JEE Mains Passing Marks, Cutoff and Minimum Score for NIT Admission – Everything Class 11 and 12 Students Must Know

JEE Mains Cutoff and NIT Admission Guide for Class 11 and 12

JEE Mains Passing Marks, Cutoff and Minimum Score for NIT Admission: Everything Class 11 and 12 Students Must Know

Important Notice: Cutoff data in this blog is based on historical JEE Mains trends (2022–2025) and expected ranges for 2026 derived from multiple education platforms. Official 2026 cutoffs will be released by NTA with the Session 2 result. Use this guide for planning and preparation target-setting only.

One of the most confusing aspects of JEE Mains for Class 11 and 12 students is the difference between passing marks, qualifying cutoff, and the actual marks needed for NIT admission. These three numbers are completely different and conflating them leads to either over-confidence or unnecessary panic.

JEE Mains has no "pass" or "fail" in the traditional sense. There is no fixed minimum score that everyone must cross. Instead, there are two distinct cutoff systems that serve entirely different purposes: the qualifying cutoff that determines whether you can appear for JEE Advanced, and the admission cutoff that determines which NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs you can get into through JoSAA counselling.

A student who scores 85 percentile has not "failed" JEE Mains — they simply did not meet the General category qualifying cutoff for JEE Advanced. That same student may still be eligible for several GFTIs and Tier-3 NITs through JoSAA. Understanding what each cutoff number means — and setting your preparation target accordingly — is the most important planning decision you will make in Class 11 and 12.

The Two Types of JEE Mains Cutoff — Not the Same Thing

Before any numbers are useful, you need to understand that there are two completely separate cutoff systems operating in JEE Mains. Most students confuse them and end up either undershooting or overshooting their actual preparation target.

Type 1: Qualifying Cutoff

Set by NTA. The minimum percentile you need to be eligible to appear for JEE Advanced. This also determines eligibility for JoSAA counselling (NIT/IIIT/GFTI admission). Released along with the final result. This is the cutoff you most commonly see reported.

Type 2: Admission Cutoff

Set by JoSAA. The actual rank needed for admission to a specific NIT, IIIT, or GFTI branch. Much higher than the qualifying cutoff. Varies by institution, branch, category, and state quota. Released through JoSAA counselling rounds.

The qualifying cutoff (93–95 percentile for General) is only the entry card to JoSAA counselling — not the threshold for NIT admission. Crossing the qualifying cutoff means you can participate in JoSAA. What college and branch you get depends on your actual rank versus the closing rank for that specific seat. For top NIT CS, you need 99+ percentile even though the qualifying cutoff is only 93.

JEE Mains Qualifying Cutoff 2026: Category-Wise Expected Percentiles

The qualifying cutoff is released by NTA after both sessions conclude. The values below are expected ranges based on 2022–2025 official NTA cutoff trends and 2026 Session 1 analysis from multiple education platforms.

Category Expected Cutoff Percentile 2026 Official Cutoff 2025 Official Cutoff 2024 Official Cutoff 2023 Approx. Marks Needed (Average Shift)
General (Open) 93.5 to 95.0 93.10 93.23 90.78 120 to 140 marks
EWS 80.0 to 82.0 80.62 81.32 75.62 90 to 105 marks
OBC-NCL 79.0 to 81.5 79.82 80.30 73.61 85 to 100 marks
SC 61.0 to 63.0 60.88 60.98 51.98 60 to 75 marks
ST 47.5 to 50.0 47.49 46.69 37.23 45 to 60 marks
PwD (General) 0.001 to 0.02 0.001 0.013 0.001 Near-zero score threshold
Qualifying cutoff qualifies approximately the top 2.5 lakh candidates across all categories for JEE Advanced. Actual 2026 official cutoffs will be released by NTA with Session 2 results. Mark estimates are for average shift difficulty — tougher shifts require fewer marks for the same percentile.
Key insight from the trend data: The General category qualifying cutoff has been remarkably stable at 90 to 93 percentile since 2021. The 2026 expected range of 93.5 to 95 reflects the increase in candidate numbers (13+ lakh candidates in 2026) rather than any sudden increase in paper difficulty. Plan your target percentile to be at least 2 to 3 percentile points above the expected cutoff to have a safe buffer.

