GJS Exam Pattern 2026: Complete Gujarat Judiciary Exam Structure, Marks and Qualifying Rules

July 15, 2026
Gujarat judiciary exam pattern 2026

GJS Exam Pattern 2026 | Gujarat Judiciary Exam Pattern | GJS Prelims Mains Interview | Negative Marking | Gujarati Language Paper | Qualifying Marks

GJS exam pattern 2026 has one element that trips up more candidates than the law syllabus itself — the Gujarati language paper in the Prelims. The Prelims is not one paper but two: Paper 1 is the law MCQ paper (100 marks, 2 hours), and Paper 2 is the Gujarati Language Test (50 marks, 30 minutes) — mandatory only for candidates who did not study Gujarati at SSC or HSC level. Mains, by contrast, has no Gujarati paper — it is purely two descriptive law papers. Every other aspect of the Gujarat judiciary exam pattern 2026 is equally specific and worth understanding precisely — because the qualifying thresholds at each stage are different, and missing any one of them ends your candidature regardless of your performance in the others.

This guide covers the complete GJS exam pattern 2026 stage by stage — Prelims, Mains, Gujarati Language Paper, and Viva Voce — with the exact marks, duration, negative marking rules, and qualifying thresholds that appear in the official Gujarat High Court notification.

GJS Exam Pattern 2026 — All Stages at a Glance

Gujarat Judiciary Exam Pattern 2026 — Quick Reference:     Conducting Authority: Gujarat High Court | gujarathighcourt.nic.in   Post: Civil Judge (Junior Division)   Vacancies 2026: 237 (notified April 24, 2026 — subject to revision)     PRELIMS — Paper 1: Law subjects | 100 marks | 2 hours | 0.33 negative marking   PRELIMS — Paper 2: Gujarati Language Test | 50 marks | 30 minutes             (Only for candidates who did NOT study Gujarati at SSC/HSC level) MAINS  — Paper I: Criminal Law | 100 marks | 3 hours (descriptive) MAINS  — Paper II: Civil Law | 100 marks | 3 hours (descriptive)   VIVA VOCE: 50 marks     Final Merit: Mains (200) + Viva (50) = 250 marks only   Prelims marks NOT counted in final merit

GJS Prelims Pattern 2026 — Stage 1 of the Gujarat Judiciary Exam

The GJS Prelims is an elimination test. Its marks do not appear in the final merit list — it only qualifies you for the Mains. Clearing it is necessary; maximising it beyond the qualifying threshold does not directly improve your final rank.

GJS Prelims Paper 1 — Law MCQ Paper

ParameterDetails
Total Marks100 marks
Duration2 hours
Question TypeObjective — MCQ
Language of PaperEnglish
Question Distribution100 questions on law subjects
Marks Per Question1 mark per correct answer
Negative Marking0.33 marks deducted per wrong or multiple answer
Qualifying Marks — General50% (minimum 50 out of 100)
Qualifying Marks — SC/ST/SEBC/EWS/PwBD45%
OMR EvaluationComputer scanning — no rechecking entertained
Prelims in Final MeritNot counted — qualifying only

GJS Prelims Paper 2 — Gujarati Language Test

Prelims Paper 2 is a separate Gujarati Language Test of 50 marks, 30 minutes — only for candidates who did not pass SSC or HSC with Gujarati as a subject. If you studied in English, Hindi, or any other medium, you must take this test and score at least 40% to become eligible for the Mains examination. The marks from this paper are NOT counted in the final merit — it is qualifying only. The Mains examination has no Gujarati language paper.

Practically: candidates who are exempt from Paper 2 (having studied Gujarati at SSC/HSC) only need to clear Paper 1. Non-Gujarati medium candidates must clear both Paper 1 (50%) and Paper 2 (40%) to reach the Mains. Score required in Paper 2 is 40% — that means 20 out of 50. It is not a high bar, but it cannot be left for the week before the exam.

GJS Mains Exam Pattern 2026 — Stage 2 of the Gujarat Judiciary Exam

The GJS Mains is where GJS 2026 selection is determined — descriptive written answers, judgment writing, problem questions. This is where selection is determined. Two law papers, both 100 marks each, with a minimum qualifying threshold of 50% per paper for General category candidates.

