Key Takeaways — the entire guide in 6 facts:
- The best app for a state-PSC educator is decided by discovery and fit, not feature count. Every platform stores video and tests; few bring you aspirants searching for your exam in their language.
- State PSC is fragmented across UPPSC, BPSC, RAS, MPPSC, MPSC and more — each with its own syllabus, pattern and dominant study language, so a one-size national app rarely fits.
- Vernacular support is essential, not optional. Most UPPSC, BPSC and RAS aspirants study in Hindi or a regional language, so an English-first app reaches a fraction of your students.
- The state-PSC products that earn are the PYQ test series, state GK and current affairs, and mains answer-writing — plain video is the least differentiated product.
- AllCoaching matches state-PSC aspirants to educators by exam and language through marketplace discovery, supports Hindi and regional content and the full product stack, at ₹0 upfront.
- The economics must fit a regional educator: ₹0 upfront, 10% revenue-share, 90% kept, with daily payouts — not a several-lakh white-label fee or a heavy monthly subscription.
The reframe
The real question
behind "best app".
For a state-PSC coaching educator, the best app is the one where an aspirant searching for your exam in their language finds you, enrols, and practises on the exact state pattern — not the one with the longest feature list. Most "best app" comparisons line up video hosting, test engines, and live-class tools and declare a winner. But for a UPPSC, BPSC or RAS teacher, those features are table stakes; every serious platform has them. The decisive differences lie elsewhere, and the usual lists never mention them.
This matters because state PSC is not one market — it is dozens. UPPSC in Uttar Pradesh, BPSC in Bihar, RAS through RPSC in Rajasthan, MPPSC, MPSC, TNPSC, WBPSC and more, each with its own syllabus, exam pattern, and dominant study language. A teacher who coaches BPSC mains in Hindi has almost nothing in common, operationally, with a national English-medium UPSC brand — yet most coaching apps are designed for the latter. So the right question is not "which app has the most features", but "which app is built for a state-PSC educator and the aspirants they actually teach".
The first thing we ask a UPPSC or BPSC teacher who comes to us is not which features they want — it is which exam and which language they teach, because that single answer predicts whether their aspirants will ever find them. This is the same distribution-first logic behind any honest comparison of the best coaching apps: the tool is rarely the bottleneck; discovery is.
The checklist
What a state-PSC educator
actually needs.
A state-PSC educator's needs differ from those of a general online course business on a few specific axes. Hosting a video is the easy part; the things below are what actually decide whether a state-PSC coaching grows. Use this as the real checklist when judging any app:
Notice that only one of these — the test engine — is a "feature" in the usual sense, and even there the question is whether you can build a state-pattern PYQ test series, not just any quiz. The rest are about reach, language, and economics. An app can score perfectly on a feature comparison and still be the wrong choice for a BPSC educator, because it was never built to bring them Bihar aspirants in Hindi. A strong test engine specifically matters because, as in any exam niche, interactive mock tests are the highest-engagement, highest-converting product.
The structural gap
Why generic national apps
fall short.
This is not a criticism of national coaching platforms — they do exactly what they were built for. The misalignment is structural. Most national platforms are optimised for large, English-medium brands and national exams — UPSC, NEET, JEE, CAT — because that is where the biggest, most monetisable audiences sit. State PSC, by contrast, is fragmented, vernacular, and state-specific, which makes it commercially awkward for a one-size national product.
The consequence shows up in three places. First, discovery favours large national names — a new state-PSC educator is buried beneath them. Second, vernacular is bolted on — the interface, support, and content tooling assume English, while your aspirants think in Hindi or a regional language. Third, the product stack is generic — built for selling video courses, not for a state-pattern PYQ test series or descriptive mains evaluation. The result is that a UPPSC or BPSC teacher signs up, uploads content, and waits — while their actual aspirants never find them. This is the same vernacular-reach gap that a purpose-built multi-language LMS for regional Indian languages is designed to close.
A national app is not worse — it is built for someone else. The best app for a state-PSC educator is one designed for fragmented, vernacular, exam-specific demand.
The decisive factor
The decisive factor:
state-aspirant discovery.
If you change only one thing in how you judge an app, change this: ask whether it brings you state-PSC aspirants, or whether you must market yourself to find them. A state aspirant does not search for "best coaching app" — they search for "UPPSC GS in Hindi", "BPSC mains answer writing", or "RAS Hindi medium". The best app is the one where that exact search lands on the educator who teaches exactly that. That is a discovery problem, and most apps simply do not solve it.
Question Often Asked
How will a UPPSC or BPSC aspirant actually find my coaching on an app?