Minimum Score for NIT Admission: What You Actually Need

The qualifying cutoff only gets you into JoSAA counselling. The actual score needed for NIT admission is significantly higher and varies dramatically by NIT tier, branch, and category. This is the most critical data for Class 11 and 12 students planning their target score.

NIT Admission by Tier and Branch — Expected 2026 Ranges

Target Approx. Score Needed Approx. Percentile Approx. AIR (General) What This Opens
NIT Tier-1 CS (Warangal, Trichy, Surathkal) 200 to 240 marks 99.0 to 99.8 2,000 to 14,000 CSE/ECE at top NITs; IIIT Hyderabad CS
NIT Tier-1 Core Branches (Mech, Civil, EE) 170 to 200 marks 97.5 to 99.0 14,000 to 37,000 Core branches at NIT Warangal, Trichy, Calicut
NIT Tier-2 CS (Rourkela, Calicut, Jaipur) 160 to 195 marks 97.0 to 98.5 22,000 to 42,000 CS at mid-tier NITs; ECE at top NITs
NIT Tier-2 Core Branches 140 to 170 marks 95.0 to 97.5 37,000 to 70,000 Core branches at NIT Rourkela, Calicut, Silchar
NIT Tier-3 CS 130 to 155 marks 93.0 to 96.0 55,000 to 98,000 CS at newer NITs; mid-tier IIIT options
NIT Tier-3 Core Branches 115 to 140 marks 90.0 to 94.0 90,000 to 1,40,000 Core branches at newer/smaller NITs
GFTIs (Any Branch) 95 to 125 marks 85.0 to 92.0 1,10,000 to 2,20,000 Good GFTIs including BIT Mesra, PEC Chandigarh
All data is for the General (Open) category, All India quota. Home State quota and reserved categories have significantly better admission options at the same score. Mark ranges reflect average shift difficulty — actual cutoffs vary by JoSAA counselling round and annual seat demand.
The most important planning insight: If your target is any NIT seat at all (not just top NIT CS), you need 95+ percentile as a safe minimum for General category. If your target is any NIT core branch, you need 97+ percentile. If your target is top NIT CS, you need 99+ percentile. The qualifying cutoff of 93 to 95 percentile is not the admission threshold for NITs — it is only the JoSAA participation threshold.

Setting Your JEE Target: A Practical Guide for Class 11 and 12 Students

Now that you understand what the numbers mean, the next step is setting your personal preparation target based on where you want to end up. Here are the four most common student situations and the score target each requires.

Target: IIT — Any Branch

You must qualify JEE Mains with a comfortable margin (96+ percentile) to first appear for JEE Advanced, and then perform well in JEE Advanced separately. JEE Mains rank is not used for IIT admission at all. Focus on clearing Mains comfortably, then give all energy to Advanced preparation.

Target: NIT CS or ECE (Top Tier)

You need 200 to 240 marks — approximately 99 to 99.8 percentile. This requires strong performance in all three subjects and above-average accuracy. Start building P1 chapter depth in Class 11 itself. Do not wait for Class 12 to begin serious JEE preparation.

Target: Any NIT (Core Branches Acceptable)

You need 140 to 175 marks — approximately 95 to 97.5 percentile. This is achievable with two years of structured preparation focusing on the high-weightage chapters and consistent mock test practice from Class 12 onwards.

Target: JEE Advanced Eligibility Only

You need 120 to 135 marks — approximately 93 to 95 percentile for General category. This is the minimum meaningful target for General category students planning a second attempt at IIT through Advanced. Any score below this does not qualify you for JEE Advanced.