GJS Mains — Paper I (Civil Law)

ParameterDetails
Marks100 marks
Duration3 hours
TypeDescriptive — written answers
Language of AnswersEnglish or Gujarati (candidate’s choice)
Minimum Qualifying — General50% (50 out of 100)
Minimum Qualifying — SC/ST/SEBC/EWS/PwBD45%
Key TopicsCode of Civil Procedure, Indian Contract Act, Specific Relief Act, Transfer of Property Act, Constitution of India, Personal Laws (Hindu and Muslim), Limitation Act, Gujarat-specific legislation

GJS Mains — Paper II (Criminal Law)

ParameterDetails
Marks100 marks
Duration3 hours
TypeDescriptive — written answers
Language of AnswersEnglish or Gujarati (candidate’s choice)
Minimum Qualifying — General50% (50 out of 100)
Minimum Qualifying — SC/ST/SEBC/EWS/PwBD45%
Key TopicsBNS 2023, BNSS 2023, BSA 2023 (primary law from 1 July 2024), Juvenile Justice Act, POCSO Act, Negotiable Instruments Act, Gujarat Prohibition Act, local criminal legislation
Criminal Law in GJS Mains 2026 — What Changed from Previous Cycles:     BNS 2023, BNSS 2023, and BSA 2023 replaced IPC, CrPC, and the Indian Evidence   Act from 1 July 2024. For GJS 2026, these new codes are the primary criminal law   texts for Paper II.  A candidate writing ‘Section 302 IPC’ instead of ‘Section 103 BNS’ in a 2026   GJS criminal judgment answer is citing an outdated code. Every criminal law session   at Jyoti Judiciary Coaching has used BNS, BNSS, and BSA as primary texts since   1 July 2024. Aditya Gaur (1st Rank GJS 2022) and Shreya Singhal (9th Rank GJS   2025) both prepared through this coaching — the 2026 batch follows the same   updated criminal law framework.

GJS Prelims Paper 2 — Gujarati Language Test (For Non-Gujarati Medium Candidates)

This is the stage that most GJS pattern guides either skip or mention in one line. It deserves its own section because it eliminates a significant proportion of non-Gujarat candidates every cycle.

Who Has to Take the Gujarati Language Paper?

Every candidate who did NOT pass their Secondary (SSC) and Higher Secondary (HSC) examinations with Gujarati as a subject at the Higher Level must appear for the Test of Gujarati Language. This is a mandatory paper — not optional. If you studied in Hindi medium, Marathi medium, English medium, or any medium other than Gujarati, you must take this test.

Gujarati Language Paper — Marks and Qualifying Rules

ParameterDetails
Marks50 marks
Duration1.5 hours (90 minutes)
TypeLanguage proficiency test — Gujarati reading, writing, comprehension
Minimum Qualifying40% (20 out of 50)
In Final MeritNOT counted in final merit — qualifying only
When TakenAlongside Prelims Paper 1 — taken on the same day as the law MCQ paper
Consequence of FailingNot eligible for Mains stage — candidates must clear both Prelims Paper 1 and Paper 2 to proceed
The Gujarati Language Paper — What Most Candidates Underestimate:     Failing the Gujarati language paper disqualifies you from the GJS selection   process even if your Civil Law and Criminal Law Mains papers are strong.   The 40% minimum is not a formality — candidates who have not prepared   specifically for this paper have failed it despite performing well in law subjects.     At Jyoti Judiciary Coaching, Gujarati language preparation for the Prelims Paper 2   is built into the GJS coaching programme from Month 3 for non-Gujarati medium   candidates. Leaving Paper 2 preparation for the final weeks before the Prelims exam   is the most common reason otherwise-prepared GJS candidates fail to qualify for   the Mains stage.

GJS Viva Voce Pattern 2026 — Stage 3 of the Gujarat Judiciary Exam

GJS 2026 Viva Voce carries 50 marks. This is lower than UKPSC’s 100-mark interview but higher as a proportion of the total merit marks than it might initially appear — because the final merit is calculated on Mains (200 marks) plus Viva (50 marks), making the interview 20% of the total merit score.

