Daily Current Affairs Quiz

Practice daily current affairs with our updated quiz questions for SSC, RRB, Banking, Railway and other government exams.

Lal Qila - Red Fort, Delhi
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Daily Current Affairs Quiz

Practice daily current affairs with our updated quiz questions for SSC, RRB, Banking, Railway and other government exams.

Daily Current Affairs Quiz: February 2026

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Daily Current Affairs Quiz - 23 Feb 2026

20 Questions · Moderate

Attempted: — times

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Daily Quiz – 20 Feb 2026

5 Questions · Moderate

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Why current affairs matter for exams

Why daily current affairs matter for government exams

Most aspirants leave current affairs for the last few weeks. That’s a mistake. Exams like SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, RRB NTPC, IBPS PO, and SBI Clerk dedicate a solid chunk of marks to recent events, schemes, and appointments. If you’re only cramming names and dates a month before the test, you’ll keep forgetting what you read. Spreading it over months with a small daily dose works better.

Our daily current affairs quiz is built around that idea. Each set is short enough to finish in a few minutes—during a commute or a break. You pick a date from the calendar, attempt the quiz, and get your score right away. No signup is required to try. The questions cover national and international news, sports, awards, government policies, and banking updates that often show up in prelims and mains.

Which exams need current affairs?

Almost every major recruitment in India does. SSC tier 1 has a general awareness section where a lot of questions come from the last six to twelve months. RRB NTPC and Group D both test general knowledge that includes current affairs. In banking, IBPS and SBI papers ask about RBI circulars, new schemes, and economic surveys. State PSCs and police exams also expect you to know recent appointments, new laws, and key events. So whether you’re aiming for a central or state-level job, staying updated pays off.

How to use these quizzes without burning out

Don’t try to do five quizzes in one day. One quiz per day is enough. Fix a time—early morning or late evening—and stick to it. After you submit, go through the answers you got wrong and note the correct ones in a small notebook or a doc. Revise that list once a week. Over time you’ll build a personal “current affairs bank” that you can skim before the exam.

Use the date filter on this page to pick any day you missed. If you were busy on a Tuesday, you can come back later and take that day’s quiz. The idea is to stay consistent, not perfect. Even 15–20 minutes every day adds up. Many toppers say they didn’t do anything special for current affairs except read one source and practice daily. This section is that practice.

What we cover in the questions

The questions are framed the way they appear in real exams: multiple choice, one correct answer. Topics include Union and state government schemes, summits and treaties, sports events and winners, books and authors, science and tech in the news, appointments in important posts, and changes in banking or economic policy. We add new quizzes regularly so that the content stays relevant.

You can combine this with our SSC practice sets, mock tests, and PYQ sections for a full preparation plan. A lot of students use the date-wise list to revise a particular week or month before their exam. Bookmark this page and visit whenever you have a few minutes. No login is needed to attempt the quizzes; only if you want to track your accuracy over time do you need an account. For mixed-topic daily practice, try our daily quiz (Reasoning, Quant, GK). Good luck with your preparation.

Frequently asked questions – Current affairs quiz

Which exams have current affairs? SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, RRB NTPC, IBPS PO, SBI Clerk, and most state PSC and police exams have a GK or current affairs section. Questions often come from the last 6–12 months.

How many current affairs quizzes should I do per day? One quiz per day is enough. Consistency matters more than volume. Use the date filter to attempt any day you missed.

Is the current affairs quiz free? Yes. You can attempt all quizzes without signing up. Create an account only if you want to track your score and accuracy over time.

Related resources

For daily mixed-topic practice (Reasoning, Quant, English, GK), use our Daily Quiz. For full-length timed tests, try Mock Tests. For exam-wise practice and PYQ, go to SSC, Banking, or RRB and choose your exam. For calculators and predictors, see Online Tools.