The Class 12 Board Marks Condition: Often Forgotten, Very Important

JEE Mains rank alone is not sufficient for NIT/IIIT/GFTI admission through JoSAA. You must also satisfy the Class 12 board marks eligibility condition, which is completely separate from your JEE Mains percentile.

The 75% Rule for NIT and IIIT Admission

To receive a seat in NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs through JoSAA counselling, you must have scored at least 75% aggregate marks in Class 12 board examinations (or be in the top 20 percentile of your State Board). For SC and ST candidates, the minimum is 65%. This condition applies to the top five subjects in Class 12. A student who scores 99 percentile in JEE Mains but only 72% in Class 12 boards is ineligible for NIT admission through JoSAA until the board mark condition is met. The 75% rule was temporarily relaxed during the COVID years but has been reinstated. Class 11 students should treat their board score as a parallel target alongside JEE preparation.

The Top-20-Percentile Alternative

If you do not score 75% in boards but are in the top 20 percentile of students in your State Board, you are still eligible for JoSAA admission. This alternative condition helps students from state boards where absolute marks differ significantly from national averages. Check your state board's specific top-20-percentile cutoff from previous years to understand where you need to stand.

How Category Changes Everything: Reserved Category Admission Advantage

Reserved category students — OBC-NCL, SC, ST, EWS — have dramatically better NIT and IIIT admission options at the same score compared to General category students. Understanding this is critical for accurate target-setting.

Score Range General Category Options OBC-NCL Options SC/ST Options
180 to 220 marks Top NIT CS possible (99 percentile needed) Top NIT CS in most cases; IIIT Hyderabad CS NIT Warangal/Trichy CS very likely
150 to 180 marks Mid-tier NIT core branches; no top NIT CS Top NIT ECE/CS in some cases; good IIITs Top NIT CS accessible in many cases
120 to 150 marks Tier-3 NIT core branches; some GFTIs Good NIT core branches; some NIT CS Mid-tier NIT CS; good IIIT options
90 to 120 marks GFTIs only; below JEE Advanced cutoff Tier-3 NITs; several GFTIs Good NITs; some IIIT options
60 to 90 marks Below JEE Advanced cutoff; few JoSAA options Some GFTIs; may clear OBC qualifying cutoff Eligible for JEE Advanced (SC/ST); some NITs
Home State quota further improves options for all categories at every score level. An OBC-NCL student from Karnataka applying to VNIT Nagpur under home state quota has a completely different advantage than the same student under All India quota. Always check both home state and all-India options when planning college targets.

What Class 11 and 12 Students Must Do Right Now

Class 11 Students: Set the Right Target and Start Immediately

If you are in Class 11, you have the most valuable preparation asset available: time. The single most important decision you can make right now is to set an honest, specific score target — not a vague aspiration, but the exact percentile your desired college and branch requires. If you want NIT Warangal CS, the target is 99+ percentile — which means 200+ marks. If you want any NIT seat, the target is 97+ percentile — which means 160+ marks. Write that number down and use it to calibrate every preparation decision for the next two years. Simultaneously, do not neglect Class 11 board subjects — the foundation concepts taught in Class 11 Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics are the building blocks of 40 to 45% of the JEE Mains syllabus.

Class 12 Students: Focus, Don't Panic

If you are in Class 12, you have approximately one year to the next JEE Mains. The most productive use of that time is the chapter priority approach: identify your six to eight highest-weightage chapters where your accuracy is currently below 65%, and bring each one to 75%+ PYQ accuracy before mock test season begins. Do not try to cover the entire syllabus uniformly — that approach consistently produces mediocre results in every chapter. Simultaneously, begin mock tests in August and maintain the weekly review system that tells you whether your preparation is actually improving week over week. Board preparation and JEE preparation can run in parallel: NCERT covers both effectively and Chapter 12 Inorganic Chemistry studied for boards is almost directly applicable to JEE Mains Inorganic questions.

