Loksewa Preparation Tips Nepal 2025: Complete PSC Study Guide
Complete Loksewa Aayog preparation guide for Nepal. Study tips, syllabus, age limit, best books, preparation strategy for Kharidar, Nasu, and Officer level PSC exams.
Jul 13, 2026 12 min read 5 views
Loksewa Preparation Tips Nepal 2025: Complete PSC Study Guide
The Loksewa Aayog (Public Service Commission — PSC) conducts competitive examinations for government job recruitment in Nepal. From entry-level Kharidar to Gazetted Officer positions, thousands of Nepali youth appear for Loksewa exams every year. Cracking these highly competitive exams requires systematic preparation, the right strategy, and consistent practice. This complete Loksewa preparation guide covers everything you need — syllabus, age limit, best books, study tips, and free mock tests.
What is Loksewa Aayog?
The Lok Sewa Aayog (लोक सेवा आयोग) is the constitutional body established under Article 242 of the Constitution of Nepal to recruit civil servants. It conducts examinations for:
Kharidar (Non-gazetted Second Class) — entry-level, SEE qualification
Nasuw (Nasu) (Non-gazetted First Class) — +2 qualification
Officer (Adhritti — Gazetted Third Class) — Bachelor's degree
Gazetted Second Class (Sahayak Sachib / Deputy Secretary) — promotion-based
Gazetted First Class (Sachib / Secretary) — promotion-based
Nepal Public Service Commission Exam — Overview
Exam Levels and Qualifications
| Level | Minimum Education | Age Limit (General) |
|-------|------------------|---------------------|
| Kharidar | SEE (SLC) pass | 18–35 years |
| Nasu | +2 (or equivalent) | 18–35 years |
| Officer (Gazetted 3rd) | Bachelor's degree | 21–35 years |
| Sahayak Sachib | Master's degree | 21–45 years (govt employees) |
Age Limit for Loksewa
| Category | Age Limit |
|----------|-----------|
| General (Male) | 21–35 years |
| General (Female) | 21–40 years |
| Dalit/Disabled | 21–40 years |
| Existing government employees | 21–45 years |
Can We Give Loksewa Exam in English?
Yes! Loksewa exams can be taken in either Nepali or English. You choose your preferred language when filling out the application form. The question paper will be in your chosen language (or bilingual for some subjects).
Loksewa Exam Pattern
Kharidar Exam Pattern
| Paper | Subject | Marks | Type |
|-------|---------|-------|------|
| First | General Knowledge (सामान्य ज्ञान) | 100 | Objective (MCQ) |
| Second | Intelligence Test (बुद्धि परीक्षण) | 50 | Objective |
| Third | Subject-specific (विषयगत) | 100 | Written (long answer) |
| Total | | 250 | |
Nasu Exam Pattern
| Paper | Subject | Marks | Type |
|-------|---------|-------|------|
| First | General Knowledge | 100 | Objective |
| Second | Intelligence Test + Subject | 100 | Objective + Written |
| Third | Subject-specific (2 papers) | 200 | Written |
| Interview | | 30 | |
| Total | | 430 | |
Officer (Gazetted Third Class) Exam Pattern
| Paper | Subject | Marks | Type |
|-------|---------|-------|------|
| First | General Knowledge + Aptitude | 100 | Objective |
| Second | Subject-specific (3 papers) | 300 | Written |
| Third | Service-specific | 100 | Written |
| Interview | | 40 | |
| Total | | 540 | |
Loksewa Syllabus Breakdown
General Knowledge (सामान्य ज्ञान)
This is common to all Loksewa exams:
Nepal's history — ancient, medieval, modern (Licchavi, Malla, Shah, Rana, post-2007)
Geography of Nepal — physical (Himal, Pahad, Terai), economic, social
Constitution of Nepal (2072) — fundamental rights, structure of government, federalism
Current affairs — national and international (last 6 months)
Sports, awards, and honors — national and international
United Nations and international organizations — UN, SAARC, BIMSTEC, WTO
Nepali politics and governance — parliament, judiciary, executive
Economic survey and budget — annual budget, monetary policy
Intelligence Test (बुद्धि परीक्षण)
Series completion — number, letter, figure series
Coding-decoding — letter coding, number coding
Blood relations — family tree problems
Direction sense — north/south/east/west problems
Syllogisms — logical deductions
Puzzles — seating arrangement, classification
Analogies — word and number analogies
Subject-Specific Papers
Depends on the position you're applying for:
Administration (प्रशासन): Public administration, management, governance, office procedures
Accounting (लेखा): Financial accounting, auditing, budgeting, government accounting
Engineering (इन्जिनियरिङ): Civil, mechanical, electrical (based on specialty)
Computer (कम्प्युटर): Programming, databases, networking, system analysis
Health (स्वास्थ्य): Public health, nursing, pharmacy, health management
PSC repeats question patterns. Solve at least 5 years of past papers. This helps you understand the exam pattern and important topics.
