scheme launches at the ministry tier, mission announcements, and a long tail of policy notifications. They almost never come from routine ministerial pressers, from photo-ops, or from cultural events. They almost always come from PIB releases that carried a backgrounder or an English-rendering note. We have organised the year through that lens.

The shape of 2025–26 was set in three weeks. First the India AI Impact Summit (February 2026), which became the year's largest single source of exam material — five separate question patterns we expect on the May 2026 paper trace to that one week of releases. Second the Sudarshan Chakra Mission (August 2025), the defence event that ended the post-Operation Sindoor military doctrine debate. And third — quieter, but already used by UPSC in past cycles — the BUR-4 climate submission (December 2024, surfacing as 2026 Q21). If you read only three chapters of this booklet, read Chapter 11 (AI), Chapter 19 (Defence), and Chapter 24 (Climate).

A note on what this booklet is not. It does not replace your textbook. It does not cover NCERTs. It does not handle static portions of GS-1. It does not anticipate every trap. It is one document, narrow in scope, that tries to do one thing very well — capture the year's PIB-anchored exam-relevant news with enough editorial context that you can revise from it in the sixty days before Prelims and not feel like you are reading raw newswire. The trap-watch chapter at the end is the closest we get to anticipating specific exam framings; the blind-spot reading list is our attempt to be honest about what we cannot catch.

If you bought this booklet expecting an MCQ test series, please return it (refund policy on the refund page). If you bought it expecting a PIB filter calibrated by people who have been grading Prelims-style mocks since 2018, you have the right document. Read it slow, mark it up, come back to the trap-watch chapter in the last week.

Past editions

Subscribers can download every back edition during their subscription period.

2026 edition · current

For the 24 May 2026 paper

76 pages · 1,180 releases · shipped 8 March 2026 · 2-col box grid

The AI year — Summit, ILACI, Bengaluru AI Safety Institute. The maritime year — MILAN, Vizhinjam, Matsya-6000.

P@10 = 72% on the actual 2026 Prelims paper · verified post-exam
2025 edition

For the 25 May 2025 paper

72 pages · 1,060 releases · shipped 2 March 2025

The post-G20 year. Paris AI Summit, BIMSTEC Bangkok, Critical Minerals Mission, PM Surya Ghar.

P@10 = 29% on the 2025 Prelims paper · honest weak spot, see 2025 backtest
2027 edition · pre-order

For the May 2027 paper

~76 pages estimated · ships March 2027

Covers May 2026 – April 2027. Will include downstream Cabinet decisions from the AI Summit, the upcoming Union Budget 2027-28, and the first year of BNSS implementation review.

Included for subscribers active in March 2027 · no extra charge

The 2027 booklet ships March 2027.

Subscribe before March and the 2027 edition is included automatically. Active subscribers also get every past edition listed above and the live daily, weekly, and monthly feeds in between. ₹599 a year. Cancel anytime from your account.

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