Over two million people sat for the Rajasthan 4th Grade exam last September. That number alone tells you how much this recruitment means to people. It’s not just a job — for most of these candidates, it’s years of waiting, preparing, and hoping finally turning into something concrete.
The Rajasthan Staff Selection Board (RSSB) conducted the exam across 38 districts of the state on 19, 20, and 21 September 2025. Six shifts. Hundreds of exam centres. Around 21 lakh candidates actually showing up. Anyone who has followed state-level recruitments knows how massive a logistical effort that is, and how anxious those weeks of waiting for results feel.
The result was declared on 16 January 2026. The merit list — with names, roll numbers, and ranks — followed the very next day on 17 January. The final answer key had already come out on 21 January, and the score cards were released on 26 January 2026. Then came the revised result on 6 February 2026, which is what most people are checking and following up on right now.
What Actually Happened With 53,749 Posts
This recruitment was advertised under Advertisement No. 19/2024, and the total vacancies stood at 53,749 posts. That’s split into two parts — 48,199 posts under Non-TSP (non-tribal sub-plan areas) and 5,550 posts under the TSP zone. The pay falls under Pay Matrix Level L-1, which is the entry-level government pay structure in Rajasthan.
Applications were accepted between 21 March and 19 April 2025. Around 24.7 lakh candidates applied, and of those, 21.17 lakh actually appeared for the exam. So roughly 40 candidates for every single vacancy. That’s not unusually harsh by state recruitment standards, but it does mean the competition was real and the cut-offs would naturally be tight.
What made things a little more complicated is the sheer scale of the result — it wasn’t released as a simple list. The results came out in PDFs, category-wise cut-offs were published separately, and the OMR sheets of roughly 1.41 lakh candidates were uploaded to the official website for reference. That’s a lot of data moving around, and candidates needed to track multiple documents across multiple dates.
The “Pass” Status Confusion — This Matters
One thing that tripped up a lot of people when they first checked their results: many candidates saw “Pass” written next to their name and assumed they were selected. That’s not how it works here.
The result status showing “Pass” means the candidate’s OMR sheet was processed and their attempt is valid — it does not mean they’ve been called for Document Verification (DV). Only candidates whose scores fall at or above the category-wise cut-off marks are being invited for DV. So if you saw “Pass” and assumed that meant a government job was confirmed, that’s a misread of the system.
Cut-off marks are published separately, and that’s the document you actually need to cross-reference with your score card to know where you stand.
Document Verification — Zone-Wise Schedules Are Out
The recruitment has now moved into the Document Verification (DV) stage, and the RSSB has released the DV schedule along with candidate name lists for all major zones. As of early March 2026, the following zone-wise DV schedules and candidate name lists have been published:
- Jaipur Zone
- Jodhpur Zone
- Ajmer Zone
- Bikaner Zone
- Udaipur Zone
Each zone has its own PDF with the list of candidates called for DV, along with the schedule. Candidates who were shortlisted based on their cut-off scores need to check the list corresponding to their zone and report accordingly with their original documents.
If you want to track all of this without having to hunt across multiple sites, GovJobss.com is worth bookmarking. It regularly covers Rajasthan-specific recruitment updates, results, and DV-related news in one place — which saves a lot of time when you’re juggling multiple documents and deadlines.
How to Check Your Score Card
The score card was released on 26 January 2026 and can be accessed through the official Rajasthan government recruitment portal. Here’s how to check it without the usual confusion:
Go to rssb.rajasthan.gov.in, navigate to the Candidate Corner, and look for the Results section. Click on the link for Rajasthan 4th Grade Employees Result 2025-26. The result file is a PDF, so once it opens, use Ctrl+F and search for your roll number. Don’t search by name — names repeat, roll numbers don’t.
If you’re on a phone, use the in-app search function in whatever PDF viewer you’re using. Scrolling through a 1,000-page PDF manually is how people miss their own names.
Also, download and save your score card as soon as you access it. These portals often go down when traffic is high, links sometimes expire, and during later stages of joining, you may be asked to produce proof of your result. A saved PDF or even a screenshot is enough, but have it stored somewhere safe.
