The position often referred to as “PSI” or “Sub-Inspector (Civil)” in Karnataka is a state-level police officer role under KSP.
The recruitment exam is conducted by KSP (or in some years via the Karnataka Examination Authority (KEA) as the nodal agency).
As a Sub-Inspector (Civil), key responsibilities include: maintaining law & order in assigned jurisdiction, supervising constables, conducting investigations, submitting charge-sheets in court, patrolling, arresting offenders, etc.
Because it’s a uniformed, respectable public-service role, many aspirants consider it a strong career option.
Educational qualification: Graduation (Bachelor’s degree) from a recognised university.
Age limit: In many past notifications, ~21-30 years for general category (with relaxations for other categories) though you should check the specific year’s notification.
Physical standards & endurance: Candidates must meet height, chest (for men), and endurance test (run/jump) criteria.
Physical Standard Test (PST) + Endurance Test (ET) to ensure physical fitness for police duty.
Written examination: Past patterns show two papers — Paper I (Descriptive) and Paper II (Objective) for example: Paper I ~50 marks; Paper II ~150 marks.
Other stages may include medical exam, document verification, interview depending on year/notification.
The basic pay for a newly recruited Sub-Inspector (Civil) in Karnataka is around ₹ 37,900 per month (as per recent information) under the 7th Pay Commission structure.
Of course, on top of basic pay there are allowances: Dearness Allowance (DA), House Rent Allowance (HRA), Travel Allowance, medical allowances, city compensatory allowance (if posted in big city) etc.
Considering allowances, in-hand salary will vary by posting (metro vs rural), years of service, and extra duties. For instance one source says in-hand could range ~₹ 40,000-₹ 75,000 depending on allowances.
Salary progression (increments) as you serve more years: one breakdown shows increment structure for PSI in Karnataka:
First year: ₹ 37,900
Next 2 years + annual increment ~₹ 950 or so.
Later years: higher pay as years pass and with promotions.
Job security, government pension scheme / retirement benefits, allowances for hardship/risk, opportunity for field postings etc.
Prestige of uniformed service, opportunity to serve society.
From Sub-Inspector one can climb up through ranks such as Inspector, Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) or equivalent, and further depending on performance, departmental exams, seniority, etc. One article gives a broad progression: PSI → Inspector → Assistant Commissioner/ACP → DCP etc (though actual path depends on state cadre rules).
With experience and good service record, you may get posted to more responsible roles (investigation branches, traffic, special units) which often lead to quicker promotions.
Early in service: you will be hands-on in field duty (beat patrols, crime scenes, investigations).
Mid-career: you may supervise units, manage teams, get postings with higher responsibility.
Long-term: Senior ranks, administrative roles, specialised units (cybercrime, intelligence) become possible.
A police SI role offers more than salary: public service, dynamic work environment, good growth if you remain disciplined and perform.
Especially if you qualify departmental exams (for promotion) and maintain good fitness & service record, the growth is significant.
Entry requirement is straightforward (graduation + fitness) compared to some roles; the salary and benefits are strong for the starting level.
It offers a public-service role with societal impact and stable government job advantages.
The opportunity for growth is real (assuming you perform and stay eligible).
For someone wanting a uniformed service, stability, and a defined career path, this is attractive.
Physical fitness matters a lot: the PST/ET stages are not trivial. Early preparation of fitness is important.
Posting location matters: rural vs urban postings differ a lot in lifestyle, allowances, workload.
Promotion depends not only on years but performance, departmental exams, and availability of vacancies.
Being aware of service duties (cycles, being on shift, risk, transfers) is important — police work is demanding.
Keep updated with official notifications for that year (eligibility, pattern, vacancy) because norms may change.