How to Distribute Marks Across Subjects to Hit Your Target

Knowing your total target score is not enough. You need a subject-wise distribution that is realistic given your strengths and the available chapter weightage.

Total Target Score Suggested Physics Score Suggested Chemistry Score Suggested Maths Score Strategy Note
120 marks 35 to 40 45 to 50 30 to 35 Lean on Chemistry (fastest to improve) and accept a lower Maths contribution
150 marks 45 to 55 55 to 60 40 to 50 NCERT Inorganic drives the Chemistry score; P1 Physics chapters drive Physics
180 marks 60 to 65 60 to 65 55 to 60 Balanced across all three; no subject below 55 is sustainable at this level
210 marks 65 to 75 70 to 75 70 to 75 All P1 and P2 chapters must be at 75%+ accuracy; mock testing essential from Aug
240+ marks 75 to 90 80 to 90 80 to 90 Near-zero negative marking; 80%+ accuracy across all high-weightage chapters essential
Chemistry is the most predictable subject for score improvement in a defined time window because of its NCERT-driven Inorganic content. Allocate extra daily time to Chemistry in the initial phase and use the improvement to build confidence and total score before deepening Maths and Physics work.

Quick Reference: Everything in One Place

  • There is no universal "passing mark" in JEE Mains. There is only the qualifying cutoff (to appear for JEE Advanced) and the admission cutoff (to get into specific NITs/IIITs).
  • Expected 2026 qualifying cutoff for General: 93.5 to 95 percentile — approximately 120 to 140 marks on average shift difficulty.
  • Any NIT seat (core branches) for General: needs 95 to 97.5 percentile — approximately 140 to 175 marks.
  • Top NIT CS for General: needs 99+ percentile — approximately 200+ marks.
  • The 75% Class 12 board marks rule is mandatory for JoSAA admission. A JEE Mains rank alone is not sufficient.
  • Reserved category students have significantly better NIT/IIIT options at every score level due to category-specific seat reservations.
  • Home State quota adds another advantage layer — always check home state closing ranks alongside all-India closing ranks when planning targets.
  • Class 11 students: set your target score now, build your foundation systematically, and do not underestimate the Class 11 chapters (40–45% of JEE Mains).
  • Class 12 students: prioritise P1 chapter accuracy, begin mock tests in August, and maintain the weekly tracking system to confirm improvement is happening.

About Competishun

At Competishun, our teachers with more than 20 years of JEE teaching experience help Class 11, Class 12, and dropper students build preparation plans calibrated to their specific score targets — whether that is crossing the qualifying cutoff or reaching the 99 percentile needed for top NIT CS. Our more than 2.1 million YouTube subscribers access free chapter-wise concept videos and PYQ sessions that support every level of preparation.

Courses at Competishun

Pratham (Class 11)

Foundation-building course for Class 11 students starting JEE preparation from scratch.

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Prakhar (Class 12)

Full JEE Mains preparation course for Class 12 students targeting 95+ percentile.

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Praveen (Droppers)

Comprehensive JEE 2027 dropper course with chapter tests and AITS mock series.

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AITS Test Series

All-India test series with rank benchmarking to track progress against real JEE targets.

