Hubbry Logo
Joint Entrance Examination – MainJoint Entrance Examination – MainMain
Open search
Joint Entrance Examination – Main
Community hub
Joint Entrance Examination – Main
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Joint Entrance Examination – Main
Joint Entrance Examination – Main
from Wikipedia

Joint Entrance Examination – Main
AcronymJEE-Main (formerly AIEEE)
TypeComputer Based Test (CBT) and pen and paper Mode (For B. Arch paper only)
AdministratorNational Testing Agency
Skills tested
PurposeAdmission to undergraduate engineering and architecture courses in 32 NITs, 26 IIITs, and 40 GFTIs and some others State Government and Private Institutes. Also serves as a preliminary selection and eligibility test for appearing JEE-Advanced for admission to 23 IITs
Year started2002 (23 years ago) (2002) Formerly known as AIEEE
Duration3 hours
Score range-75 to +300 in Paper 1 and -82 to +400 in Paper 2A & 2B
OfferedTwice a year (Except for the year 2021 where it was conducted 4 times due to the COVID-19 pandemic).
Restrictions on attemptsMaximum six attempts in three consecutive years as it is conducted twice a year, with no age limit
Regions India
LanguagesEnglish
Hindi
Assamese
Bengali
Gujarati
Kannada
Malayalam
Marathi
Odia
Punjabi
Tamil
Telugu
Urdu
Annual number of test takers
PrerequisitesClass 12 or equivalent with Mathematics, Physics and any one of the technical subjects prescribed by AICTE from recognised board/university
Fee
Qualification rate250,284 (17.68%) qualify for JEE-Advanced (2024)
Websitejeemain.nta.nic.in
As per 2025 information bulletin[1]

The Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE-Main), formerly All India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE), is an Indian standardized computer-based test for admission to various technical undergraduate programs in engineering, architecture, and planning across colleges in India. The exam is conducted by the National Testing Agency for admission to B.Tech, B.Arch, B.Planning etc. programs in premier technical institutes such as the National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs) and Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs) which are based on the rank secured in the JEE-Main. It is usually conducted twice every year: Session 1 and Session 2 (commonly known as January session and April session). It also serves as a preliminary selection and eligibility test for qualifying JEE (Advanced) for admission to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs). Since mid 2019, the JEE has been conducted fully online as a computerized test. Before the NTA, the JEE was administered by the Central Board of Secondary Education.

History

[edit]

The AIEEE was introduced in 2002, since the newly established NITs, IIITs and GFTIs wanted an entrance examination paper of a higher standard than the Common Engineering Test (CET), which was formerly used for admission to all non-IIT engineering colleges and some state government colleges (by a few states), including RECs and IIITs, owing mostly to the rising competition and the goal of maintaining the exclusiveness of such institutes of national importance. It was renamed to JEE-Main in 2013.

Until 2018, the exam was held both in pen and paper and CBT modes,[2] as well as was held in the first week of April by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE). It is conducted by National Testing Agency in CBT mode only from 2018 onwards.

The 2020 and 2021 exams were postponed and conducted later in the same years, due to the coronavirus pandemic.[3] 2021 was the only year throughout JEE-Main history, when a maximum of 4 attempts were given to students.[4] In general, for the rest of the years, most students took the JEE-Main exam in either 1 or 2 attempts, even though a maximum of 3 attempts is allowed during two consecutive years.

Structure

[edit]

The examination consists of only two papers: Paper 1 for B.E./B.Tech courses and Paper 2 for B.Arch and B.Planning courses.[5] A candidate can opt for any or both the papers. Paper 1 is a mandatory computer based test (CBT) (called online mode) from 2018 onwards. Until 2018, there was an option between offline pen and paper mode and online computer mode. The examination was conducted offline pen and paper mode only till 2010. In 2011, as per the orders of the Ministry of Human Resource Development, CBSE conducted Paper 1 in Computer Based Test (CBT) mode for the first one lakh candidates who opted for the same, while the remaining students took the examination in the conventional pen and paper mode.[6] The number of attempts which a candidate can avail at the examination is limited to three in consecutive years. As of 2018, the top 2,24,000 rankers of JEE-Main will qualify to take the second and final level of examination: JEE-Advanced. this number of 2.24 lakh is not fixed this may vary as per difficulty level of paper of JEE-Main.[7]

In 2010, the Ministry of Human Resource Development announced plans to replace JEE with a common entrance test for all government engineering colleges which will be called Indian Science Engineering Eligibility Test (ISEET), by 2013.[8] Accordingly, MHRD proposes to set up National Testing Service, which will be an autonomous and self-sustained agency to conduct this new common entrance test.

The JEE-Main also serves as a preliminary requisite examination for JEE-Advanced.

In 2024, NTA reduced the JEE Main syllabus to reduce pressure and stress among students and to meet the same syllabus structure as that of the revised NCERT books.

In the latest 2025 Information brochure, the syllabus remained same as of 2024 but NTA reduced the number of question in Section - B of Paper - 1 (B.E/B-Tech) from 5 out 10 questions (to be attempted) to 5 out of 5 questions (compulsory) with negative marking.

Languages

[edit]

The exam is offered in thirteen languages, namely English, Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu.[9]

Irregularities and Misconduct

[edit]

2011 incident

[edit]

In 2011, CBSE postponed the exam by a few hours after the questions were leaked in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh the night before. CBSE sent alternative questions to exam centres. CBSE announced the postponement of the exam 30 minutes before the scheduled start of the examination.[10][11]

JEE (Main) 2020 Assam topper scam

[edit]

In 2020, Neel Nakshatra Das, a candidate for JEE-Main, used a substitute to give the exam. He subsequently scored 99.8 percentile in the exam and topped in his state, Assam.[12][13] Seven people were arrested, including Bhargav Deka, the owner of a city-based coaching institute, Global Edu Light, Tata Consultancy Services employees, [14] the candidate (Neel Nakshatra Das), Neel's father, Jyotirmoy Das, and an invigilator.[15][16][17]

JEE (Main) 2022 technical glitches

[edit]

National Testing Agency (NTA) was widely criticized for the improper conduction of the JEE-Main 2022 examination. Many students faced technical glitches during the examination, which resulted in lower scores.[18] Glitches in answer key and response sheet of the exam were also a serious problem for the students. The agency did not consider re-conduction of the examination.[19]

Apparent Misconduct and Irregularity in JEE (Main) 2024

[edit]

NTA has been criticized for irregularities in the difficulty level of question papers of JEE(Main), which leads to the normalization of marks and ultimately, lower scores of candidates.[20]

JEE(Main) 2024 Session 1 (January)

[edit]

The discrepancy of appearing students in the initial four shifts of January 27(Shift 1 and 2) and January 29(Shift 1 and 2) has been reported by many students. The NTA allegedly distributed candidates erratically over the 10 shifts. Claims state that an absurdly larger appearance of students on the first two days was observed which caused major disparities in percentiles of the candidates. A surge in cutoff was also observed which further caused despair among some students. Multiple requests under the RTI Act have been filed, seeking evidence-backed statistical records of the number of students appearing in the respective shifts.[21][22][23][24][25] However, NTA released data in which no uneven distribution of candidates was found.[26]

JEE(Main) 2024 Session 2 (April)

[edit]

The agency stated that one case of impersonation and nine cases of cheating or other unfair means were reported on 4 April. It was later reported that the impersonation case was reported in Noida, while the other nine cases were reported in various parts of the country. The offenders were detected through artificial intelligence enabled monitoring and biometric verification.[27][28] In its concluding press release, the agency highlighted that 39 candidates have been disqualified for a period of three years due to their involvement in unfair practices during the examination.[29]

JEE(Main) 2025 Session 2 (April) Irregularities in the Final Results

[edit]

Following the release of the JEE Main 2025 Session 2 results by the National Testing Agency (NTA), concerns were raised by students and educators regarding discrepancies in the NTA percentile scores. Several students reported a mismatch between their raw scores and the percentiles allotted, with instances where candidates with lower scores received higher percentiles, while those with higher raw scores were awarded comparatively lower percentiles.[30]

This anomaly sparked confusion and dissatisfaction, particularly among students who narrowly missed the eligibility cutoff for JEE Advanced 2025 due to their reported percentiles. Many candidates took to social media platforms to share their experiences, and the issue gained wider attention after it was first highlighted by a YouTuber in his video and in the comments section, who analyzed and compared scorecards submitted by affected students.[31]

As the issue gained traction, demands for clarification from the NTA increased, with some students urging a review or reevaluation of the percentile normalization process used for multi-shift exams. At the time, the NTA had not issued a formal statement addressing the specific mismatches reported in Session 2.[32]

Mode of Exam

[edit]

Participating institutes

[edit]

Institutes participating in the 2022 centralized seat allocation process included:

Number of applicants by year

[edit]

The number of applicants taking the JEE-Main has varied over the years, with a peak of over 1.35 million in 2014.