On a standalone app, they mostly will not — a personal app has no discovery of its own, so you have to drive every aspirant to it yourself. On a marketplace, discovery is built in: an AI matching layer routes an aspirant searching for your state exam and language to your studio. So a BPSC aspirant in Patna searching in Hindi is matched to the educator teaching BPSC in Hindi — not to a national English brand. This is the structural reason a marketplace beats a standalone app for state PSC, explained in depth in how the AllCoaching marketplace model solves discovery.
This is also where a state niche flips from a disadvantage to an advantage. On the open internet, "RAS in Hindi" is too small for a big institute to bother with and too specific for a generic app to surface. On a marketplace built to match by exam and language, that same specificity is exactly what gets you found — the aspirant searching for precisely what you teach is routed to you, with no ad budget. Being the narrow, obvious choice for one state exam beats being a forgettable option for all of them.
The product stack
The state-PSC product stack
that earns.
Once an aspirant finds you, what they pay for is specific — and it is rarely just a recorded course. The best app for a state-PSC educator is one that lets you build and sell the products state aspirants actually buy, in order of earning power:
Product 01
A PYQ-based test series
Built on the exact state pattern, with auto-grading and ranks. For state PSC this is usually the single biggest earner — aspirants value speed, accuracy practice, and where they stand against peers. The same principle holds across exam niches, as in teaching SSC online, where the test series outsells the concept course.
Product 02
State GK and current affairs
State polity, geography, history, economy and government schemes — the state-specific knowledge a national course never covers well. Because it changes constantly, recurring current-affairs and state-GK content is a repeatable, renewable product.
Product 03
Mains answer-writing and evaluation
State PSC mains are descriptive, so structured answer-writing practice with feedback is high-value and hard to commoditise. Personalised evaluation is something plain video can never deliver, which is why aspirants pay a premium for it. Unlike objective, MCQ-only exams such as SSC, descriptive mains answer-writing is a state-PSC-specific need — a recurring product a generic test app rarely supports.
Product 04
Optional subjects and prelims CSAT
Many state exams have optional papers and an aptitude (CSAT) component. A focused optional or CSAT offering serves a clear, recurring need and rounds out the stack for a serious state-PSC aspirant.
The point is simple: the best app must support this stack, not just host lectures. If a platform can only sell a video course, it limits a state-PSC educator to the least differentiated, lowest-earning product. The right app gives you a test engine, content delivery, and an answer-evaluation workflow — so you can sell what aspirants actually want. For teachers coming from UPSC, the same product logic carries over, as covered in starting online UPSC coaching from home.
The guide
How to choose your app —
a 6-step guide.
The 6-step sequence below takes a state-PSC educator from "which app?" to a live, discoverable studio — judging the things that actually matter, not the marketing feature list:
Step 01
Pin your exact state-PSC niche by exam and language
Decide the precise exam and language you teach — for example UPPSC GS in Hindi, BPSC mains answer-writing, or RAS in Hindi and English. A precise state-and-language niche is what aspirants actually search for, and it is what you will judge every app against.
Step 02
Check vernacular (Hindi or regional) support
Confirm the app supports your teaching language for video, notes and tests, and that the student-facing experience works in that language. Most state-PSC aspirants study in Hindi or a regional language, so an English-only app cuts your reach.
Step 03
Check the state-PSC product stack
Make sure the app supports a PYQ-based test series, state GK and current-affairs delivery, and descriptive mains answer-writing or evaluation — the products state-PSC aspirants pay for, beyond plain video.
Step 04
Check student discovery for your state exam
Ask the decisive question: does the app bring you aspirants searching for your exam, or must you market yourself? A marketplace that matches aspirants by state exam and language is worth more than any feature list.
Step 05
Check the economics
Avoid a heavy upfront subscription or white-label fee a regional educator cannot justify. Prefer ₹0 upfront with a revenue-share, so you pay only when you earn and keep the larger share.
Step 06
Launch a free branded studio and switch on discovery
Sign up on educator.allcoaching.in with a mobile OTP, set your state-PSC branding, add a course and a PYQ test series, enable UPI payments, and switch on marketplace discovery for your state exam and language.
The economics
The economics:
why ₹0 upfront matters.
State-PSC economics are different from national-brand economics, and the best app respects that. A regional state-PSC educator usually teaches price-sensitive aspirants in tier-2 and tier-3 cities, pricing a batch or test series accessibly and winning on volume. Against that reality, a several-lakh white-label app or a heavy monthly subscription is hard to justify — the upfront cost arrives long before the revenue does, and the risk sits entirely on the educator.
Question Often Asked
Should a state-PSC educator pay a subscription or upfront fee for the best app?
Generally no. The model that fits a regional educator is ₹0 upfront with a revenue-share, so the platform earns only when you do. On AllCoaching there is no subscription on the free tier and no setup fee; it takes a 10% revenue-share on paid earnings, the educator keeps 90%, and payouts are daily. That turns a large, risky fixed cost into a small, success-linked share — which matters far more to a price-sensitive state-PSC educator than any premium feature. The hidden-cost trap of "cheap" platforms is unpacked in the truth about zero-commission teaching platforms.
