SSC Stenographer 2026: Grade C & D — Complete Guide for Aspiring Steno Officers

The Staff Selection Commission Stenographer (Grade C and Grade D) examination is a recruitment that most government job aspirants overlook — and that is precisely what makes it an opportunity. With fewer candidates than SSC CGL or CHSL, a unique skill-based selection component (stenography speed test), and permanent central government postings with good pay, SSC Stenographer is worth targeting seriously.

Stenographers work in central government ministries and departments — taking dictation from senior officers, preparing official documents, maintaining records, and providing secretarial support. The role combines technical skill (shorthand speed) with general government office work.


SSC Stenographer 2026 — Overview

Detail Information
Conducting Body Staff Selection Commission (SSC)
Posts Stenographer Grade C and Grade D
Grade C Pay Level 6 (₹35,400–₹1,12,400)
Grade D Pay Level 4 (₹25,500–₹81,100)
Qualification Class 12 pass from any recognised board
Age Limit Grade C: 18–30 years; Grade D: 18–27 years
Official Website ssc.nic.in

Grade C vs Grade D

Factor Grade C Grade D
Pay level Level 6 (₹35,400) Level 4 (₹25,500)
Shorthand speed 100 words per minute 80 words per minute
Posting Group B (Non-Gazetted) Group C
Departments Higher-level ministries, Parliament Various central govt offices
Age limit (General) 18–30 years 18–27 years

Grade C is the more prestigious posting with better pay — but requires higher shorthand speed (100 WPM vs 80 WPM).


SSC Stenographer 2026 Exam Pattern

Stage 1 — Written Examination (Computer Based Test)

Subject Questions Marks Time
General Intelligence & Reasoning 50 50
General Awareness 50 50
English Language & Comprehension 100 100
Total 200 200 120 minutes
  • Negative marking: 0.25 per wrong answer
  • English carries 50% of the written exam marks — the highest of any SSC exam

Stage 2 — Skill Test (Stenography Speed Test)

Grade Dictation Speed Transcription Time (English) Transcription Time (Hindi)
Grade C 100 WPM 40 minutes 55 minutes
Grade D 80 WPM 50 minutes 65 minutes

How the skill test works:

  • A passage is dictated at the specified speed (100 or 80 WPM) for 10 minutes
  • Candidates take dictation in shorthand
  • They then type the transcribed text on a computer within the given time
  • Transcription is evaluated for accuracy

The skill test is qualifying — you must pass it to be appointed, but marks are not added to your written exam score.


Complete Syllabus

General Intelligence & Reasoning

  • Analogies — verbal and non-verbal
  • Similarities and differences
  • Space visualisation
  • Problem solving and analysis
  • Judgment
  • Decision making
  • Visual memory
  • Discrimination
  • Observation
  • Relationship concepts
  • Arithmetical reasoning
  • Verbal and figural classification
  • Arithmetical number series
  • Non-verbal series
  • Coding and decoding
  • Statement and conclusion
  • Syllogisms

General Awareness

  • Current events — national and international
  • India and its neighbouring countries — history, culture, geography, economy, polity
  • Scientific research
  • General science — Physics, Chemistry, Biology (Class 10 level)
  • Sports, awards, books and authors
  • Important dates and events

English Language & Comprehension (100 marks — most important)

This section is twice the marks of any other section. English preparation deserves proportionally more time.

  • Spot the error
  • Fill in the blanks
  • Synonyms and antonyms
  • Spelling/detecting misspelled words
  • Idioms and phrases
  • One-word substitution
  • Improvement of sentences
  • Active and passive voice
  • Direct and indirect narration
  • Shuffling of sentence parts / sentences in a passage
  • Cloze passage
  • Comprehension passage (multiple — the largest component)
  • Para jumbles
  • Reading comprehension at a higher level than CHSL

Eligibility

Qualification: Class 12 pass from any recognised board. No graduation required.

Age Limit:

Post General OBC SC/ST
Grade C 18–30 years 18–33 years 18–35 years
Grade D 18–27 years 18–30 years 18–32 years

The Stenography Skill — What It Requires

Stenography (shorthand writing) is a skill that requires months of dedicated practice. The two main shorthand systems used in India are:

English shorthand: Pitman Shorthand system — a symbolic notation system where sounds are represented by specific symbols. For Grade C (100 WPM), this is a very high speed requiring consistent daily practice over 6–12 months.

Hindi shorthand: Devanagari shorthand systems — similar symbolic notation for Hindi phonetics.

Can you learn stenography for this exam? Yes — but only if you start early. 80 WPM (Grade D) requires approximately 6–8 months of daily practice starting from scratch. 100 WPM (Grade C) typically requires 9–12 months. Candidates who try to learn shorthand in the final 2 months before the exam almost always fail the skill test.

Where to learn:

  • Private shorthand institutes in most cities
  • Government ITIs that offer stenography courses
  • Self-learning using Pitman shorthand textbooks + online practice tools

Daily practice requirement: Minimum 1.5–2 hours of shorthand practice every day consistently. Speed builds gradually — do not expect rapid progress in the first 2–3 months.


Preparation Strategy

English is the Priority (100/200 marks)

No other SSC exam gives English such high weightage. Spend 50% of your written exam preparation time on English specifically.

Daily English routine:

  • Read one English editorial (20 minutes)
  • Practice 20 comprehension questions (15 minutes)
  • Grammar drills — error spotting, fill in the blanks (15 minutes)
  • Vocabulary — 10 new words daily with usage (10 minutes)

English at the SSC Stenographer level is harder than CHSL and comparable to CGL in terms of comprehension passage difficulty. The questions test both grammar accuracy and reading speed.

Reasoning and GK — Moderate Investment

These sections carry 50 marks each. Standard SSC-level preparation is sufficient. Cover high-frequency topics: analogies, series, coding-decoding for Reasoning; current affairs + static GK for General Awareness.

Skill Test — Start Immediately

If you are serious about SSC Stenographer, start shorthand practice from Day 1 of your preparation — before you even open a GK book. The skill test is the most time-intensive component and cannot be rushed.

Shorthand practice progression:

  • Month 1–2: Learn the basic symbols, practice writing at dictation speed 30–40 WPM
  • Month 3–4: Build to 50–60 WPM
  • Month 5–6: Reach 70–80 WPM (Grade D target)
  • Month 7–9: Push to 90–100 WPM (Grade C target)
  • Final weeks: Transcription practice — typing from shorthand notes accurately and quickly

Transcription accuracy matters as much as speed. A candidate who takes dictation at 80 WPM but transcribes with 15% errors will fail. Accuracy of 95%+ is needed for reliable qualification.


Why SSC Stenographer Is Underrated

Lower competition: Because of the shorthand requirement, many SSC aspirants skip Stenographer. Those who develop the shorthand skill face proportionally less competition than in CGL or CHSL.

Grade C pay at Class 12 level: Level 6 pay (₹35,400) for a Class 12 pass candidate is exceptional — comparable to SSC CGL posts that require graduation and much harder competition.

Central government posting: Stenographers work in central government ministries — including high-profile postings in Parliament, PMO-supporting ministries, and major central departments.


Official Link

SSC Official Website: ssc.nic.in


Published by ExamzPrep — free government exam preparation for serious aspirants. Last updated June 2026.

Leave a Comment