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NDA vs CDS: Which Defence Exam is Better for You After 12th?

Two exams. One dream. If you want to become a commissioned officer in the Indian Armed Forces, the question you will hear most often from peers, teachers, and family is the same: “Should I go for NDA or CDS?” It is one of the most searched questions in India’s defence exam space — and also one of the most poorly answered.

The truth is that NDA vs CDS is not a competition between two exams — it is a comparison between two life paths. Each exam has its own eligibility window, its own difficulty profile, its own training experience, and its own career trajectory. The better exam is not the harder one or the more prestigious one — it is the one that fits your age, academic background, and long-term ambitions.

This complete, data-driven comparison of NDA vs CDS will help you understand every difference — eligibility, exam pattern, career path, salary, and training — so you can make the decision that is right for you.


Quick Overview: NDA and CDS at a Glance

FeatureNDACDS
Full FormNational Defence AcademyCombined Defence Services
Conducted ByUPSCUPSC
FrequencyTwice a yearTwice a year
Minimum QualificationClass 12 (appearing or passed)Graduation (completed or final year)
Age Limit16.5 – 19.5 years19 – 25 years (varies by academy)
Services CoveredArmy, Navy, Air ForceArmy (IMA/OTA), Navy (INA), Air Force (AFA)
Entry Rank on CommissioningLieutenant / Sub-Lieutenant / Flying OfficerLieutenant / Sub-Lieutenant / Flying Officer
Total Marks (Written + SSB)1800600 (Written) + 900 (SSB)
Training LocationNDA, Pune → Service AcademyDirect to Service Academy

Eligibility Comparison: NDA vs CDS

This is the most fundamental difference between the two exams — and the one that determines which exam you should target at any given stage of your life.

NDA Eligibility

  • Educational Qualification:
    • Army Wing: Class 12 pass or appearing — any stream
    • Navy and Air Force Wings: Class 12 with Physics and Mathematics as compulsory subjects
  • Age Limit: 16.5 to 19.5 years at the time of joining
  • Gender: Both male and female candidates are eligible
  • Marital Status: Must be unmarried at the time of application

CDS Eligibility

  • Educational Qualification:
    • IMA (Army): Graduation in any stream from a recognised university
    • INA (Navy): Engineering degree (B.E./B.Tech)
    • AFA (Air Force): Graduation with Physics & Maths in Class 12, OR B.E./B.Tech
    • OTA (Short Service): Graduation in any stream
  • Age Limit (by academy):
CDS AcademyAge Range
Indian Military Academy (IMA)19–24 years
Indian Naval Academy (INA)19–22 years
Air Force Academy (AFA)20–24 years
Officers’ Training Academy (OTA)19–25 years

  • Gender: Both male and female eligible (OTA has dedicated Women’s Short Service Commission entry)

The Eligibility Verdict

If you are currently in Class 11 or 12: NDA is your exam. You cannot appear for CDS — graduation is mandatory.

If you have completed or are in your final year of graduation: CDS is your primary route. NDA’s age window will have closed for most graduates.


Exam Pattern Comparison: NDA vs CDS

NDA Exam Pattern

The NDA written examination has two papers:

PaperSubjectMarksDuration
Paper IMathematics3002.5 hours
Paper IIGeneral Ability Test (GAT) — English + GK6002.5 hours
Total Written9005 hours
SSB InterviewPersonality + Leadership9005 days
Grand Total1800

Negative Marking in NDA:

  • Mathematics: −0.83 per wrong answer
  • GAT (English + GK): −1.33 per wrong answer

CDS Exam Pattern

The CDS written examination has two or three papers depending on the academy:

For IMA, INA, AFA (Three Papers):

PaperSubjectMarksDuration
Paper IEnglish1002 hours
Paper IIGeneral Knowledge1002 hours
Paper IIIElementary Mathematics1002 hours
Total Written3006 hours

For OTA (Two Papers):

PaperSubjectMarksDuration
Paper IEnglish1002 hours
Paper IIGeneral Knowledge1002 hours
Total Written2004 hours

Negative Marking in CDS: −0.33 per wrong answer (1/3rd)

SSB Interview: 900 marks for both IMA, INA, AFA, and OTA entries

Exam Pattern Comparison Table

ParameterNDACDS
Mathematics LevelClass 11–12 (advanced)Class 10 (elementary)
EnglishPart of GAT (200 marks)Separate paper (100 marks)
Total Written Marks900300 (IMA/INA/AFA) / 200 (OTA)
Negative Marking−0.83 to −1.33−0.33
SSB Marks900900
Grand Total18001200
No. of Papers22–3

Difficulty Analysis

NDA is harder mathematically. The Mathematics paper (300 marks, Class 11–12 level) covers Calculus, Trigonometry, Coordinate Geometry, Matrices, and Statistics — topics that require deep conceptual understanding. Students from Arts or Commerce streams find this particularly challenging.