₹0
Upfront cost on the free tier
90%
Revenue kept by the educator, daily payout
10%
Revenue-share, on paid earnings only
The verdict
The verdict.
So which is the best app for state PSC coaching educators? The one that brings your state's aspirants to you in their own language, lets you sell the products they actually pay for, and costs you nothing until you earn. Judged that way, the winner is not the platform with the most features — it is the one built for fragmented, vernacular, exam-specific demand, with discovery and economics on the educator's side. For UPPSC, BPSC, RAS and most state exams, that points to a discovery-first marketplace with full vernacular and test-series support at ₹0 upfront.
Across the AllCoaching educator base in 2026, the state-PSC educators who win are not the ones who agonised over feature comparisons — they are the ones who picked a niche by exam and language, launched fast, switched on discovery, and let aspirants searching for exactly their exam find them. The patterns we see in the ones who grow:
- Choose by discovery, not features — can your state's aspirants find you in their language?
- Niche down by exam — be the obvious choice for UPPSC or BPSC, not a forgettable one for all.
- Lead with the test series — the PYQ-based product earns most; add mains answer-writing.
- Teach in the vernacular — Hindi or regional reaches the aspirants you are actually for.
- Keep economics light — ₹0 upfront, 10% rev-share, 90% kept, so risk never sits on you.
You can start today. Take a phone, pick one state exam and language, and set up a free branded studio on educator.allcoaching.in — it is a single afternoon. Add a PYQ test series, switch on discovery for your exam, so that when the first aspirant searching for your state PSC finds and enrols with you, their fee is in your account the next business day.
"The best app for a state-PSC teacher was never the one with the most features. It is the one where a UPPSC or BPSC aspirant, searching in their own language, finds you — and can practise on the exact pattern they will sit."
— Amit Ratan, Founder & CEO, AllCoaching
About the Author
Amit Ratan
Founder & CEO, AllCoaching
"State-PSC teachers are some of the most underserved educators in India — brilliant at their exam, but invisible on platforms built for national English brands. They do not need more features. They need their aspirants to find them, in their own language."
Amit Ratan is the founder and CEO of AllCoaching, India's AI-driven educator growth marketplace. He has spent over a decade studying why regional and vernacular educators — including the teachers behind state PSC exams like UPPSC, BPSC and RAS — stay invisible on national platforms, and how a discovery-first, multilingual marketplace closes that gap. AllCoaching is built so the best educator for a specific exam and language, not the biggest national brand, is the one who gets found.
Get Started
Build your state-PSC coaching where your aspirants can actually find you.
A phone, one state exam, and a single afternoon is all it takes. Set up a free branded studio on AllCoaching, add a PYQ test series in your language, and switch on marketplace discovery so UPPSC, BPSC or RAS aspirants searching for your exam find and enrol with you. ₹0 upfront. 90% revenue to the educator. Daily payouts. Vernacular and discovery built in.
Glossary
Glossary —
key terms.
Term
State PSC (State Public Service Commission)
A state government body that recruits for state administrative posts through its own exams. Each state runs its own commission and syllabus, which is why state-PSC teaching is fragmented by state and language, unlike the single national UPSC exam.
Term
State PSC Exams (UPPSC, BPSC, RAS)
State-level civil services exams such as UPPSC (Uttar Pradesh), BPSC (Bihar), and RAS (Rajasthan, conducted by RPSC), along with MPPSC, MPSC, TNPSC, WBPSC and others. Each has a state-specific syllabus, pattern, and dominant study language.
Term
Vernacular Teaching
Teaching in a regional or Hindi medium rather than English. For most state-PSC exams the majority of aspirants study in the vernacular, so vernacular content and discovery reach far more students than English alone.
Term
PYQ Test Series
A paid set of mock and sectional tests built on Previous-Year-Question patterns of a specific state exam, giving aspirants speed practice and ranks. For state PSC it is typically the single biggest earning product.
Term
Mains Answer Writing
Descriptive answer practice and evaluation for the written (mains) stage of a state PSC exam. Structured answer-writing with feedback is a high-value, recurring product that plain video cannot replace.
Term
Marketplace Discovery
AllCoaching's AI-driven, multi-educator marketplace where aspirants search by exam, subject or language and are matched to educators. It brings state-PSC aspirants to an educator without paid ads or a following.
Term
Branded Studio
An educator's own name-and-logo coaching space (web and mobile) where courses, test series, payments and aspirants are managed. On a white-label studio, aspirants see the educator's state-PSC brand while AllCoaching runs as the engine.