Year Phase No. of registered

applicants

No. of appeared

applicants

No. of unique

registered applicants

No. of unique

appeared applicants

Reference(s)
2002 Once

a year

212,000 190,000 N/A [34]
2003 328,000 298,000
2004 418,000 357,000
2005 436,000 399,000
2006 524,000 493,000
2007 645,000 602,000
2008 863,000 791,000
2009 1,010,000 962,119
2010 1,120,000 1,070,000
2011 1,110,000 1,050,000
2012 1,137,256 1,061,854 [35]
2013 1,282,000 [36]
2014 1,356,805 [37]
2015 1,304,495 [38]
2016 1,194,934 1,128,633 [39]
2017 1,186,454 1,122,351 [40]
2018 1,259,000 1,043,000 [41]
2019 1 929,198 874,469 1,237,892 1,147,125 [42]
2 935,741 881,096
2020 1 921,000 869,000 1,174,000 1,023,000 [43]
2 841,000 635,000
2021 1 652,628 621,033 1,048,012 939,008 [44]
2 619,641 556,248
3 709,611 543,553
4 767,700 481,419
2022 1 872,970 769,604 1,026,799 905,590 [45]
2 622,034 540,242
2023 1 860,064 823,967 1,162,398 1,113,325 [46][47][48]
2 931,510 883,372
2024 1 1,221,624 1,170,048 1,476,557 1,415,110 [49][50][51]
2 1,179,569 1,067,959
2025 1 1,311,544 1,258,136 1,539,848 1,475,103 [52][53]
2 1,061,840 992,350

(From 2021)

Year Phase No. of registered

applicants

No. of appeared

applicants

No. of unique

registered applicants

No. of unique

appeared applicants

Reference(s)
2021 1 59,962 48,836 91,468 62,035Decrease [54][55]
2 74,479 29,004
2022 1 61,534 39,639 77,849 46,336Decrease [56]
2 32,724 14,924
2023 1
2
2024 1 68,147 51,570 99,086 (B.Arch+B.Planning) 71,009 (B.Arch+B.Planning) [57][58]
2 73,362 36,707
2025 1 63,481 44,144 91,378 63,378 [59][60]
2 48,703 34,876

B.Planning

[edit]

(From 2021)

Year Phase No. of registered

applicants

No. of appeared

applicants

No. of unique

registered applicants

No. of unique

appeared applicants

Reference(s)
2021 1 25,810 19,352 40,346 24,351Decrease [54][55]
2 32,108 10,551
2022 1 25,820 15,371 33,048 17,817Decrease [56]
2 12,758 4,912
2023 1
2
2024 1 36,672 24,876 99,086 (B.Arch+B.Planning) 71,009 (B.Arch+B.Planning) [57][58]
2 38,105 16,228
2025 1 28,335 18,596 41,012 26,590 [59][60]
2 20,768 13,583

Common Paper (B.Arch/B.Planning)

[edit]

(Before 2021)

Year Phase No. of registered

applicants

No. of appeared

applicants

No. of unique

registered applicants

No. of unique

appeared applicants

Reference(s)
2019 1 180,052 145,386 275,913 227,907 [61]
2 169,759 144,032
2020 1 145,189 118,732 207,369 147,983Decrease [62]
2 112,139 76,889

Counselling

[edit]

Earlier, counselling for the JEE-Main was conducted through the CSAB; but, now, the authorities have made changes in the counselling procedure. The JAB (Joint Admission Board), representing IITs, and the CSAB (Central Seat Allocation Board), making agreements on behalf of the NITs (National Institutes of Technology) and other CFTIs (Centrally Funded Technical Institutes), are now united to conduct counselling (common counselling) for the two exams of the IIT-JEE. The memo for the same was signed on 2 May 2015. These two together are known as the Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA).[63] The ministry of education constituted Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) consisting of the Central Seat Allocation Board (CSAB) and the Joint Admission Board of IITs (JAB-IITs) for joint counselling and seat allocation to IITs and the NIT+ system, which consists of 31 NITs, IIEST Shibpur, 26 IIITs, three Schools of Planning and Architecture (SPAs) and 37 GFTIs (Central/State Government Funded Technical Institutions).

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main) is a national-level competitive examination conducted annually by India's National Testing Agency (NTA) for admission to undergraduate programs in engineering (B.E./B.Tech), architecture (B.Arch), and planning (B.Planning) at National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and other centrally funded technical institutions (CFTIs). Introduced as part of the JEE system in 2012 to streamline admissions beyond the elite Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), it serves as the eligibility test for the subsequent JEE Advanced exam, which determines entry into IITs. Since 2019, NTA has administered the exam in a computer-based format twice yearly—typically in January and April—assessing candidates on physics, chemistry, and mathematics through multiple-choice and numerical questions. In recent sessions, such as , JEE Main drew over 1.4 million unique candidates for the B.E./B.Tech paper alone, underscoring its role as a high-stakes gateway amid fierce competition for roughly 50,000 seats across participating institutions. The exam's percentile-based scoring and normalization process aim to ensure fairness across sessions, with top performers qualifying for JEE Advanced, where only about 250,000 candidates advance from the larger pool. While it promotes meritocratic selection for technical education, JEE Main has encountered scrutiny over alleged irregularities, including CBI investigations into manipulation attempts during exams, highlighting challenges in maintaining integrity in mass-scale testing.

Introduction

Purpose and Scope

The Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main) is conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA) as the qualifying examination for admission to undergraduate programs in engineering (B.E./B.Tech), architecture (B.Arch), and planning (B.Planning) offered by National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and other Centrally Funded Technical Institutions (CFTIs). Admissions to these institutions are facilitated through the Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) based on candidates' All India Ranks derived from JEE Main scores. JEE Main also functions as an eligibility test for the JEE Advanced, which is required for admission to the (IITs). Top-ranked performers in JEE Main (typically the top 2.5 candidates, subject to annual variations) qualify to appear for JEE Advanced, ensuring a merit-based screening for the more selective IIT admissions process. The examination's scope encompasses two main papers: Paper 1 for B.E./B.Tech admissions, focusing on Physics, Chemistry, and ; and Paper 2, divided into Paper 2A for B.Arch (including and tests) and Paper 2B for B.Planning. Conducted twice annually in computer-based mode (except the drawing section of B.Arch), it covers candidates seeking entry into over 30 NITs, 25 IIITs, and numerous CFTIs, with additional state-level and private institutions utilizing scores for their admissions. This structure promotes standardized evaluation of approximately 10-12 applicants each year, prioritizing analytical and problem-solving skills aligned with the Class 11-12 curriculum.

Relation to JEE Advanced and Broader Admissions

JEE Main Paper 1 serves as the qualifying examination for JEE Advanced, which is conducted annually by one of the (IITs) on a rotational basis for admissions to undergraduate programs at the 23 IITs. Only candidates who achieve a sufficiently high rank in JEE Main—typically the top 2.5 performers across all categories, as determined by the JEE Advanced organizing committee—are eligible to register and appear for JEE Advanced. This threshold ensures that only the most competitive candidates proceed to the more rigorous JEE Advanced, which assesses deeper conceptual understanding for IIT seats. Beyond IITs, JEE Main ranks (from Paper 1 for B.E./B.Tech programs) form the basis for admissions to 31 National Institutes of Technology (NITs), 26 Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), the Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology (IIEST) Shibpur, and other Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs), totaling over 120 participating institutions as of the 2025-26 academic year. These admissions are centralized through the Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA), which conducts multiple rounds of counseling based on All India Ranks (AIR) derived from JEE Main percentiles, incorporating category-wise reservations and seat availability. JoSAA allocates seats starting with IITs (using JEE Advanced ranks) followed by NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs, with opening and closing ranks published post-each round to guide candidate choices. JEE Main scores also enable admissions to a wider array of engineering programs, including state government engineering colleges (e.g., via state counseling processes in states like or that partially incorporate JEE Main ranks alongside state exams) and numerous private institutions across , such as deemed universities and self-financed colleges. Additionally, JEE Main Paper 2 is utilized for B.Arch and B.Planning admissions in NITs, IIITs, , and other approved institutions, often in conjunction with aptitude tests like the National Aptitude Test in Architecture (NATA). This broad applicability underscores JEE Main's role as a national-level gateway, with over 10 candidates annually competing for limited seats in premier technical education.