CDS is broader in scope. With equal weightage to English, GK, and Elementary Maths, CDS tests breadth of knowledge rather than depth. However, the English paper eliminates a large number of candidates — especially those whose English writing and grammar skills are weak.

Overall competition intensity: NDA’s strict age window (19.5 years maximum) means a very large pool of young candidates — lakhs of Class 12 students — compete for relatively few seats. CDS, being a graduate-level exam, has a more filtered candidate pool but is taken by aspirants with more preparation experience.


Career Path Comparison: NDA vs CDS

This is where the difference between NDA and CDS becomes most meaningful in the long term.

NDA Career Path

  1. Clear NDA written exam → Clear SSB Interview → Medical Examination
  2. 3 years at NDA, Pune — integrated academic + military training
  3. Receive Bachelor’s degree (B.Sc./B.A.) from Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU)
  4. Move to respective Service Academy for additional training:
    • Army Wing → IMA Dehradun (1 year)
    • Navy Wing → INA Ezhimala (1 year)
    • Air Force Wing → AFA Hyderabad (1.5 years)
  5. Commissioned as Lieutenant / Sub-Lieutenant / Flying Officer at age ~21–22

Total timeline from Class 12 to commissioning: Approximately 4–4.5 years

CDS Career Path

  1. Clear CDS written exam → Clear SSB Interview → Medical Examination
  2. Move directly to the respective Service Academy:
    • IMA Dehradun: 18 months training
    • INA Ezhimala: ~37–40 months training
    • AFA Hyderabad: ~74 months training
    • OTA Chennai: 11 months training (Short Service Commission)
  3. Commissioned as Lieutenant / Sub-Lieutenant / Flying Officer at age ~24–26

Total timeline from graduation to commissioning: 1–2 years

Career Path Comparison

AspectNDACDS
Age at Commissioning~21–22 years~24–26 years
Degree Received During TrainingYes — B.Sc./BA from JNUNo (must already be a graduate)
Entry into Armed ForcesYoungest possible entryLater entry
Career Length in ForcesLonger service careerSlightly shorter (joins later)
Type of CommissionPermanent CommissionPermanent (IMA/INA/AFA) or Short Service (OTA)
Leadership Experience3 more years of officer training at NDAMore focused, service-specific training
Promotion OpportunitiesIdentical after commissioningIdentical after commissioning

🎯 Key Insight: Once commissioned, an NDA officer and a CDS officer at the same rank receive identical pay, perks, and promotion opportunities. NDA’s advantage is in the richness of the 3-year academy experience and the additional years of service career that result from joining younger.


Salary Comparison: NDA vs CDS

One of the most searched aspects of NDA vs CDS is the salary — and here the answer is clear: both lead to the same pay structure.

Starting Salary After Commissioning (Both NDA and CDS)

Salary ComponentAmount Per Month
Basic Pay (Lieutenant — Level 10)₹56,100
Military Service Pay (MSP)₹15,500
Dearness Allowance (DA)~50% of Basic + MSP (revised 6-monthly)
House Rent Allowance (HRA)8–24% of Basic Pay
Transport Allowance₹3,600 – ₹7,200
Field Area Allowance (where applicable)₹6,300 – ₹25,000
Total In-Hand (Approximate)₹80,000 – ₹1,20,000

Career Salary Progression (Both NDA and CDS — Identical)

RankBasic Pay RangePay Level
Lieutenant₹56,100 – ₹1,77,500Level 10
Captain₹61,300 – ₹1,93,900Level 10B
Major₹69,400 – ₹2,07,200Level 11
Lieutenant Colonel₹1,21,200 – ₹2,12,400Level 12A
Colonel₹1,30,600 – ₹2,15,900Level 13
Brigadier₹1,39,600 – ₹2,17,600Level 13A
Major General₹1,44,200 – ₹2,18,200Level 14

Non-Monetary Benefits (Both Identical)

Beyond salary, all commissioned officers — NDA and CDS both — receive:

  • Free government accommodation in well-maintained cantonment areas
  • Free medical treatment at military hospitals for self and entire family
  • Kendriya Vidyalaya education for children at highly subsidised rates
  • CSD (Canteen Stores Department) access — groceries and goods at 20–40% below market price
  • Leave Travel Concession (LTC) — family travel subsidies
  • Pension and ECHS after retirement — lifelong healthcare and financial security

Training Stipend: NDA cadets receive ₹56,100 per month as stipend even during their 3-year training at NDA. CDS trainees also receive the same stipend during their academy training period.