ParameterDetails
Marks50 marks
Minimum Qualifying40% (20 out of 50)
Conducted ByGujarat High Court panel
PurposeAssess mental alertness, knowledge of law, logical exposition, balance of judgement, communication, ethics, intellectual depth
In Final MeritYES — counted in final merit along with Mains
NoteFailing to score 40% in Viva Voce disqualifies the candidate from the select list

GJS 2026 Final Merit and Qualifying Marks — What Counts and What Does Not

GJS qualifying marks and merit calculation — this is where many candidates misread the GJS pattern. Three stages, but not all three count toward final ranking.

StageMarksCounts in Final Merit?
Prelims — Law MCQ Paper (Paper 1)100 marksNo — qualifying only
Prelims — Gujarati Language Test (Paper 2)50 marksNo — qualifying only (Prelims stage)
Mains — Paper I Civil Law100 marksYes
Mains — Paper II Criminal Law100 marksYes
Viva Voce50 marksYes
Total Merit Marks250 marksMains (200) + Viva (50)

Practical implication: two candidates who score identically in the Prelims can end up with very different final ranks depending on their Mains and Viva performance. A candidate who just clears Prelims at 50% and then performs strongly in Mains can outscore a candidate who topped Prelims but underperformed in Mains. Knowing this should shape how you allocate preparation time — Prelims preparation should be sufficient to clear 50%, not maximised at the cost of Mains depth.

GJS Exam Pattern 2026 — How It Compares to Other State Judiciary Exams

Candidates who have prepared for RJS or UP PCS J alongside GJS need to know how the Gujarat judiciary exam pattern differs — because several key parameters are not the same.

ParameterGJS 2026RJS 2026UP PCS J 2026
Prelims Negative Marking0.33 per wrong answerNo negative marking0.33 per wrong answer
Prelims Qualifying50% General40% General50% General
Mains Qualifying50% per paper General35% per paper General50% per paper General
Interview Marks50 marks35 marks100 marks
Language RequirementGujarati proficiency test (if non-Gujarati medium)Hindi Devanagari essayHindi + English essays (100 marks each)
Final Merit Based OnMains + Viva (250 total)Mains + Interview (335 total)Mains + Interview (1100 total)
Vacancies 202623760-100 (expected)300+ (expected)

The GJS has the highest Mains qualifying threshold among these three — 50% per paper versus RJS’s 35% per paper. That single difference changes preparation strategy: in RJS, a weak paper can be compensated if other papers are strong and the aggregate clears 40%. In GJS, each Mains paper independently must reach 50%. A candidate who scores 72 in Paper I and 48 in Paper II is eliminated in GJS — regardless of aggregate.

GJS Exam Pattern 2026 — Preparation Strategy Based on the Pattern

Prelims — Clear It, Don’t Over-Invest

The Prelims is qualifying at 50%. Spending more than 20-25% of your total preparation time on Prelims is misallocating effort. Clear it by ensuring solid coverage of the law subjects tested and by specifically addressing the 25 Gujarati-language MCQs. The rest of the preparation time belongs to Mains depth and Viva readiness.

Mains — Both Papers Must Independently Hit 50%

Criminal Law Paper II cannot be treated as secondary to Civil Law Paper I. Both must independently clear 50%. A candidate who is stronger in civil law must deliberately ensure criminal law depth — BNS 2023, BNSS 2023, BSA 2023 judgment writing, charge framing, and new provisions (Zero FIR under BNSS Section 173, mandatory forensic under BNSS Section 176(3), staggered custody under BNSS Section 187) that carry fresh question weight in GJS 2026.

Gujarati Language Paper — Start in Month 3

If you are a non-Gujarati medium candidate, do not leave the language paper for the final month. Three months of structured Gujarati essay and comprehension practice, starting from Month 3, is far more manageable than trying to reach 40% proficiency in six weeks. The paper is 50 marks and only requires 40% — but that 40% must come from actual writing practice, not from passive reading.

Viva Voce — It’s 20% of Your Merit

50 marks out of 250 total merit marks is 20%. In a competition where Mains scores among shortlisted candidates are often within 10-15 marks of each other, 10 marks’ difference in the Viva — which is achievable through preparation — can shift your rank significantly. Start building your Gujarat-specific legal awareness file from Month 6. One Gujarat High Court judgment per week, summarised by ratio and interview application, is a low-effort, high-return practice.