Historical Development

Origins in Pre-JEE Entrance Systems

Prior to the establishment of a unified national entrance examination for non-IIT engineering institutions, admissions to Regional Engineering Colleges (RECs)—predecessors to the National Institutes of Technology (NITs)—relied on a patchwork of state-level common entrance tests (CETs) and institution-specific examinations, often varying by region and affiliated university. This fragmented approach, prevalent through the 1990s, required candidates to appear for multiple tests to access seats across India's growing network of over 20 RECs established under the Ministry of Education since 1960. The expansion of private and state engineering colleges in the post-liberalization era exacerbated inefficiencies, as students faced dozens of disparate exams with inconsistent syllabi, formats, and evaluation criteria, leading to high burdens and logistical challenges for an estimated hundreds of thousands of annually. In contrast, admissions to the elite (IITs) operated under a separate, rigorous via the IIT-Joint Entrance Examination (IIT-JEE), originally launched in 1961 as the (CEE) following the IIT Act of 1961, featuring subjective papers in physics, chemistry, , and initially English. By the 1990s, IIT-JEE had evolved to include objective elements while maintaining three-hour subject-specific papers, serving exclusively the seven IITs with limited seats (around 5,000 by 2000). This bifurcated framework—IIT-JEE for top-tier institutes and localized tests for RECs and others—underscored systemic disparities in access and merit assessment, as non-IIT seats (numbering over 100,000 by the early 2000s) lacked a national benchmark, prompting government intervention to rationalize admissions without merging with IIT-JEE, which stakeholders resisted due to differing academic standards. The resulting All India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE), introduced in 2002 by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), directly addressed these pre-existing multiplicities by providing a single objective test for 15 RECs, select deemed universities, and architecture programs, drawing on models like the All India Pre-Medical Test for standardization. Over 150,000 candidates appeared in its inaugural year, marking a shift from regional silos to national eligibility screening.

Formation of AIEEE and Transition to JEE Main

The All India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE) was established in 2002 by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) to serve as a standardized national-level test for admissions to undergraduate programs in engineering, architecture, and planning at National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and other centrally funded technical institutions (CFTIs). Prior to AIEEE, admissions relied on disparate state-level and institute-specific exams, prompting the central government to consolidate them for greater uniformity, with several states agreeing to adopt the new format. The inaugural AIEEE was conducted on May 19, 2002, and it was held annually in offline mode during the first week of May until 2010, after which online options were introduced alongside paper-based tests. In 2012, the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD), now Ministry of Education, directed a restructuring of engineering entrance exams to reduce multiplicity and align admissions processes across institutions. This led to the replacement of AIEEE with the Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main) effective from the 2013 session, while the Indian Institutes of Technology's Joint Entrance Examination (IIT-JEE) was reconfigured as JEE Advanced. JEE Main retained AIEEE's core role as the primary gateway for NITs, IIITs, and CFTIs, but incorporated a two-tier system where top performers qualified for JEE Advanced for IIT admissions, aiming to streamline coaching dependencies and integrate Class XII board performance (initially 40% weightage) into merit lists. CBSE continued administering JEE Main until 2018, when responsibility shifted to the National Testing Agency (NTA) for improved scalability and computer-based delivery. The transition increased applicant numbers, with over 12.8 lakh candidates registering for JEE Main 2013 compared to prior AIEEE figures, reflecting broader access but also heightened competition.

Key Reforms Over Time

In 2013, the All India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE) was restructured and renamed as JEE Main, establishing a two-tier admission process for engineering institutes; JEE Main qualified the top performers for JEE Advanced, which became mandatory for IIT admissions, while JEE Main ranks determined allocations to National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and other centrally funded technical institutions. This reform aimed to streamline multiple state-level and institute-specific exams into a unified national framework, though it faced initial criticism for increasing competition and altering preparation dynamics. Concurrently, a computer-based test (CBT) mode was introduced as an option alongside the traditional pen-and-paper format, enabling faster result processing and reducing logistical challenges associated with large-scale offline exams. From 2019 onward, the (NTA), an autonomous body under the Ministry of Education, took over the conduct of JEE Main from the (CBSE), introducing multi-session formats with percentile-based normalization to account for variations in difficulty across shifts. That year, the exam was scheduled twice annually—typically in January and April—to offer candidates multiple attempts within the same admission cycle, with the best score considered for ranking; this shift, initially piloted, became permanent to mitigate risks of underperformance in a single sitting. The pattern was also updated to include a Section B with numerical value questions, allowing assessment of conceptual application beyond multiple-choice formats, though candidates could attempt only a subset to manage time constraints. Subsequent adjustments addressed pandemic disruptions and equity concerns: in 2021, numerical questions became optional with no negative marking to ease pressure, but this reverted in 2025 with mandatory attempts and a -1 penalty for incorrect numerical answers, alongside increased weightage to 30% from 25%. In 2024, the was rationalized by removing approximately 15-20% of topics across Physics, Chemistry, and to align with the NCERT Class 11 and 12 reductions, aiming to curb excessive coaching-driven content beyond school curricula. These changes, while enhancing fairness through technology and flexibility, have sparked debates on whether they dilute rigor or adequately address coaching monopolies and rural-urban disparities in access.

Eligibility and Registration

Academic and Age Qualifications

Candidates seeking to appear for the Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main) face no age restrictions, allowing individuals of any age to participate provided they meet the academic criteria. This policy, implemented by the National Testing Agency (NTA), eliminates prior upper age limits to broaden access, with no minimum age requirement specified either. Academic eligibility requires candidates to have passed the Class 12 (or equivalent) examination or be appearing in it during the relevant year. For JEE Main 2025, eligible candidates include those who completed Class 12 in 2023 or 2024, or are scheduled to appear in 2025. The qualifying examination must include specific subjects depending on the paper: for Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech), Physics and Mathematics are compulsory, along with at least one of Chemistry, Biotechnology, Biology, or a Technical Vocational subject; for Paper 2A (B.Arch), Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics are required; and for Paper 2B (B.Planning), Mathematics is mandatory. No minimum percentage marks in Class 12 are needed to appear for the exam itself, though admission to National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and other centrally funded technical institutions (CFTIs) requires 75% aggregate marks (or top 20 percentile in the board) for general category candidates, reduced to 65% for SC/ST/PwD categories. Candidates from recognized boards or equivalent examinations abroad are eligible if they fulfill the subject and passing criteria, with five subjects typically required in the qualifying exam. Repeaters who passed Class 12 before the specified years (e.g., prior to 2023 for 2025) are ineligible unless they qualify under special provisions, such as reappearing for improvement.

Attempt Limits and Special Provisions

Candidates are eligible to appear for the Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main) for three consecutive academic years starting from the year in which they pass or appear for the Class 12 (or equivalent) examination. Since the examination is conducted in two sessions annually (typically and April), this eligibility framework permits a maximum of six attempts. Candidates may opt to appear in one or both sessions within an eligible year, with the higher Normalized Technical Ability (NTA) score from multiple appearances in the same year used for ranking purposes. There is no explicit cap on attempts beyond this three-year window, nor differentiation by category (such as general, SC/ST, or OBC) for the number of attempts permitted. No age limit applies for appearing in JEE Main, allowing candidates of any age to participate provided they meet the year-of-passing criterion and other academic qualifications. This policy, established by the (NTA), ensures accessibility while tying eligibility to recent academic performance to maintain relevance for undergraduate admissions. Special provisions for attempts are minimal and primarily address examination accommodations rather than extending the attempt window. For persons with benchmark disabilities (), compensatory time of 1 hour per 3-hour paper and the option to use a are available, subject to certification via the Unique Disability ID () card. Past temporary relaxations, such as those during the for Class 12 marks requirements, have not altered the core attempt eligibility tied to the three-year period. Foreign nationals, Persons of Indian Origin (PIO), and Overseas Citizens of India (OCI) follow the same attempt guidelines but may face distinct admission quotas for Indian institutions.

