JKSSB Senior Horticulture Technician Syllabus & Exam Pattern 2026

The Jammu and Kashmir Services Selection Board (JKSSB) has opened applications for the post of Senior Horticulture Technician under the Agriculture Production Department (Horticulture, Kashmir), with the online application window running from 22 June to 21 July 2026. For B.Sc. Horticulture and B.Sc. Agriculture graduates in Jammu and Kashmir, this is one of the more specialised technical postings on offer this year, and with limited seats up for grabs, a focused, syllabus-driven preparation strategy will matter more than ever.

This article puts together what aspirants actually need — who can apply, how the seats are distributed, what the paper is likely to look like, and a working breakdown of the subject matter you should be revising over the next few months.

At a Glance: Senior Horticulture Technician Recruitment 2026

Particulars Details
Conducting Body Jammu & Kashmir Services Selection Board (JKSSB)
Post Senior Horticulture Technician
Department Agriculture Production Department — Horticulture (Kashmir Division)
Vacancies 6 (3 Open Merit, 1 SC, 1 ST-1, 1 ST-2)
Pay Level Level-6E
Minimum Qualification B.Sc. Horticulture, or B.Sc. Agriculture with Horticulture as a major subject
Apply Online From 22 June 2026
Last Date to Apply 21 July 2026
Fee Rs. 600 for General/OBC/RBA/ALC-IB male applicants; Rs. 500 for SC/ST-1/ST-2/EWS/PwBD applicants
Maximum Age 40 years (Open Merit category), with relaxation up to 43 years for most reserved categories and 48 years for Ex-Servicemen
Stages of Selection Written Test → Document Verification → Medical Examination
Apply At jkssb.nic.in

Who Can Apply

The qualifying degree for this post is fairly specific: you either need a B.Sc. in Horticulture, or a B.Sc. in Agriculture where Horticulture was studied as a major subject, earned from a university that holds UGC recognition. Candidates from both Agriculture and dedicated Horticulture backgrounds are therefore eligible, so long as the major subject requirement is satisfied.

Age-wise, the cut-off works on the usual J&K recruitment scale. Open Merit applicants must be under 40 on the relevant date mentioned in the notification. That ceiling rises to 43 for SC, ST-1, ST-2, OBC, RBA, ALC/IB and EWS candidates, to 42 for persons with benchmark disabilities, and goes as high as 48 for Ex-Servicemen. As always, candidates should verify their exact eligibility against the formal notification PDF before submitting an application, since minor clarifications are sometimes added after the initial release.

How the Six Posts Are Split

Category Seats
Open Merit 3
SC 1
ST-1 1
ST-2 1
Total 6

A six-seat recruitment is about as competitive as it gets, and that changes how you should approach preparation. There’s very little room for a rushed, last-minute attempt — the candidates who clear this are likely to be the ones who’ve actually mastered their horticulture fundamentals rather than skimmed them.

How Selection Works

JKSSB follows its usual three-stage process for technical posts of this kind:

  • Written test — an objective paper testing both core horticulture knowledge and general aptitude.
  • Document verification — candidates who make the merit cut on the written test bring their degree certificates, category proof, and identity documents for physical checking.
  • Medical examination — a standard fitness check carried out before the final appointment order is issued.
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Only the written test score determines your place in the merit list; document verification and the medical round are qualifying stages, not scoring ones.

What the Written Paper Is Likely to Look Like

JKSSB hasn’t published a post-specific marking scheme for Senior Horticulture Technician at the time of writing, since applications are still being accepted. That said, the Board has a fairly consistent template for technical, degree-level posts elsewhere in the Agriculture Production Department, and the Senior Horticulture Technician paper is expected to follow the same broad shape:

Feature What to Expect
Format Offline, OMR sheet-based
Question Type Objective / Multiple Choice
Approximate Total Marks 100 to 120
Approximate Duration 2 hours
Negative Marking 0.25 marks cut per incorrect answer
Language English

In practice, this means the bulk of the paper will draw from your core horticulture training, with a smaller share going to general sections like English, reasoning, and J&K-focused general knowledge. Treat the table above as a planning estimate rather than a confirmed scheme — JKSSB typically issues the final, official syllabus and pattern through a separate notice closer to the exam.

Syllabus Breakdown: What to Actually Study

Rather than memorising a long list of headings, it helps to think of the Senior Horticulture Technician syllabus as four connected blocks of knowledge that build on each other — starting from how a horticultural crop is established, moving through how it’s grown and fed, and ending with crop-specific details that matter most in a place like Kashmir.

1. Establishing and Managing a Crop

This block covers the groundwork: how horticultural crops are classified and why certain crops matter economically in different parts of India and J&K, how a nursery is set up and run, and the layout and spacing decisions that go into planting an orchard. It then moves into the ongoing work of running that orchard — pruning and training young trees, understanding why a tree bears fruit irregularly one season and heavily the next, and the techniques used to bring an ageing orchard back into productive shape, such as top working and frame working. Sustainable practices, including intercropping, mulching, and organic farming principles, also fall under this heading.

2. Multiplying Plants: Propagation Science

A separate and fairly large chunk of the syllabus deals with how new plants are actually produced. This includes both the sexual route (through seed, including the science of seed dormancy and how it’s broken through scarification or stratification) and asexual methods such as cutting, layering, grafting, and budding — along with the biology behind why cuttings root successfully or fail. Infrastructure used for propagation, including mist chambers, greenhouses, glasshouses, cold frames, hot beds, and poly-houses, is also part of this section, as is the practical matter of selecting and maintaining healthy mother plants and understanding how a scion and rootstock interact once joined.