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Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is the minimum marks to pass JEE Mains?
There is no official "passing" mark in JEE Mains — it is not a pass or fail exam. The relevant threshold is the qualifying cutoff percentile: approximately 93.5 to 95 percentile for the General category in 2026. This translates to roughly 120 to 140 marks on average shift difficulty. However, crossing this threshold only makes you eligible for JEE Advanced and JoSAA counselling. It does not guarantee admission to any NIT or IIIT. For NIT admission, you need a significantly higher score — 140 to 175 marks for core branches at Tier-2 and Tier-3 NITs, and 200+ marks for CS at top NITs.
2. How many marks are required for NIT Warangal CSE for General category?
NIT Warangal Computer Science for the General category (All India quota) is one of the most competitive NIT seats available. Based on recent JoSAA trends, the closing rank for NIT Warangal CSE for General-OS (Other State) is typically between 1,100 and 2,600 AIR — corresponding to approximately 99.8 to 99.95 percentile and roughly 240 to 265 marks. Home State (Telangana) quota has a slightly higher closing rank but is still extremely competitive. This is an extremely high bar — students targeting NIT Warangal CS should be treating JEE Mains as a warm-up for JEE Advanced preparation at the same time.
3. Is 150 marks enough for NIT?
150 marks corresponds to approximately 97 to 98 percentile (shift-dependent) and a rank of roughly 28,000 to 45,000 for General category. At this rank and score, you have good prospects for core branches at mid-tier NITs like NIT Calicut, NIT Rourkela, NIT Silchar, and NIT Patna, and some CS seats at Tier-3 NITs through JoSAA. For OBC-NCL candidates, 150 marks opens considerably better options including possible CS seats at Tier-2 NITs. For SC/ST candidates, 150 marks at the same percentile opens very strong NIT options including some top-tier NITs. Use the JoSAA previous year cutoff data to check specific NIT-branch combinations for your category at this rank.
4. What is the difference between JEE Mains cutoff and JEE Advanced cutoff?
These are two completely different thresholds for two different stages. The JEE Mains qualifying cutoff (approximately 93 to 95 percentile for General in 2026) is the minimum JEE Mains percentile needed to be eligible to appear for JEE Advanced — the gateway exam for IIT admission. After clearing JEE Mains, qualifying students then appear for JEE Advanced separately. JEE Advanced has its own cutoff — a different percentage of JEE Advanced marks needed to qualify for IIT admission through JoSAA. Students who clear JEE Mains but do not appear for or do not clear JEE Advanced can still get NIT/IIIT admission through JoSAA using their JEE Mains rank — they just cannot get IIT admission.
5. Does 75% in Class 12 boards apply to everyone for JEE Mains itself?
The 75% board marks rule applies to NIT/IIIT/GFTI admission through JoSAA — not to appearing for JEE Mains itself. Any student who has passed Class 12 (or is appearing for Class 12) can appear for JEE Mains regardless of their Class 12 marks. However, if you score well in JEE Mains but your Class 12 aggregate is below 75% (65% for SC/ST), you will not be eligible for JoSAA seat allotment and cannot get an NIT/IIIT seat even with a good JEE Mains rank. This makes the 75% board condition extremely important for anyone targeting NIT or IIIT admission — it must be met alongside the JEE Mains rank requirement.
6. Can I get NIT admission without clearing JEE Advanced?
Yes. JEE Advanced is required for IIT admission only. NIT, IIIT, and GFTI admission is entirely through JEE Mains rank via JoSAA counselling — JEE Advanced is not required and not relevant for NIT admission. A student who appears for JEE Mains, meets the qualifying cutoff, and participates in JoSAA can get an NIT seat based entirely on their JEE Mains rank. Many students who are eligible for JEE Advanced choose not to appear because their preparation is focused on NIT targets rather than IITs — this is a perfectly valid strategy. However, appearing for JEE Advanced has no downside and keeps the IIT option open even if NIT is the primary target.
7. I am in Class 11 now. When should I start preparing seriously for JEE Mains?
The best time to start serious JEE preparation is the first month of Class 11 — which for many students reading this is right now. Class 11 chapters — Mechanics, Thermodynamics, General Organic Chemistry, Mole Concept, Sequences and Algebra — account for approximately 40 to 45% of JEE Mains marks. Students who build a strong Chapter 11 foundation through rigorous active problem-solving in Class 11 arrive at Class 12 with a significant head start. Students who treat Class 11 as a light year and plan to "really start in Class 12" typically find themselves trying to cover two years of foundational material in one year — which is achievable but dramatically harder. Start now, build the P1 chapter foundations systematically, and use Class 12 for deepening rather than starting from scratch.
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