9. Stay Updated on Government Policies
Read the annual budget (presented in Jestha)
Review monetary policy (Nepal Rastra Bank)
Follow Economic Survey (published before budget)
Know key government schemes and programs
10. Stay Consistent and Positive
Loksewa preparation is a marathon, not a sprint. Study consistently for 6 months. Don't get discouraged by mock test scores — they improve with practice.
Loksewa Pass Mark
| Level | Pass Mark |
|-------|-----------|
| Kharidar (written) | 40% of total |
| Nasu (written) | 40% of total |
| Officer (written) | 40% per paper |
| Interview | Must pass to be considered |
Important: Just passing isn't enough — you need to score high enough to be in the merit list for available vacancies. For popular positions, you may need 60%+ to be selected.
Common Loksewa Mistakes to Avoid
Ignoring current affairs — many candidates fail GK due to outdated preparation
Not reading the Constitution — heavily tested, easy marks
Skipping Intelligence Test practice — scoring section, don't neglect
Not taking mock tests — knowledge without practice = failure
Cramming at the last minute — Loksewa requires consistent preparation
Ignoring subject-specific papers — these carry maximum marks
Not analyzing mock tests — repeating the same mistakes
Neglecting health — sleep and exercise are crucial for exam performance
Loksewa Preparation for Working Professionals
If you're working full-time:
Study 2–3 hours daily (early morning or evening)
Take 1 mock test on weekends
Listen to news podcasts during commute
Use Khojney's mobile-friendly mock tests during lunch breaks
Focus on high-weightage topics (GK, Intelligence Test)
Be patient — may take 1–2 years to crack while working
FAQ
How can I prepare for Loksewa exam in Nepal?
Start with the official syllabus, read Gorkhapatra daily, study Nepal Parichaya and the Constitution, practice Intelligence Test, take weekly mock tests, and maintain a current affairs notebook.
What is the age limit for Loksewa in Nepal?
For general (male): 21–35 years. For women, Dalits, and disabled: 21–40 years. For existing government employees: 21–45 years. Kharidar allows 18–35 years.
Can we give Loksewa exam in English?
Yes, Loksewa exams can be taken in either Nepali or English. Choose your preferred language when applying.
What is the qualification for Kharidar?
SEE (SLC) pass is the minimum qualification for Kharidar. For Nasu: +2 pass. For Officer: Bachelor's degree.
What is the pass mark for Loksewa?
The pass mark is 40% of total marks for written exams. However, you need to score much higher to be in the merit list for available vacancies.
How many times can I take Loksewa exam?
There's no limit on attempts, as long as you meet the age criteria. Many candidates clear Loksewa on their 2nd or 3rd attempt.
Which is the best Loksewa preparation book?
Nepal Parichaya for General Knowledge, RS Aggarwal for Intelligence Test, Constitution of Nepal 2072 for constitution, and Mero Loksewa Magazine for current affairs.
Can I prepare for Loksewa for free?
Yes. Use Khojney's free Loksewa mock tests, read Gorkhapatra online (free), watch YouTube preparation channels, and download the official syllabus from PSC website.
What is Loksewa Aayog called in English?
Loksewa Aayog is called the Public Service Commission (PSC) in English.
How long does Loksewa preparation take?
For serious preparation: 6 months (4–6 hours daily). For working professionals: 1–2 years (2–3 hours daily). Consistency matters more than total hours.