Application and Fee Structure

The application process for JEE Main is entirely online and managed by the (NTA) via its official portal at jeemain.nta.nic.in. Candidates initiate registration by creating an account using a valid ID and mobile number, followed by filling in personal details (such as name, date of birth, and or other ID), academic qualifications, and preferred exam centers and papers. Required documents, including a recent passport-sized (10-200 KB, ), signature (4-30 KB, ), and category/PwD certificates if applicable, must be uploaded in specified formats. After form submission, candidates pay the fee electronically and download the confirmation page for records; no physical submission is needed. The process for each session ( and ) opens approximately 60-90 days prior, with deadlines strictly enforced, and corrections allowed in a limited window post-submission. Examination fees are category-specific, differentiated by gender, reserved status, number of papers attempted (single paper: Paper 1 B.E./B.Tech or Paper 2A B.Arch or Paper 2B B.Planning; both papers: any combination), and exam center location ( or abroad). Fees apply per session and are non-refundable except in cases of overpayment or erroneous calculation by NTA. Payment modes include debit/, net banking, or UPI, with additional processing charges and GST levied by the . Candidates opting for foreign centers face substantially higher fees to cover logistics.
CategorySingle Paper (India)Both Papers (India)Single Paper (Abroad)Both Papers (Abroad)
General/Unreserved (Male)₹1,000₹2,000₹5,000₹10,000
General/Unreserved (Female)₹800₹1,600₹4,000₹8,000
Gen-EWS/OBC-NCL (Male)₹900₹1,800₹4,500₹9,000
Gen-EWS/OBC-NCL (Female)₹800₹1,600₹4,000₹8,000
SC/ST//₹500₹1,000₹2,500₹5,000
For SC/ST/PwD/Transgender categories, fees remain uniform across genders. NTA verifies category claims during application and may disqualify candidates providing false information. Fee waivers or concessions are not extended beyond these structures, emphasizing self-reliance for reserved categories.

Examination Structure

Papers and Subject Coverage

The Joint Entrance Examination – Main comprises distinct papers aligned with admissions to engineering, architecture, and planning programs. Paper 1, intended for B.E./B.Tech courses, covers Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics, testing conceptual understanding and analytical application from secondary school curricula. Paper 2A, for B.Arch admissions, includes , an Aptitude Test evaluating spatial awareness, visualization, and aesthetic sensitivity, and a assessing sketching proficiency and creative expression. Paper 2B, dedicated to B.Planning, features , the Aptitude Test (focusing on comprehension and ), and Planning-Based Questions that probe knowledge of urban environments, geography, history, and problem-solving in planning contexts. Candidates select papers based on targeted programs, with overlap in and components across Paper 2 variants to accommodate interdisciplinary preparation.

Syllabus Outline and Recent Reductions

The syllabus for JEE Main Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech), which assesses eligibility for admission to undergraduate programs, encompasses Physics, Chemistry, and drawn primarily from the NCERT for Classes 11 and 12. The content emphasizes conceptual understanding, problem-solving, and application of fundamental principles across these subjects, with a total of approximately 54 units distributed as follows: 20 in Physics, 20 in Chemistry, and 14 in . Physics units cover foundational mechanics, thermodynamics, electromagnetism, optics, and modern physics. Key areas include:
  • Units and Measurements; Kinematics; Laws of Motion; Work, Energy and Power; Rotational Motion; Gravitation; Properties of Solids and Liquids; Thermodynamics; Kinetic Theory of Gases; Oscillations and Waves.
  • Electrostatics; Current Electricity; Magnetic Effects of Current and Magnetism; Electromagnetic Induction and Alternating Currents; Electromagnetic Waves; Optics; Dual Nature of Matter and Radiation; Atoms and Nuclei; Electronic Devices; Experimental Skills.
Chemistry is structured into Physical, Inorganic, and Organic sections, focusing on atomic , chemical reactions, periodic properties, and molecular interactions: Mathematics units address algebra, , , and probability, with emphasis on analytical skills:
  • Sets, Relations and Functions; Complex Numbers and Quadratic Equations; Matrices and Determinants; Permutations and Combinations; and Its Simple Applications; Sequence and Series.
  • Limit, Continuity and Differentiability; Calculus; Differential Equations; Co-ordinate Geometry; Three Dimensional Geometry; Vector Algebra; Statistics and Probability; .
The (NTA) released the revised syllabus for JEE Main 2025 on October 28, 2024, reflecting ongoing rationalization efforts initiated in 2021 amid the and further refined in 2023 to align more closely with NCERT textbooks and reduce student workload by approximately 25-30%. These reductions eliminated redundant or advanced topics not central to core preparation, such as in Physics: the full Communication Systems unit, detailed Carnot engine processes in , and certain subtopics in (e.g., zero vector specifics) and Electromagnetic Waves; in Chemistry: Polymers, Chemistry in , , and select p-block details; in : entire units on and Mathematical Reasoning, along with some trigonometric identities and statements of theorems without proofs. No further deletions were announced for the 2025 session, maintaining the streamlined version to prioritize high-weightage fundamentals like , , and . This adjustment followed consultations with subject experts and aimed to mitigate overlap with JEE Advanced while ensuring fairness, though coaching institutes noted it shifted focus toward NCERT-based questions.

Language Options and Regional Adaptations

The JEE Main examination is conducted in 13 languages to facilitate accessibility for candidates from linguistically diverse regions of . These include English, , Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, , , Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu, and . Candidates select their preferred language during the online application process, and the computer-based test interface displays the question paper in the chosen language, with instructions available bilingually where applicable (e.g., English and or the regional language). This provision applies to both Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech) and Paper 2 (B.Arch/B.Planning), though Drawing sections in Paper 2A remain in English due to their visual nature. The multilingual format was implemented starting with the January 2021 session, expanding from the previous English and Hindi-only options to include 11 regional languages initially, with additions to reach 13 by subsequent years, in alignment with the National Education Policy 2020's promotion of mother-tongue instruction and regional language use in technical education. This adaptation addresses empirical disparities in performance linked to , as studies on similar exams indicate that non-native English/ speakers score 10-20% lower in monolingual formats, though direct causal data for JEE Main remains limited to NTA's post-implementation analyses showing increased participation from regional-language dominant states like and . Regional adaptations extend to examination center allocation, with over 500 centers available across more than 300 cities in and select international locations, prioritized based on candidates' permanent or correspondence addresses to minimize travel burdens in remote or border areas. For instance, northeastern states like and have dedicated centers supporting Assamese and Odia papers, reducing logistical challenges for rural candidates who comprise about 40% of registrants from those regions. Special provisions include scribe facilities and compensatory time for visually impaired candidates in regional languages, ensuring equivalence across linguistic zones, though availability of scribes fluent in less common languages like may vary by center. These measures reflect NTA's data-driven adjustments, with center choices finalized post-registration to balance load and regional equity, as uneven distribution in prior years led to 15% higher absenteeism in underserved areas.

Exam Pattern and Administration

Question Types, Duration, and Marking Scheme

JEE Main Paper 1 for admission to B.E./B.Tech programs features 75 questions divided equally among , , and , with each subject containing 20 multiple-choice questions (MCQs) in Section A and 5 numerical value questions in Section B, all mandatory for attempt. The examination duration is 3 hours, extended to 4 hours for candidates with disabilities. Marking awards +4 marks for each correct response in both MCQs and numerical questions, with a deduction of -1 mark for each incorrect answer across both types, and 0 marks for unattempted questions. This scheme totals 300 marks, reflecting a 2025 revision that eliminated optional numerical questions and introduced negative marking for Section B to standardize evaluation. Paper 2A for B.Arch includes (20 MCQs + 5 numerical questions, 100 marks), Test (50 MCQs, 200 marks), and Drawing Test (2 subjective questions, 100 marks), totaling 77 questions attempted in 3 hours (or 4 hours for ). MCQs and numerical questions follow the +4/-1 scheme, while drawing evaluation is criterion-based without negative marking, yielding 400 total marks. Paper 2B for B. comprises (20 MCQs + 5 numerical, 100 marks), Test (50 MCQs, 200 marks), and Planning-based questions (25 MCQs, 100 marks), for 100 questions in 3 hours (4 for ) and 400 marks overall, adhering to the same +4/-1 marking for objective sections.
PaperQuestion TypesDurationTotal MarksMarking Scheme
Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech)60 MCQs + 15 Numerical3 hours300+4 correct, -1 incorrect (both types)
Paper 2A (B.Arch)70 MCQs + 5 Numerical + 2 3 hours400+4/-1 for MCQs & Numerical; Criterion-based for
Paper 2B (B.Planning)105 MCQs + 5 Numerical3 hours400+4/-1 for all objective questions

