The fast formally ended after Member of Parliament Manoj Tiwari and other leaders offered fruit juice to striking students, a statement issued by the government said.
The students expressed their gratitude and thanked Union Minster Jitendra Singh for his concern about their demands, it said.
The protesting civil services aspirants were demanding that the pattern for the Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT) be changed to give level-playing field to those hailing from rural areas.
Earlier in the day, Singh has said in Lok Sabha that the Government is fully aware of the issue and is taking a sympathetic view on the matter.
"We appeal to the students not to cause unnecessary physical and mental agony to themselves, as the Government is already pursuing their cause in right earnest," the Minister had said.
The Government has constituted a three-member committee to look into their grievances and put forward its suggestions. "We are writing to the Committee to expedite the process and furnish its report at the earliest, considering the urgency of the matter.
The civil services examination is conducted by the Union Public Service Commission in three stages--preliminary, main, and interview-- to choose candidates for prestigious Indian Administrative Service (IAS), Indian Foreign Service (IFS) and Indian Police Service (IPS) among others.
There are two compulsory papers of 200 marks each in the preliminary examination. These papers are also known as CSAT I and CSAT II.