The Revised Result — Why It Was Released
The revised result on 6 February 2026 was released in four sheets (Sheet 1 through Sheet 4). Revised results in state-level exams typically come out when there are corrections to the original result — this could be due to OMR processing errors, answer key challenges that were accepted, or candidate grievances that resulted in score adjustments.
If you checked your result only from the original January 16 release, it’s important that you now cross-check your position against the revised result sheets from February 6. Some candidates may find their scores slightly different, and in tight cut-off situations, even one or two marks can move you from being shortlisted to not — or the other way around.
The revised cut-off marks have also been published separately and are available in PDF format on the official website.
What Comes After DV
For candidates who clear Document Verification, the next stage is typically a final appointment process. There’s usually a gap between DV completion and the actual appointment letter — sometimes a few weeks, sometimes longer depending on administrative processing. That silence is normal. It doesn’t mean something went wrong.
Training schedules, posting orders, and reporting dates all come later in batches. Departments process candidates in groups, not individually. The important thing is to stay alert to official notices during this period and keep all documents organized and accessible.
If you’re following Rajasthan recruitment updates and want to know what’s happening with similar processes — the Rajasthan Police Constable Final Result 2025 also wrapped up its own multi-stage selection recently. There’s a detailed breakdown of what happens after final results in that process on GovJobss.com, and a lot of the same post-result logic applies here too. Selection confirmed, training details shared, joining follows. The mechanics are similar even when the recruitment is different.
A Quick Look at the Timeline (For Reference)
Just to put everything in one place:
| Event | Date |
|---|---|
| Application Window | 21 March – 19 April 2025 |
| Exam Dates | 19, 20, 21 September 2025 |
| Admit Card Release | 12 September 2025 |
| Answer Key Published | 18 October 2025 |
| Result Declared | 16 January 2026 |
| Merit List (Name/Roll No. Wise) | 17 January 2026 |
| Final Answer Key | 21 January 2026 |
| Score Card Released | 26 January 2026 |
| OMR Sheets Uploaded | 5 February 2026 |
| Revised Result | 6 February 2026 |
| DV Schedules Published | March 2026 |
What Candidates Waiting on Results Should Actually Do
A lot of people in this stage feel stuck — they’ve checked the result, they know roughly where they stand, but there’s nothing concrete to act on yet. That waiting is genuinely difficult. But there’s one practical thing to focus on right now: document readiness.
For DV, candidates are typically asked to bring originals along with photocopies of everything — educational certificates, caste certificate (if applicable), domicile certificate, age proof, identity proof, and photographs. Having a clean, complete set of all these ready before the DV date avoids unnecessary stress on the day.
Also, for candidates who missed the cut-off this time — that’s a real and common outcome given how many people appeared. The silver lining is that Rajasthan has multiple active recruitments going on simultaneously. The RIICO Vacancy 2026 recently opened for 12th pass candidates with 121 posts, and national-level opportunities like RRB Group D 2026 — with reportedly around 22,000 posts — are on the horizon. The preparation mindset that got you through this exam transfers directly.
Something Worth Saying Plainly
Recruitments of this scale — over 50,000 posts, 21 lakh candidates — have a kind of weight that’s hard to explain if you haven’t lived through the preparation cycle. People give months to this. Some give years. Families wait. Plans get built around a potential result date.
When the result comes and your name is there, it’s quiet relief more than celebration. When it’s not, it’s genuinely heavy. Both reactions make complete sense.
But the practical reality is that the process moves forward regardless. DV happens. Appointments follow. And for those who need to try again, the next notification will come — because they always do.
For anyone actively tracking the Rajasthan 4th Grade Result 2026, the official website is rssb.rajasthan.gov.in, and for consolidated updates across all stages of this and other recruitments, GovJobss.com keeps the information current and easy to follow without having to browse multiple government portals at once.
Yes. The Rajasthan 4th Grade Employee Result was first declared on 16 January 2026 by the Rajasthan Staff Selection Board (RSSB). A revised result was subsequently released on 6 February 2026 in four separate sheets. Candidates should check the revised result to confirm their updated score and status.
The result can be checked on the official RSSB website at rssb.rajasthan.gov.in. Candidates can navigate to the Candidate Corner, then click on Results, and look for the Rajasthan 4th Grade Employees Result 2025-26 link. The result is available in PDF format — use Ctrl+F to search your roll number.
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