Computer-Based and Pen-Paper Modes

The Joint Entrance Examination – Main employs two primary modes of administration: computer-based test (CBT) for the majority of sections and pen-and-paper (P&P) mode exclusively for the drawing test in Paper 2A. This hybrid approach accommodates the diverse requirements of the papers, with CBT facilitating digital delivery of multiple-choice and numerical questions across shifts, while P&P ensures the feasibility of subjective sketching tasks. The (NTA) oversees both modes to maintain standardization, security, and scalability for over a million candidates annually. Paper 1, intended for B.E./B.Tech admissions, is conducted entirely in CBT mode, featuring 90 questions (75 to attempt) in physics, chemistry, and delivered via computer interfaces at designated centers. Candidates navigate sections digitally, with features like question palettes for tracking attempted, unanswered, and marked-for-review items, enabling efficient time management within the 3-hour duration. This mode supports multiple sessions per exam day, with normalization applied across shifts to account for potential variations in difficulty. For Paper 2A (B.Arch), Parts I () and II () are administered in CBT mode, mirroring the digital format of Paper 1 with objective questions, while Part III () requires P&P mode to permit freehand sketching on provided sheets. This segregation occurs in a single session, where candidates first complete the CBT portions before transitioning to the drawing section, ensuring the subjective evaluation of creativity and visualization skills unfeasible in a fully digital environment. Paper 2B (B.Planning) remains fully CBT, focusing on objective planning-related questions without drawing components. CBT mode enhances through randomized question sets per candidate, reducing risks via real-time monitoring and biometric verification, as implemented since NTA's in for JEE Main. In contrast, P&P for limits scalability but preserves assessment for artistic elements, with scanned sheets evaluated manually. Both modes adhere to identical marking schemes—+4 for correct answers, -1 for incorrect in MCQs, and no penalty for unattempted or numerical questions—but CBT's interface demands familiarity with on-screen tools, prompting NTA-recommended mock tests.

Role of National Testing Agency (NTA)

The National Testing Agency (NTA) was established by the Ministry of Education, Government of India, under the Societies Registration Act, 1860, as an independent, autonomous, and self-sustained organization to conduct standardized entrance examinations for higher education admissions. Its mandate includes assessing candidate competencies through efficient, transparent, and research-based testing processes that prioritize equity, quality, and security. Since 2019, the NTA has been entrusted with the full responsibility for conducting JEE Main, succeeding the (CBSE) to enhance standardization, reduce errors, and implement international best practices in test delivery and evaluation. This includes managing the examination in two sessions annually—typically and —with over 1 million candidates participating across multiple shifts to accommodate logistics. NTA's operational duties encompass releasing official notifications and application portals, verifying applicant documents and eligibility, allocating examination centers in India and abroad, and ensuring secure preparation and distribution of question papers. The agency conducts most papers via computer-based testing (CBT) mode, with the B.Arch/B.Planning drawing test in pen-and-paper format, while employing biometric verification and surveillance to prevent malpractices. Post-examination, NTA applies normalization algorithms to equate scores across shifts due to potential difficulty variations, releases provisional answer keys for candidate objections, computes scores, and declares final results, which qualify candidates for JEE Advanced and admissions to NITs, IIITs, and other institutes. It also coordinates with bodies like JoSAA for seat allocation and addresses grievances through structured appeal mechanisms, aiming for error-free and fair outcomes.

Scoring and Qualification

Percentile System and Normalization Process

The Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main) employs a percentile-based scoring system to determine candidate rankings, as the examination is conducted across multiple sessions and shifts with potential variations in difficulty levels. This approach replaces the use of raw marks for merit lists, ensuring equitable comparison by normalizing performance relative to peers within each session. The National Testing Agency (NTA) calculates percentile scores separately for each session, with the highest raw score in that session assigned a percentile of 100. Percentile scores are derived using the formula: Percentile Score = 100 × (Number of candidates in the session with a raw score equal to or less than the candidate's raw score) / Total number of candidates in the session. These scores are computed to seven decimal places to reduce the likelihood of ties and enhance ranking precision. For multi-session papers, such as Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech), the NTA merges percentile scores across sessions after individual session-wise computation, treating the percentile as the normalized NTA score for merit preparation. Candidates appearing in both sessions receive consideration of their best percentile score. The normalization process inherently addresses inter-session discrepancies through this percentile method, avoiding direct equating of raw marks which could disadvantage candidates in tougher shifts. Separate percentiles are generated for overall performance and each subject (Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics), with the aggregate used for ranking in Paper 1. This system has been standard since NTA assumed conduct of JEE Main in 2019, with results including All India Ranks derived solely from these normalized percentiles rather than absolute marks.

Tie-Breaking Rules

In the Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main), candidates receive scores (NTA scores) based on normalized performance across multiple sessions to account for variations in difficulty. When two or more candidates obtain identical total NTA scores, tie-breaking criteria are applied sequentially to assign relative ranks, ensuring fairness in the merit list. For Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech), the primary tie-breaker prioritizes the candidate with the higher NTA score in . If the tie persists, the higher NTA score in Physics is considered next, followed by the higher NTA score in Chemistry. Should equality remain after these subject-wise comparisons, both candidates are assigned the same rank without further differentiation, marking a revision from prior years that eliminated secondary factors such as candidate age (favoring older applicants) and application number (favoring lower numbers). Tie-breaking for Paper 2A (B.Arch) follows a distinct sequence: higher NTA score in the Test, then in , then in , with identical ranks awarded if unresolved. For Paper 2B (B.Planning), priority is given to the higher NTA score in , followed by , then , again defaulting to shared ranks upon persistent ties. These rules, updated by the (NTA) for the 2025 session, apply uniformly to raw score ties before normalization and aim to emphasize subject proficiency over extraneous variables.

Category-Wise Cutoffs and Qualification Criteria

The category-wise cutoffs for JEE Main represent the minimum scores required for candidates in various reservation categories to qualify for JEE Advanced, ensuring that approximately 2.5 candidates from the B.E./B.Tech. paper are shortlisted overall. These percentiles are determined by the (NTA) post-results, based on the performance distribution to allocate slots proportionally: 40.5% to the Common Rank List (CRL), 27% to OBC-NCL, 10% to GEN-EWS, 15% to SC, 7.5% to ST, with an additional 5% horizontal reservation for Persons with Disability (PwD) across categories. Qualification requires securing at least this percentile in the aggregate across Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics, with no sectional minimums specified by NTA. For the 2025 examination cycle, the NTA-released qualifying percentiles were as follows:
CategoryQualifying Percentile
Common Rank List (CRL)/UR93.1023262
GEN-EWS80.3830119
OBC-NCL79.4313582
SC61.1526933
ST47.9026465
UR-PwD0.0079349
These cutoffs reflect normalized percentiles from both sessions, where candidates' best scores are considered, and are lower for categories to align with constitutional reservation policies, though the overall pool remains merit-based via all-India . Candidates meeting or exceeding these thresholds receive an eligibility confirmation for JEE Advanced registration, subject to additional criteria such as not exceeding attempt limits (maximum two consecutive years post-Class 12) and fulfilling Class 12 aggregate requirements (75% for general/EWS/OBC or 65% for SC/ST at admission stage for IITs). For admissions to NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs via JoSAA, no separate cutoff applies beyond obtaining a valid All India Rank (AIR); seat allocation depends on category-specific closing ranks, which vary by institute and branch but effectively require higher performance for competitive programs. Cutoffs fluctuate annually based on exam difficulty, applicant volume (over 12 in 2025), and score normalization across shifts, with 2025 figures showing a slight decline from 2024's general cutoff of 93.2362181 due to increased and normalization adjustments.

Admissions and Counselling

Participating Institutes: NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs

The National Institutes of Technology (NITs) comprise 31 autonomous public institutions designated as Institutes of National Importance under the NIT Act of 2007, offering undergraduate programs in engineering, architecture, and management primarily through JEE Main scores via centralized JoSAA counseling. These institutes, spread across states like Tamil Nadu (NIT Tiruchirappalli), Karnataka (NIT Karnataka, Surathkal), and others, admit students based on All India Rank (AIR) from JEE Main, with seat allocation prioritizing top performers while reserving quotas for categories such as Scheduled Castes (15%), Scheduled Tribes (7.5%), Other Backward Classes (27%), and Economically Weaker Sections (10%). Total seats across NITs for the 2025-26 academic year exceed 23,000, distributed among branches like Computer Science, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering, with branch-specific cutoffs varying by institute location and demand. The (IIITs) include 26 specialized institutions, many operating under a public-private model, focused on , , and related fields, with admissions exclusively via JEE Main ranks through JoSAA for B.Tech and integrated programs. Notable examples are IIIT Allahabad, IIIT Hyderabad (though partially autonomous), and IIIT , offering around 8,200 seats collectively for 2025-26, emphasizing curricula in , , and cybersecurity to address industry needs. Unlike NITs, IIITs often have fewer traditional branches, prioritizing IT-centric , and their establishment since the early aims to build specialized talent pools, though seat availability and quality differ across newer versus older institutes. Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs) encompass 47 diverse entities, including institutes like Birla Institute of Technology (BIT) Mesra, Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology (IIEST) Shibpur, and University of Hyderabad's engineering programs, admitting via JEE Main for approximately 6,000 seats in 2025-26 across B.Tech, B.Arch, and integrated courses. These institutes, funded by central or state governments, vary widely in focus—from mining engineering at Indian School of Mines (now NIT Dhanbad, but similar for others) to hotel management at institutes like Assam University—offering alternatives to NITs and IIITs for candidates with moderate ranks, though cutoffs are generally lower due to factors like regional preferences and program specificity. JoSAA allocates seats in multiple rounds, allowing choices across all categories, with final admissions contingent on document verification and fee payment.

Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA) Process

The Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA), established by the Ministry of Education, Government of India, manages a centralized online counseling process for allocating seats in Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and other Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs) to candidates qualified through JEE Advanced for IITs and JEE Main for NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs. This unified system, introduced to streamline admissions previously handled separately, processes over 2.5 lakh qualified candidates annually across approximately 120 institutes offering engineering, architecture, and planning programs. The process prioritizes All India Ranks (AIR) from JEE Advanced for IIT seats and Common Rank Lists (CRL) from JEE Main for other institutes, incorporating category-wise reservations under the Government of India's policies. The counseling commences with online registration on the official JoSAA portal (josaa.nic.in), where eligible candidates log in using their JEE Main or Advanced application number and password, followed by verification of personal and academic details against the respective rank lists uploaded by the organizing bodies. Registration typically opens shortly after JEE Advanced results, as in 2025 when it began on June 3, and requires candidates to agree to terms, including a partial admission fee payment option for reserved categories. Post-registration, candidates fill preferences by selecting from a list of institute-program combinations, arranging up to hundreds of choices in descending order of priority; this step allows broad or targeted selections, such as prioritizing IITs before NITs. Two mock allocation rounds are conducted thereafter to simulate outcomes and enable choice revisions without commitment, aiding candidates in refining strategies based on projected allotments. Choices must be locked by a deadline, after which no modifications are permitted. Seat allocation proceeds in up to six regular rounds, plus an additional NIT+ system round if needed, using a deferred acceptance algorithm that processes candidates in rank order: for each, the highest-preference available seat matching eligibility (including home state quotas for NITs/GFTIs) is assigned, with seats reverting for lower ranks if declined. Results are published online, displaying allotted institute, program, and category. Allotted candidates must then select a willingness option—freeze (accept the seat and withdraw from further rounds), float (retain the seat but remain eligible for upgrades across institutes in subsequent rounds), or slide (retain the seat but seek upgrades to higher-preference branches within the same institute)—and complete online reporting by uploading documents like Class X/XII marksheets, category certificates, and JEE admit cards. A non-refundable seat acceptance fee is required: ₹35,000 for SC/ST/PwD candidates and ₹45,000 for others (as of recent cycles), adjustable against institute fees upon physical reporting. Non-compliance results in automatic cancellation and loss of claim to further seats. Subsequent rounds incorporate seats vacated by withdrawals, upgrades, or non-reporting from prior allotments, with opening and closing ranks published per round for transparency; for instance, in 2025, Round 1 results were announced on June 14. Final verification occurs at the allotted institute via physical reporting, where discrepancies in documents can lead to seat forfeiture. Vacant seats post-JoSAA rounds, often in lower-demand branches or categories, are filled through special counseling by the Central Seat Allocation Board (CSAB), targeting JEE Main qualifiers excluded from initial JoSAA participation due to rank thresholds. This multi-round structure ensures maximal seat occupancy while upholding merit-based assignment, though it demands timely candidate action to avoid penalties.

Reservation Policies and Their Implementation

Reservation policies for admissions through JEE Main apply exclusively to seat allocation in participating institutes such as National Institutes of Technology (NITs), Indian Institutes of Information Technology (IIITs), and other Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs), managed via the Joint Seat Allocation Authority (JoSAA). These policies mandate vertical reservations of 15% for Scheduled Castes (SC), 7.5% for Scheduled Tribes (ST), 27% for Other Backward Classes belonging to Non-Creamy Layer (OBC-NCL), and 10% for Economically Weaker Sections (EWS), calculated from the total sanctioned seats in each institute. Additionally, a horizontal reservation of 5% is provided for Persons with Disabilities (PwD) across all categories, including the open category, ensuring proportional distribution without altering vertical quotas. In NITs, reservations operate within a dual quota system: 50% seats under Home State (HS) quota for candidates domiciled in the state where the NIT is located, and 50% under Other State (OS) or All India quota, with category-wise reservations applied separately in each to maintain equity. IIITs and most GFTIs allocate 100% seats under All India quota, applying reservations uniformly without state-specific divisions, while certain state-funded GFTIs may incorporate additional state-level quotas alongside central policies. Candidates must qualify JEE Main on the Common Rank List (CRL) or category-specific ranks, with reserved category applicants competing first within their category ranks for reserved seats before any spillover to open seats if unfilled. Implementation occurs during JoSAA counselling, a centralized online process starting post-JEE Main results, typically in June-July, involving registration, choice filling of institutes and branches, mock allotments, and multiple rounds of seat allocation based on All India Ranks (AIR), category ranks, and preferences. Eligible candidates upload category certificates—such as SC/ST certificates issued by competent state/central authorities, OBC-NCL certificates not older than the financial year of admission with exclusion, EWS certificates based on family income below ₹8 annually excluding agricultural land, and certificates from designated medical boards—for verification at reporting centers. Non-submission or invalid certificates results in allotment under the open category, with strict document checks to prevent misuse, though unfilled reserved seats may convert to open category in final rounds per guidelines.

Annual Applicant Numbers and Participation Rates

The number of candidates registering for the Joint Entrance Examination – Main has exhibited a general upward trajectory since the National Testing Agency assumed conduct in 2019, reflecting heightened competition for limited seats in National Institutes of Technology, Indian Institutes of Information Technology, and other federally funded technical institutes. In 2024, a record 1,476,557 unique candidates registered across both sessions, with 1,415,110 appearing, marking the highest participation to date prior to 2025. For the January 2025 session alone, registrations reached 1,380,000, surpassing the previous year's corresponding figure by approximately 160,000, driven by an expanding pool of Class 12 graduates and repeat applicants. Participation rates, measured as the proportion of registered candidates who actually appear, have consistently hovered between 90% and 96% in recent years, indicating strong commitment among applicants despite logistical challenges. For instance, in the 2024 January session, 1,221,624 candidates registered, with an appearance rate yielding 1,170,048 attendees. Similarly, the 2025 January session saw 1,311,544 registrations for Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech), with 1,258,136 appearing, for an attendance rate of approximately 96%. This high turnout contrasts with earlier trends under the pre-NTA regime, where annual appearances stabilized around 1.2 million from 2014 to 2016, showing a slight decline amid growing applicant pools.
YearUnique Registered (approx.)Unique AppearedNotes on Sessions
2023Not fully detailed; session totals ~9-10 per session1,113,325Unique across January/April; lower than 2024 due to post-pandemic normalization.
20241,476,5571,415,110Record unique; January: 1,221,624 registered, April: 1,179,569.
2025 (Jan session)1,380,0001,258,126Highest January registrations; full-year data pending session 2 completion.
The surge in applicants correlates with expanded access via computer-based testing and dual sessions since , allowing candidates to improve scores, though it intensifies pressure on qualifiers for JEE Advanced, limited to the top 250,000 performers inclusive of reservations. Earlier data from 2015–2016 indicate appearances of 1,234,760 and 1,207,058 respectively, suggesting stabilization before NTA's reforms boosted numbers through better and . Variations in reporting—per-session versus unique—stem from overlapping appearances, but official NTA releases prioritize unique counts for ranking purposes.

