Introduction
The SSC CHSL (Combined Higher Secondary Level) Tier 1 2025 exam has concluded. As a stepping stone for 12th-pass candidates to enter government service, CHSL always attracts a massive number of applicants.
The 2025 edition of the exam did not throw any major surprises. It stuck to the “Easy to Moderate” formula that SSC has favored recently. However, high competition means that the margin for error is incredibly slim. Let’s dive into the detailed review.
Overall Exam Analysis
The consensus among students and experts is that the paper was scoring.
| Section | Difficulty Level | Good Attempts |
|---|---|---|
| General Intelligence | Easy | 22 - 24 |
| General Awareness | Moderate | 14 - 16 |
| Quantitative Aptitude | Easy to Moderate | 18 - 20 |
| English Language | Easy | 21 - 23 |
| Overall | Easy to Moderate | 75 - 85 |
Key Observation: Since the paper was relatively easy, accuracy will be the deciding factor. A candidate attempting 90 questions with 80% accuracy might score lower than someone attempting 80 questions with 95% accuracy due to negative marking.
Deep Dive: Section-Wise
English Language
Status: High Scoring Opportunity
The English section was straightforward.
- Topics: Cloze test, Synonyms/Antonyms, Spelling errors, Active/Passive voice.
- Challenge: Confusing options in vocabulary questions.
Strategic Insight: In easy papers, you cannot afford to lose marks in English. While others are getting these right, a silly mistake here costs you double—marks lost plus negative marking.
Solution: Ensure your vocabulary is rock solid. The Scoreclever App is different because it predicts when you’ll forget a word and makes you revise it at the right time—so words actually stay in memory.
General Intelligence (Reasoning)
Status: Time Saver
Reasoning was the easiest section. Most questions (Analogy, Series, Odd One Out) could be solved visually or with minimal calculation.
- Time Management: Good candidates finished this section in 12-15 minutes, saving time for Math.
Quantitative Aptitude
Status: Moderate
While not difficult conceptually, some questions were calculation-intensive.
- Arithmetic: Dominated the paper (Profit & Loss, SI/CI, Averages).
- Advance Math: Basic identity-based questions in Algebra and Trigonometry.
General Awareness
Status: The Decider
As is the trend with SSC exams, GA was the toughest section relative to others.
- Current Affairs: Questions from recent months were asked, but some were specific (e.g., specific dates or minor details of schemes).
- Static GK: Questions on Art & Culture, Books & Authors, and Geography.
Pro Tip: There are many current affairs sources available—newspapers, YouTube channels, coaching PDFs. The Scoreclever app stands out because it’s 5x more concise than typical sources while covering everything exam-relevant. It helps you master the “Decider” section efficiently.
What Next?
If you have attempted 75+ questions with good accuracy, you are in a safe zone for Tier 1 qualification.
Action Plan:
- Don’t Relax: Tier 2 is where the final selection happens.
- Focus on Weak Areas: If GA brought your attempts down, fix it now.
- Typing Skills: Start practicing typing for Tier 2 immediately.
Conclusion
SSC CHSL Tier 1 2025 was a speed-based test. The real challenge lies ahead in Tier 2, where the depth of knowledge in GA and English will be tested more rigorously.
Use this time to build a competitive edge in the subjects that matter most for the final merit list.