Term
Revenue Share Model
A monetisation model where the platform charges only when the educator earns — no upfront fee, no subscription. On AllCoaching it is a 10% revenue-share on paid earnings; the educator keeps 90%, paid out daily.
FAQ
Frequently asked
questions.
What is the best app for state PSC coaching educators?
For a state-PSC educator the best app is not the one with the longest feature list, but the one that brings you aspirants searching for your specific exam in their language, supports the products state-PSC aspirants pay for (a PYQ test series, state GK and current affairs, mains answer-writing), and does not charge a heavy upfront fee. AllCoaching fits this because it matches state-PSC aspirants by exam and language through marketplace discovery, supports Hindi and regional content, and is ₹0 upfront with a 10% revenue-share, so the educator keeps 90% with daily payouts.
Why isn't a generic national coaching app best for state PSC teachers?
Because most national platforms are built and optimised for big national, English-medium brands — UPSC and national test prep — while state PSC is fragmented across states, languages and state-specific syllabi. On a generic platform a state-PSC educator's vernacular, exam-specific content is an afterthought, and discovery favours large national names, so a UPPSC or BPSC teacher signs up but their state aspirants never find them. The misalignment is structural, not a question of feature quality.
Which app is best for teaching UPPSC, BPSC or RAS online?
The same principle applies to each: choose the app that lets aspirants searching for that exam in their language find you, and that supports a PYQ test series, state GK and current affairs, and mains answer-writing. For UPPSC and BPSC that means strong Hindi support; for RAS, Hindi and English. AllCoaching matches aspirants to educators by state exam and language and supports these products, with ₹0 upfront — which is why it fits UPPSC, BPSC and RAS educators alike.
Does the best state PSC app need Hindi or regional language support?
Yes — for most state PSC exams it is essential. A very large share of UPPSC, BPSC, MPPSC and RAS aspirants study in Hindi, and other state commissions draw regional-language aspirants. An English-first app reaches a fraction of your potential students. The best app supports your teaching language in content and, ideally, matches aspirants searching in that language to you, so vernacular is a discovery advantage, not just an interface preference.
What products do state PSC aspirants actually pay for?
Above all, a Previous-Year-Question-based test series built on the state exam's pattern; state-specific GK and recurring current affairs (state polity, geography, history, schemes); descriptive mains answer-writing practice and evaluation; and optional-subject or prelims-CSAT coaching. A plain video course is the least differentiated product. The best app is one that lets you build and sell this state-PSC stack, especially the test series and answer-writing, not just host lectures.
How much does the best state PSC coaching app cost?
It should cost nothing upfront. A regional state-PSC educator often prices for price-sensitive aspirants in tier-2 and tier-3 cities, so a heavy monthly subscription or a white-label app fee of several lakh is hard to justify. AllCoaching is ₹0 upfront with no subscription on the free tier; it takes only a 10% revenue-share on paid earnings, so the educator keeps 90% with daily payouts and pays only when they earn.
Can I teach multiple state PSC exams on one app?
Yes. On a single branded studio you can run separate courses and test series for, say, UPPSC and BPSC, or add MPPSC later, each described precisely so the right aspirants are matched to the right product. Marketplace discovery routes a UPPSC aspirant to your UPPSC offering and a BPSC aspirant to your BPSC offering, so one studio can serve several state exams without confusing students.
How will state PSC aspirants find my coaching app?
Two ways: your own reach (a free PYQ PDF or sectional test shared on Telegram and YouTube, plus your network), and marketplace discovery, where an AI engine matches aspirants searching for your state exam and language to your studio. A standalone app has no discovery of its own, so the marketplace is what brings state aspirants who never knew you existed — without an ad budget.
Is a PYQ test series important for state PSC?
Very. For state PSC, a Previous-Year-Question-based test series is usually the single most-bought product, because aspirants value speed, accuracy practice and ranks against peers on the exact state pattern. The best app gives you an auto-grading test engine with ranks so you can build and sell a PYQ test series, which often earns more than the concept course itself.
Does the best app keep my own branding for my state PSC coaching?
It should. On AllCoaching, even the free tier is white-labeled — your name, logo and colours front the aspirant experience while the platform runs underneath as the engine. A custom domain is a paid-tier feature but is not needed to start, and aspirants build a relationship with your state-PSC coaching brand, not a generic platform.
More from AllCoaching Blog
Continue reading
How to Teach SSC Online and Earn Money in India
The subject-niche playbook for SSC — pick a sub-niche, build the PYQ test series aspirants pay for, and market where they gather.
How to Start Online UPSC Coaching from Home
Ghar baithe ₹0 me UPSC mentor banne ka practical playbook — notes, mock test series, current affairs, mains evaluation.
Multi-Language LMS for Regional Indian Languages
Why English-first platforms underserve vernacular educators, and what a regional-language teaching platform must do differently.