Topper Statistics and Score Distributions

In the Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main), toppers are defined as candidates securing a perfect (NTA) score of 100, representing the highest in the normalized scoring system across multiple exam sessions. This normalization process, applied separately to each session and shift to account for variations in difficulty, has led to an increasing number of such toppers in recent years, as multiple candidates can achieve 100 if their relative performance tops their respective cohorts. For instance, in , a record 56 candidates attained 100 NTA score across the two sessions (23 in January and 33 in ), including representation from various states and categories. In 2025, the trend showed variability across sessions, with 14 candidates achieving 100 percentile in the session, down from 23 in the corresponding 2024 session, reflecting potentially tougher papers or shifts. The April 2025 session saw 24 candidates secure 100 percentile, with contributing the highest number, while state-wise toppers dropped to 44 from 53 in 2024. These toppers typically hail from coaching hubs like , , and , underscoring regional concentrations in high preparation, though NTA emphasizes merit-based normalization over absolute raw scores. Score distributions in JEE Main are characterized by a skewed normal curve, with the majority of over 10 annual candidates scoring below 100 and clustering in the 70-90 range, while top percentiles require near-perfect raw marks out of 300. The NTA score () correlates with estimated raw marks as follows, based on 2025 session trends:
Estimated Raw MarksPercentile RangeApproximate Rank Range
250–26299.977–99.98985–210
241–25099.960–99.975215–367
231–24099.934–99.956430–620
151–16099.029–99.2406,800–8,949
141–15098.732–98.9909,000–11,678
These ranges derive from normalization formulas where = 100 × (number of candidates below the score / total candidates in session), enabling fair comparisons but occasionally inflating topper counts when shift difficulties vary significantly. Achieving 99+ generally demands 200+ raw marks, with 100 reserved for those equaling or exceeding the highest in their shift.

Conversion Rates to Top Institutes

Approximately 1.2 million unique candidates appeared for JEE Main in 2024 across its two sessions, with only the top 250,000 qualifying for JEE Advanced, the gateway to admission in the 23 (IITs). Of these qualifiers, roughly 180,000-200,000 typically appear for JEE Advanced, where performance determines eligibility for the 17,740 available seats in IITs; this results in an overall conversion rate of about 1.4% from JEE Main participants to IIT admissions, reflecting the dual-stage filtering process. Admission to top National Institutes of Technology (NITs), such as NIT Tiruchirappalli and NIT Surathkal, relies directly on JEE Main ranks through the (JoSAA) process, bypassing Advanced. In 2024, NITs offered 24,229 seats collectively, but entry to premier branches like at these institutes generally requires a Common Rank List (CRL) rank under 5,000-10,000 for the general category, corresponding to percentiles exceeding 99.5 and affecting fewer than 1% of JEE Main candidates. Category-wise reservations further modulate these rates, with closing ranks for reserved seats extending to higher numerical values but maintaining overall competitiveness. These low conversion rates underscore the examination's role as a high-stakes selector, where even among JEE Main toppers (percentiles above 99.9), success in securing preferred branches at top institutes depends on precise rank thresholds and choice filling during JoSAA counselling rounds. Historical trends show minimal year-over-year variation in seat availability relative to applicant pools, with IIT seats increasing modestly from prior years but applicant numbers stabilizing around 1.2-1.4 million.

Controversies and Criticisms

Paper Leaks, Grace Marks, and Result Manipulations

In 2021, the (CBI) probed allegations of JEE Main examination manipulation involving a private firm in that charged parents Rs 10-15 to have proxies or "solvers" hack into candidates' computers during the computer-based test and complete the exam on their behalf. The CBI arrested seven individuals in September 2021, including a Russian national in October 2022 who allegedly assisted in the scheme by providing technical expertise for remote access. These incidents did not involve widespread paper leaks but targeted cheating through digital interference, prompting CBI raids across 19 locations in five cities. In February 2020, images purportedly showing JEE Main questions circulated online during the January session, allegedly captured via mobile phones inside exam centers, though the (NTA) denied any and attributed them to unauthorized post-exam. Unlike overt paper distribution seen in some state exams, JEE Main disruptions have centered on localized malpractices rather than systemic breaches, with NTA reporting isolated cases of impersonation and unfair means, leading to debarments such as 39 candidates banned for three years in 2024. Regarding , JEE Main has not featured compensatory awards akin to those in NEET-UG 2024 for time losses, but erroneous questions have prompted alternative adjustments. In JEE Main 2025 Session 1, NTA dropped 12 questions from evaluation—the highest number in recent years—awarding full credit to all candidates who attempted them, following complaints of factual inaccuracies across subjects. Similarly, in the 2025 session, students and experts identified at least nine disputed questions in physics, chemistry, and mathematics, urging NTA to exclude them or provide equivalent compensation, though official responses focused on answer key revisions rather than explicit . Result manipulations surfaced prominently in 2025, with multiple students filing petitions in the alleging discrepancies between downloaded scorecards and official NTA portals, including inflated or altered scores and missing response sheets. On May 15, 2025, the court directed a (CFSL) and CBI investigation into potential tampering, emphasizing forensic audit of digital records amid claims of systemic NTA failures in . By May 21, the court urged expedition of the probe, noting urgency for affected candidates' admissions, while a June 2025 hearing highlighted patterns of evasion in NTA's responses to score mismatches. These cases underscore vulnerabilities in NTA's computerized result processing, distinct from earlier proxy-based frauds but raising parallel concerns over verifiable exam sanctity.

Technical Glitches and Administrative Failures

In January 2025, technical glitches disrupted the JEE Main exam at two centers in Bengaluru, where monitor failures required invigilator intervention lasting up to 10 minutes, prompting the (NTA) to reschedule sessions for affected candidates at one center. Similar hardware issues have recurred, including a 2015 incident where a candidate in Bengaluru switched computers five times due to glitches, completing only 61 of 90 questions. Administrative errors in question papers and answer keys have been frequent, with JEE Main 2025 Session 1 seeing a record 12 questions dropped—the highest in recent years—due to factual inaccuracies, translation inconsistencies, and marking flaws across physics, chemistry, and . In Session 2 of the same year, students reported at least nine disputed questions in all subjects, alongside mismatches in response sheets that failed to reflect submitted answers, leading to NTA withdrawing and revising provisional keys. Server-related failures have compounded these problems, including crashes during 2025 Session 2 registration that interrupted form submissions and required reloads, as well as errors delaying the April 18 final answer key release despite NTA's announced timeline. Results access faced glitches on February 11, 2025, with pages displaying errors amid high traffic. In 2024 Session 1, NTA removed the answer key, recorded responses, and question papers from its site citing technical errors, prompting candidate complaints. These incidents have eroded trust in NTA's operational reliability, with critics attributing failures to inadequate pre-exam validation and over-reliance on digital infrastructure without robust backups, though NTA maintains that dropped questions award full marks to all and objections are reviewed transparently. Application processes have also seen administrative lapses, such as 2024 Session 2 confusions over fee payments and eligibility for repeat applicants, delaying registrations.

Coaching Dependency and Socioeconomic Barriers

The JEE Main's advanced problem-solving demands frequently surpass the scope and pace of standard Class 12 curricula in most schools, compelling a majority of aspirants to depend on private coaching for competitive preparation. This mismatch has prompted the Indian government to initiate a review in October 2025 via an expert panel, chaired by Higher Education Secretary K. Sanjay Murthy, to evaluate alignment between exam difficulty and school syllabi, aiming to curb coaching reliance by ensuring Class 12 education suffices for success. While data from IIT Delhi's analysis of 2013 JEE Advanced qualifiers shows 52% succeeded primarily through self-study, top performers overwhelmingly hail from coaching hubs; for instance, 11 of 24 students achieving 100 percentile in JEE Main 2025 were from Kota institutes, with Allen Career Institute alone claiming 26 such toppers. Coaching fees impose substantial socioeconomic hurdles, typically ranging from ₹80,000 to ₹1.7 per year for structured programs, plus costs for and travel to centers like Kota or , rendering them inaccessible for many low-income households. Rural and economically weaker students face compounded disadvantages, as urban households spend nearly three times more on supplementary annually than rural ones, per household surveys on shadow education expenditures. Although scholarships exist at some institutes, they cover only a of , perpetuating a cycle where correlates with higher success probabilities. An entrenched urban-rural disparity underscores these barriers: rural candidates constituted 44-45% of JEE Main applicants from 2011 to 2015 but held only 27-30% of top 1 ranks, indicating inferior access to specialized and in non-urban areas. This underrepresentation persists despite reservation policies, as coaching ecosystems cluster in cities, widening the gap between applicant pools and high-rank achievers; 75% of 2016 IIT qualifiers originated from urban locales, further evidencing resource concentration's role in outcomes.

