Every year when UPSC results come out, one question floods every WhatsApp group, every Muslim family dinner table, every coaching centre notice board across India. How many Muslims made it this time? On March 6, 2026, we finally got the answer. And honestly? It is one of the best answers this community has received in years.
53 Muslims cleared UPSC Civil Services Examination 2025, results of which were officially declared on March 6, 2026. Out of 958 total candidates selected across IAS, IPS, IFS and other central services, 53 were Muslim — nearly double last year’s count of just 26. Four of them broke into the top 100. One of them, A R Rajah Mohaideen, finished at All India Rank 7. In the entire country. Out of over 9 lakh registered candidates.
Let that sink in.
A R Rajah Mohaideen — The Name Everyone Is Searching Right Now
If you searched “muslim upsc result 2026” today, there is one name you need to know first. A R Rajah Mohaideen, All India Rank 7. He is the highest ranked Muslim candidate in this year’s results and the only Muslim in the entire top 10. His achievement is being celebrated across Tamil Nadu and across Muslim communities nationwide. Behind him, three more Muslims cracked the top 100 — Ifra Shams Ansari at Rank 24, Nabiya Parvez at Rank 29, and Hassan Khan at Rank 95.
Complete List of All 53 Muslims Who Cleared UPSC 2026 Results
This is what everyone is looking for. Here is every single Muslim candidate, rank by rank:
| Rank | Name |
|---|---|
| 7 | A R Rajah Mohaideen |
| 24 | Ifra Shams Ansari |
| 29 | Nabiya Parvez |
| 95 | Hassan Khan |
| 124 | Arfa Usmani |
| 135 | Khan Saima Seraj Ahmed |
| 157 | Wasim Ur Rahman |
| 253 | Sophia Siddiqui |
| 254 | Towseef Ahmad Ganaie |
| 307 | Mantasha |
| 321 | Asad Aqeel |
| 354 | Md Ishteyaque Rahman |
| 382 | Mohammed Ashmil Shah |
| 411 | Shahida Begum S |
| 415 | Shadab Ali Khan |
| 429 | Muhammed Swalah T A |
| 455 | Shoiab |
| 478 | Nazia Parween |
| 485 | Sheik Mohamed Habisudeen S |
| 497 | Sheik Mohamed Nishath M |
| 513 | Minhaj Shakeel |
| 535 | Gulfiza |
| 549 | Hashmi Mohammad Umar |
| 575 | Sharukh Khan |
| 576 | Asna Anwar |
| 581 | Muneeb Afzal Parrah |
| 588 | Azeem Ahmad |
| 614 | Saista Parwin |
| 625 | Noor Alam |
| 646 | Mohd Irfan Kayamkhani |
| 648 | Mohsina Bano |
| 663 | Ghulam Maya Din |
| 665 | Danish Rabbani Khan |
| 668 | Md Nayab Anjum |
| 671 | Mohd Abuzar Ansari |
| 678 | Insa Khan |
| 695 | Abdul Sufiyan K |
| 708 | Fairuz Fathima M |
| 713 | Mohamed Hashim K |
| 718 | Muhammed Suhail |
| 741 | Thousif Ulla Khan |
| 763 | Koh E Safa |
| 764 | Sana Azmi |
| 773 | Reshma M |
| 811 | Yassar Ahmed Bhatti |
| 832 | Ghulam Haider |
| 860 | Mohamed Shezin C P |
| 869 | Mohd Ajaz Ul Rehman |
| 886 | Azhar Asif Khan |
| 936 | Mohd Sarfraz Choudhary |
| 942 | Abdulla Afridh A |
| 955 | Md Shahid Raza Khan |
| 957 | Irfan Ahmed Lone |
Year by Year — How Muslim Performance Has Changed
This context is what separates a good article from a great one. Here is how 2026 result compares to recent years:
| Result Year | Total Selected | Muslims Selected | Muslims in Top 100 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 (CSE 2025) | 958 | 53 | 4 |
| 2025 (CSE 2024) | 1,009 | 26 | 2 |
| 2024 (CSE 2023) | 1,016 | 51 | 4 |
| 2023 (CSE 2022) | 933 | 30 | 1 |
| 2022 (CSE 2021) | 685 | 21 | 0 |
| 2021 (CSE 2020) | 761 | 31 | — |
2021 was the worst year in a decade. 2025 result declared in 2026 is now one of the best. The comeback is real.
The Kashmir Stories Nobody Should Miss
Muneeb Afzal Parrah comes from Kandigram village in Bijbehara, South Kashmir. Not a metro. Not a coaching hub. A village. He cracked UPSC at Rank 581 and the celebration that broke out there was something else entirely — the kind only a small community produces when one of its own does something that felt impossible.
Dr Towseef Ahmad Ganaie, currently working as a veterinary doctor in Poonch, cleared at Rank 254. In Srinagar his house was full of people celebrating. In a region that has seen so much difficulty over decades, these civil services selections carry an emotional weight that is very hard to put into words.
How the Exam Actually Works — For Anyone Preparing
The selection process that produced these 53 names was brutal by any measure. Over 9,37,876 candidates registered for the preliminary exam held on May 25, 2025. Only 5,76,793 actually appeared. From those, 14,161 qualified for the written mains held in August 2025. Then 2,736 were called for the personality test held between December 2025 and February 2026. Final result: 958 selected. That is roughly 1 in every 1,000 who registered actually making the final cut. The 53 Muslims on that list earned their place through one of the most grueling filters in Indian public life.
People Are Also Asking
Is UPSC 2026 result out? Yes — UPSC Civil Services Examination 2025 results were declared on March 6, 2026. The exam year is 2025 but the result came in 2026, which is why searches for “muslim upsc result 2026” are trending right now.
How many Muslims cleared UPSC in 2026? 53 Muslim candidates cleared the UPSC Civil Services Examination whose results were declared in 2026.
Who is the top Muslim ranker in UPSC 2026 results? A R Rajah Mohaideen secured All India Rank 7, making him the highest ranked Muslim candidate in the 2026 declared results.
Who topped UPSC CSE 2025 overall? Anuj Agnihotri secured All India Rank 1, followed by Rajeshwari Suve M at Rank 2 and Akansh Dhull at Rank 3.
How many total candidates were selected in UPSC 2025? A total of 958 candidates were recommended for appointment including 317 General, 104 EWS, 306 OBC, 158 SC and 73 ST category candidates.
Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes based on publicly available news reports from sources including The Observer Post, Awaz The Voice, Muslim Mirror, The Hindustan Gazette and ummid.com published on and around March 6, 2026. UPSC does not officially classify or categorize candidates by religion in its results. The list of Muslim candidates has been independently compiled by various news organizations based on names appearing in the official UPSC merit list. Some names common in Muslim communities may be shared by people of other faiths and vice versa, so the exact count of 53 may vary slightly after complete verification, particularly for candidates from southern states. Year-wise historical data has been compiled from multiple published sources and minor discrepancies may exist. This article does not represent the official position of UPSC or any government body. Readers are advised to verify all details from the official UPSC website at upsc.gov.in.