Training Experience Comparison: NDA vs CDS

This is perhaps the most important qualitative difference in the NDA vs CDS debate.

NDA Training (3 Years + Service Academy)

The NDA experience is transformational and unique:

  • Location: National Defence Academy, Khadakwasla, Pune — one of the world’s finest tri-service academies
  • Duration: 3 years at NDA (6 terms) + 1–1.5 years at the respective Service Academy
  • Structure: Every term alternates between rigorous military training (drill, weapons, obstacle courses, sailing, flying, riding) and academic education
  • Degree: Cadets earn a B.Sc. or B.A. degree from JNU — making them graduates who also hold a military commission
  • Unique experience: NDA cadets from Army, Navy, and Air Force wings train side by side — building the legendary tri-service brotherhood that defines India’s military culture
  • Sports and Adventure: NDA training includes gliding, sailing, horse riding, mountaineering, and a wide range of competitive sports — building a comprehensive officer personality

CDS Training (1–2 Years at Service Academy)

CDS training is more focused and service-specific:

  • IMA (Army): 18 months of intensive military training — weapons, field craft, tactics, leadership. Graduates are commissioned as Lieutenants
  • INA (Navy): ~37–40 months, covering naval warfare, navigation, seamanship, and specialised maritime skills
  • AFA (Air Force): ~74 months including flying training — one of the longest and most technically demanding officer training programmes in the world
  • OTA (Short Service): 11 months — focused on basic military officer training for Short Service Commission in the Army

Training Comparison Table

Training AspectNDACDS
Total Duration4–4.5 years (NDA + Service Academy)1–6 years (Service Academy only)
Degree EarnedYes — B.Sc./BA from JNUNo (must have degree before joining)
Tri-Service ExposureYes — trains alongside Army, Navy, AF cadetsNo — service-specific from Day 1
Adventure ActivitiesComprehensive (gliding, sailing, riding, mountaineering)Moderate — service specific
Military DepthBroader — longer preparation periodFocused — intensive military-specific
Average Commissioning Age~21–22 years~24–26 years

NDA vs CDS: Which One Should YOU Choose?

Now that you understand every dimension of the difference between NDA and CDS, here is the honest decision framework:

Choose NDA if:

  • You are currently in Class 10, 11, or 12 and are 16–18 years old
  • You want to join the Armed Forces at the youngest possible age
  • You are a PCM student (especially for Navy and Air Force wings)
  • You want the full, rich NDA academy experience — the tri-service brotherhood, the degree, the adventure training
  • You want the maximum career length as a defence officer
  • You have strong Mathematics fundamentals and are willing to build on them

Choose CDS if:

  • You are a graduate or in your final year of graduation
  • Your NDA age window has closed (you are 20 years or older)
  • You want a faster route to commissioning — IMA training is just 18 months after CDS
  • You are applying through OTA for a Short Service Commission and plan to transition to civilian career after 10–14 years with the full pension benefit
  • Your graduation is in Engineering and you want to join the Naval or Air Force technical branches

The Honest Bottom Line

If you are a Class 12 student reading this right now, there is only one right answer: target NDA. The NDA is specifically designed for you — it meets you exactly where you are, gives you a world-class 3-year academy education, and commissions you into the Armed Forces while most of your peers are still completing graduation.

CDS is not a consolation prize — it is a genuinely prestigious route that many excellent officers have used. But for a 17-year-old with the fire to serve India, letting the NDA window pass and waiting until graduation is a delay you don’t need to make.


Conclusion

The NDA vs CDS debate resolves simply once you know where you stand in life. Both exams lead to the same commission, the same salary, the same perks, and the same proud identity as an officer of the Indian Armed Forces. The path differs — one begins at 17, the other at 21. One takes 4 years, the other takes 1–2. One gives you a degree along the way; the other assumes you already have one.

Know your age, know your qualification, choose your exam, and prepare with everything you have. India’s Armed Forces are waiting — and so is the life you’ve been dreaming of.

Jai Hind. 🇮🇳


🎯 Whether you are targeting NDA 2026 after Class 12 or CDS 2026 after graduation, Commandant Academy, Patna has a tailored coaching programme for you — with experienced faculty, a comprehensive test series, and dedicated SSB preparation. Explore Courses →

📌 Share this guide with a fellow defence aspirant who is confused between NDA and CDS — the right information at the right time changes everything.

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