3. Soil, Water, and Nutrition

No horticulture paper skips this section, and it tends to carry solid weightage. Expect questions on what makes a soil fertile and productive, which nutrients a plant actually needs and what happens when those nutrients are missing (deficiency symptoms and “hunger signs” are commonly tested), how salt-affected soils behave differently, and the role microbes play in breaking down organic matter. On the water side, the syllabus covers J&K’s water resources specifically, along with irrigation scheduling, soil moisture concepts, and the comparative use of surface, sprinkler, and drip irrigation methods, including fertigation. The use of plant growth regulators — both for managing crop growth and for assisting propagation — also sits within this broader theme, alongside weed management practices.

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4. Crop-Specific Knowledge: Tropical, Sub-Tropical, and Temperate Fruits

This is where region-specific preparation pays off. The syllabus splits roughly into warmer-climate fruits — mango, banana, grapes, citrus, papaya, guava, litchi, and loquat, including why mango and citrus often show alternate bearing and how growers manage it — and arid-zone fruits like ber, pomegranate, and fig. The second half focuses on temperate fruits, which is the more locally relevant portion for Kashmir-based aspirants: apple, pear, peach, apricot, cherry, walnut, almond, kiwi, strawberry, and chestnut, covering their preferred climate and soil conditions, planting density, training and pruning methods, pollination requirements, and common production problems such as premature leaf fall or difficulties replanting in old orchard soil.

5. General Awareness, English, and Reasoning

Beyond the technical core, expect a smaller but still meaningful portion of the paper devoted to general subjects that appear across most JKSSB technical recruitments:

  • General English — grammar accuracy, vocabulary, comprehension passages, and sentence correction
  • General Knowledge focused on J&K — regional history, geography, current developments, and government schemes
  • Reasoning — analogy, coding-decoding, classification, number series, and basic logical problems
  • Computer Basics — fundamental computer knowledge, which several JKSSB technical posts include in their syllabus

When Is the Exam Likely to Happen

Because the application window only closes on 21 July 2026, JKSSB hasn’t released an exam date yet, and realistically can’t until applications are screened and a final eligible list is drawn up. Based on how the Board has handled comparable technical recruitments in recent cycles — where a written test usually follows the application deadline by a few months — the November–December 2026 window is the most reasonable expectation for this paper at present.

This is a working estimate, not an official date, so don’t build your final revision schedule entirely around it. JKSSB typically confirms exam dates through a dedicated advance notice a few weeks beforehand, with admit cards following about a week before the test itself. The safest approach is to keep your preparation on track through the second half of 2026 and check jkssb.nic.in regularly rather than waiting for a specific month to start revising.

A Practical Way to Prepare

  • Lean on your degree notes first. Your B.Sc. coursework in pomology, soil science, and propagation is more aligned with this exam than any generic guide will be — use it as your primary base and add JKSSB-specific practice on top.
  • Give temperate fruits extra time. Given how central apple and walnut cultivation are to Kashmir’s horticulture economy, it’s reasonable to expect this portion to be tested more heavily than tropical fruit topics.
  • Don’t skip the general section just because it’s smaller. In a six-seat recruitment, a few marks lost in English or reasoning can be the difference between qualifying and missing out.
  • Practice under timed, OMR-style conditions. Negative marking changes how you should approach uncertain answers, so build that instinct early through mock attempts rather than discovering it on exam day.
  • Recheck the official notification periodically. With the application process still open, it’s worth watching for any addenda or corrigenda JKSSB might issue before the deadline closes.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. How many posts are available for JKSSB Senior Horticulture Technician 2026? Six posts in total — three under Open Merit, and one each reserved for SC, ST-1, and ST-2 categories.

Q2. Who is eligible to apply for this post? Candidates need either a B.Sc. Horticulture degree or a B.Sc. Agriculture degree with Horticulture as a major subject, from a UGC-recognised university.

Q3. When does the application window close? Applications opened on 22 June 2026 and will remain open until 21 July 2026.

Q4. When will the written exam be conducted? No official date has been announced yet. Based on JKSSB’s usual recruitment timeline, the exam is expected sometime in the November–December 2026 window, though this should be treated as a tentative estimate.

Q5. Does this exam have negative marking? Based on JKSSB’s standard practice for most of its written tests, a deduction of 0.25 marks per wrong answer is expected, though candidates should confirm this once the official pattern is released.

Q6. What pay level does this post carry? Senior Horticulture Technician is placed at Pay Level-6E under the J&K government pay structure.

Q7. How much is the application fee? Rs. 600 for General, OBC, RBA, and ALC/IB male candidates, and Rs. 500 for SC, ST-1, ST-2, EWS, and PwBD candidates.

In Short

With only six seats on the line, the JKSSB Senior Horticulture Technician recruitment rewards depth over breadth — a candidate who genuinely knows propagation science, orchard nutrition, and temperate fruit cultivation will outperform one who’s tried to cram everything lightly. Use the months ahead to work systematically through your horticulture fundamentals, keep the general sections in your revision rotation, and track jkssb.nic.in for the official syllabus and confirmed exam date as the recruitment moves forward.

Keep following us for fresh updates on JKSSB notifications, exam dates, and post-wise syllabus breakdowns.

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