Frequently Asked Questions — GJS Exam Pattern 2026

What Is the GJS Exam Pattern for 2026? — Full Gujarat Judiciary Exam Structure

The Gujarat Judiciary exam pattern 2026 has three stages: Preliminary Exam (100 marks, 2 hours, 0.33 negative marking, 50% qualifying for General category), Mains (Paper I Civil Law 100 marks and Paper II Criminal Law 100 marks, both descriptive, 50% qualifying per paper for General), with a separate Gujarati Language Paper (50 marks, 1.5 hours, 40% qualifying) for non-Gujarati medium candidates, and Viva Voce (50 marks, 40% qualifying). Final merit is based on Mains plus Viva out of 250 marks — Prelims marks are not counted.

Is there negative marking in GJS Prelims 2026?

Yes. The GJS Prelims 2026 has negative marking of 0.33 marks for each wrong answer or multiple answers marked for a single question. This is different from RJS, which has no negative marking in its Prelims. At 0.33 per wrong answer, three wrong answers cancel out one correct answer. This changes the answering strategy — do not attempt questions where you are genuinely uncertain.

Is the Gujarati language paper compulsory for all GJS candidates?

No — only for candidates who did not pass their Secondary (SSC) and Higher Secondary (HSC) examinations with Gujarati as a subject. Candidates who studied Gujarati at SSC or HSC level are exempt. All others must appear for the Gujarati Language Test in Prelims (50 marks, 30 minutes, 40% qualifying). This is a Prelims-stage paper — the Mains has no Gujarati language component. Failing the Gujarati Language Test means you cannot proceed to the Mains stage.

How many marks is the GJS interview?

The GJS Viva Voce carries 50 marks, with a minimum qualifying threshold of 40% (20 marks). It is conducted by a Gujarat High Court panel. These marks are added to the Mains score for the final merit list. Unlike some state judiciary exams where the interview is a small proportion of total marks, the GJS Viva at 50 marks out of 250 total merit marks is 20% of the selection score — proportionally significant.

What is the qualifying marks in GJS Mains 2026?

The minimum qualifying mark in GJS Mains 2026 is 50% per paper for General category candidates — meaning at least 50 out of 100 in both Paper I Civil Law and Paper II Criminal Law independently. For SC/ST/SEBC/EWS and PwBD candidates, the qualifying threshold is 45% per paper. Both papers must independently meet this threshold — failing in one paper eliminates the candidate even if the aggregate across both papers clears 50%.

How many vacancies are there in Gujarat judiciary 2026?

The Gujarat High Court notified approximately 237 Civil Judge vacancies for the 2026 cycle on April 24, 2026. The High Court retains the right to revise this number. Always verify the current vacancy count directly from the official Gujarat High Court website at gujarathighcourt.nic.in before making preparation decisions.

Gujarat Judiciary — Related Articles and Coaching

→  Best Gujarat Judiciary Coaching in India — GJS Results | Jyoti Judiciary Coaching  — Aditya Gaur 1st Rank GJS 2022, Shreya Singhal 9th Rank GJS 2025 — verified results

→  Gujarat Judiciary Coaching — Online and Offline Programme  — Complete GJS preparation programme at Jyoti Judiciary Coaching

→  BNSS vs CrPC: Complete Section-Wise Comparison for Judiciary Exam  — Section mapping, Zero FIR, staggered custody — essential for GJS Paper II

→  BSA vs Indian Evidence Act: Complete Comparison for Judiciary Exam  — Section 63 BSA, dying declaration, expert opinion — GJS Criminal Law Paper II

All the best — from Jyoti Judiciary Coaching

Written by Advocate Jyoti Saxena — LLB, LLM, CS, Bar Council of Rajasthan, practising at Jaipur Family Court, Jaipur District Court, and the Rajasthan High Court. Gujarat judiciary coaching at Jyoti Judiciary Coaching has produced Aditya Gaur (1st Rank GJS 2022), Mayuri Jain (11th Rank GJS 2022), Shreya Singhal (9th Rank GJS 2025), and Teena Talesara (22nd Rank GJS 2025) — four verified, named rank holders across two GJS cycles. Contact: +91 99290 96546 | jyotijudiciary.com

GJS exam pattern data sourced from official Gujarat High Court notifications. Vacancy count of 237 is based on April 2026 notification and is subject to revision. Always verify from gujarathighcourt.nic.in before applying.

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