Meritocracy vs. Reservation Debates and Mental Health Impacts

The Joint Entrance Examination – Main (JEE Main) operates under India's constitutional reservation framework, allocating 15% of seats to Scheduled Castes (SC), 7.5% to Scheduled Tribes (ST), 27% to Other Backward Classes (OBC-Non Creamy Layer), 10% to Economically Weaker Sections (EWS), and 5% to Persons with Disabilities (PwD), with separate category-wise merit lists and qualifying cutoffs. In the 2024 session, the general category cutoff stood at 93.236 percentile, compared to 79.676 for OBC-NCL, 60.092 for SC, and 46.697 for ST, illustrating the lowered thresholds for reserved categories to meet quota targets. This system has fueled debates on meritocracy, with proponents arguing that pure exam-based selection maximizes institutional efficiency by admitting candidates with demonstrated aptitude, as JEE Main assesses problem-solving under timed conditions akin to engineering demands. Critics of reservations contend that category-based relaxations admit underprepared students, evidenced by higher dropout rates and lower initial grades among reserved entrants in (IITs), prompting remedial bridge courses and occasional unfilled seats due to persistent academic gaps. Empirical analyses indicate that general category candidates, comprising about 48% of JEE Advanced qualifiers despite reservations reducing available seats, face intensified competition, potentially eroding perceived fairness and incentivizing suboptimal preparation strategies. Defenders counter that reservations rectify historical caste-based disadvantages without long-term quality erosion, as admitted students receive identical curricula and many achieve parity through institutional support, though such claims often rely on selective success stories rather than comprehensive longitudinal performance data. rulings have upheld these quotas as constitutional imperatives for equity, rejecting blanket challenges to their application in technical admissions while emphasizing creamy layer exclusions to target genuine deprivation. The hyper-competitive nature of JEE Main preparation exacerbates strains, with (NCRB) data reporting student s rising from 8,423 in 2013 to 13,892 in 2023, a 65% increase, many attributed to examination failure fears. In coaching epicenters like Kota, 28 aspirants died by in 2023 amid JEE and NEET pressures, driven by prolonged isolation, , and familial expectations tied to single-exam outcomes. Between 2018 and 2022, premier institutes including IITs recorded 91 student s, correlating with academic stressors like rank obsessions and peer comparisons. Reservation dynamics may amplify distress for non-reserved aspirants by compressing opportunities into fewer seats, heightening perceived stakes, though primary causation traces to systemic factors: one-time , commercialized coaching inducing burnout, and cultural overemphasis on elite admissions over diversified pathways. Studies on IIT students from marginalized castes reveal additional psychological burdens from and integration challenges, underscoring the need for holistic support beyond quota policies.

Reforms and Future Directions

Pattern Changes in 2025: Mandatory Questions and Pre-Pandemic Norms

In October 2024, the (NTA) revised the JEE Main exam pattern for the 2025 session, eliminating optional questions in Section B of Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech), Paper 2A (B.Arch), and Paper 2B (B.Planning). Previously, from 2021 onward, Section B featured 10 numerical value questions per subject, with candidates required to attempt only 5; the 2025 update reduces this to 5 questions per subject, all mandatory. This adjustment results in a total of 75 questions for Paper 1 (25 per subject: 20 multiple-choice in Section A and 5 numerical in Section B), down from 90 questions in prior years. The change restores the pre-pandemic structure implemented before 2021, when Section B consisted solely of 5 compulsory numerical questions per subject, without alternatives. During the period starting in 2021, the optional format was introduced to mitigate candidate stress amid disruptions, allowing selection of easier questions and contributing to score —evidenced by rising cutoffs and distributions in subsequent sessions. By mandating all questions, the 2025 pattern emphasizes comprehensive subject mastery and problem-solving under fixed constraints, aligning with the exam's original intent to assess readiness for curricula without leniency options. This reversion addresses criticisms of post-2021, where the choice mechanism enabled higher average scores by avoiding difficult items, potentially diluting the exam's selectivity. Experts anticipate lower cutoffs in 2025 as a result, with no compensatory increase in question difficulty announced, though the fixed format may heighten pressure on preparation for numerical accuracy. Negative marking remains applicable to Section B responses (-1 for incorrect answers), reinforcing precision over guesswork. The NTA's official notice confirms these parameters apply uniformly across both sessions of JEE Main 2025, scheduled for January and April.

Syllabus Rationalization and Technological Enhancements

In November 2023, the (NTA) revised the JEE Main syllabus to align with the rationalized curricula of school boards including the (CBSE), reducing content to match updated NCERT textbooks and mitigate student workload amid post-pandemic recovery efforts. This adjustment eliminated specific topics across subjects: in Physics, chapters such as "Physical World," "Motion in a Straight Line," "Laws of Motion," and parts of "Work, Energy and Power"; in Chemistry, sections on and certain inorganic compounds; and in Mathematics, units like "" and "Mathematical Reasoning." The changes reflected broader National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 directives to streamline Class 11 and 12 syllabi by approximately 15-30% in core sciences, prioritizing core concepts over peripheral ones without altering the exam's foundational rigor. These reductions carried forward into the and 2025 sessions with no substantial additional cuts, as confirmed by NTA's official releases, ensuring consistency between school-level and entrance exam demands. Critics, including analyses, noted that while the move addressed equity by curbing over-reliance on supplementary materials, it risked diluting depth in high-weightage areas like , though empirical data from 2024 score distributions showed no significant shift in overall difficulty or topper percentiles. On the technological front, JEE Main has utilized computer-based testing (CBT) nationwide since 2013, expanding to full digital delivery by 2019 via secure servers handling over 1 million candidates per session across 500+ centers. Recent enhancements include AI-driven remote proctoring introduced in 2024, which employs facial recognition, behavioral analytics, and real-time to identify impersonators—successfully flagging cases during sessions without halting exam flow. NTA integrated these tools with biometric verification ( and iris scans) at entry points, reducing malpractice incidents by an estimated 40% compared to pre-2023 paper-based hybrids, per agency reports. Further upgrades encompass AI-assisted registration validation for 2025, automating error detection in applications to prevent discrepancies, and percentile normalization algorithms refined for multi-shift equity using statistical equating models that adjust raw scores based on session-wise difficulty variances. These measures, supported by cloud-based data infrastructure from partners like the , have enhanced scalability and integrity, though challenges persist in rural connectivity, with NTA piloting hybrid offline-online modes in select low-bandwidth regions.

Ongoing Debates on Equity, Integrity, and Accessibility

Ongoing debates on equity in JEE Main center on the tension between and India's reservation policies, which reserve 15% of seats for Scheduled Castes (SC), 7.5% for Scheduled Tribes (ST), 27% for Other Backward Classes (non-creamy layer, OBC-NCL), and 10% for Economically Weaker Sections (EWS) in qualifying for institutions like NITs and as a gateway to JEE Advanced. Critics, including students and analysts, argue that these quotas prioritize and economic criteria over exam performance, leading to admissions of candidates with significantly lower —often 20-50 percentile points below general category cutoffs—potentially undermining institutional standards, as reflected in IIT data showing approximately 63% of undergraduate dropouts from reserved categories over the past five years. Proponents, drawing from rulings, maintain that pure merit ignores systemic barriers like intergenerational and educational disparities, framing reservations as a corrective for historical inequities rather than a dilution of competence. This binary has intensified with 2025 results, where general category aspirants expressed frustration over qualified high-scorers missing seats due to category-based cutoffs. Integrity concerns persist amid recurring errors in question papers and scoring processes, with the 2025 sessions recording a unprecedented 12 dropped questions across subjects due to factual inaccuracies, prompting widespread accusations of NTA incompetence and calls for independent audits of response sheets and calculations. Although normalization—equating s across multiple exam shifts—has been upheld by the as statistically sound and aligned with global standards, students continue to challenge its opacity, citing discrepancies between raw scores and final s in 2024 and 2025, which they attribute to uneven shift difficulties or data manipulation risks. NTA defends these processes as necessary for fairness in large-scale testing but faces scrutiny over transparency, with 2025 seeing expert-flagged errors in physics, chemistry, and papers that affected hundreds of responses. Accessibility debates highlight gaps for rural and disabled candidates despite NTA provisions, such as extra compensatory time (up to four hours for PwD in three-hour exams) and scribe facilities for those with certified writing impairments in JEE Main 2025. Rural students, comprising a significant portion of applicants, face structural barriers including limited access to quality coaching—concentrated in urban hubs like Kota—and unreliable internet for online mocks, contributing to lower application rates among OBC and EWS groups in the 2025 January session. For Persons with Disabilities (PwD), while 5% horizontal reservation applies and qualification rates in related exams like JEE Advanced 2025 exceeded general category averages at 23.7%, critics question the adequacy of accommodations like assistive tech in remote centers, arguing they fail to fully mitigate physical and infrastructural hurdles. These issues fuel proposals for decentralized testing or subsidized rural coaching, though implementation remains contested due to cost and scalability concerns.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.