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JEE Main Papers Analysis

Getting ready for JEE Main goes beyond studying concepts. You have to know the trends in questions, difficulty level of the paper, and subject priority. Our JEE Main 2025 Paper Analysis provides a detailed analysis of Session 1 (January) and Session 2 (April) papers. Developed with actual feedback from students and expert assessment, this analysis will allow you to understand:

● Class-wise breakdown of question
● Subject-wise and topic-wise weightage
● Difficulty level of the overall paper and experience of students
● Trend comparison from previous years

By looking at this structured and shift wise analysis, aspirant will be able to effectively adjust, place priorities on high weightage topics areas, and approach the exam methodically & brightly.

Why Is JEE Main Paper Analysis Important?

Understanding the structure of the paper allows students to:

  • ​ Target frequently-recurrenced topics or focus areas
  • Change study approach based on difficulty in subjects
  • Manage Time during practice & revisions
  • ​ Recognize trends evolving over different years and sessions

 

So, let’s take a look at the detailed Session-wise and Shift-wise analysis for JEE Main 2025:

JEE Main 2025 Paper Analysis – Session 2 (April) | In-depth Shift-Wise Review

8 April 2025 – Subject-Wise Analysis
  • ​ Mathematics was moderately hard and lengthy, making it very crucial to manage one’s time.
  • ​ Overall, Physics was manageable, with good identification of concepts necessary to solve particular questions.
  1. Chemistry:

 

Chemistry in this sitting was on the easier side. The questions were mostly from familiar and predictable areas, with ample material from the NCERT syllabus. For example, the topics that were tested included Coordination Compounds, Chemical Bonding, Environmental Chemistry, and Organic Reaction Mechanisms. It was quite a conceptual paper and would have suited students who had been focussing on the fundamentals in the textbook and regularly revising.

  1. Physics:

The Physics paper was of moderate difficulty. It was neither too easy nor overly hard. The most important aspects were to be clear on key principles that were tested and apply those principles in solving application-based questions. Most of the problems were on the topics Mechanics, Modern Physics, Current Electricity, Ray and Wave Optics and Thermodynamics, and while numericals were heavily prevalent, the calculations were fairly straightforward.

  1. Mathematics:

The Math paper is a true test of patience, and care. The questions were not difficult in terms of the concepts, but draw back to the number of problems put on students. The groups of topics covered such as: Calculus, Vectors, 3D Geometry, Algebra, and Probability nearly covered all of Math. Students who were both speedy and accurate had the advantage.

7 April 2025 – Shift-Wise Subject Analysis

Morning Shift:

  1. Physics:

Most aspirants found the morning Physics paper to be straight forward due to it’s level of simplicity. The question areas were in depth on familiar areas such as Electromagnetism, Modern Physics, Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM), Heat and Thermodynamics, Geometrical Optics and Particle Dynamics. Most of the problems were simply plugging into the known calculations giving students a chance to score marks.

  1. Chemistry:

Chemistry offered a fairly reasonable challenge. The majority of the paper was purely based on assertion-reason and statement questions. The questions asked were distributed by each topic, which was generally equal overall:

  • Physical Chemistry: ~38%
  • Inorganic Chemistry: ~33%
  • Organic Chemistry: ~29%​

Students needed a balance of conceptual clarity and factual memorization to do well.​

  1. Mathematics:

Mathematics was, not necessarily too difficult conceptually. However, it was long and had a dense problem set. The question distribution per area is listed below:

  • Algebra: 40%
  • Calculus: 28%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 16%
  • Vectors & 3D Geometry: 12%
  • Trigonometry: 4%​

Success in this section relied heavily on a student’s ability to manage time and stay calm under pressure.​

Evening Shift:

  1. Physics:

Again, Physics was relatively approachable. The bulk of the questions came from Electromagnetism, SHM, Geometrical Optics, Modern Physics, Particle Dynamics, and Thermodynamics. If the students had good concepts and reasonable command of formulae, they should’ve scored high marks in this section.

  1. Chemistry:

As in the first shift, this shift was still a moderate one. However, the distribution of questions slightly altered as follows:

  • Physical Chemistry: 39%
  • Organic Chemistry: 33%
  • Inorganic Chemistry: 28%​

The section was largely NCERT-based and moderately conceptual, with only a few tricky questions.​

  1. Mathematics:

Again Maths was long and required more time per question than Physics and Chemistry. The topic distribution was quite broad:

  • Algebra: 36%
  • Calculus: 32%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 16%
  • Vectors & 3D Geometry: 12%
  • Trigonometry: 4%​

Even competent students struggled to do all questions in time. Your strategy for this examination was hard and time-consuming.

JEE Main 2025 – 4 April Session 2 Detailed Paper Analysis (Shift-Wise & Subject-Wise)

The JEE Main 2025 exam conducted on the 4th of April was varied for students, especially because of the difficulties that Mathematics posed for students. Physics and Chemistry were moderately easier with suitable questions, and Mathematics was very complicated and long requiring students to fully push their aptitude. Below is a full subject-wise and shift-wise analysis.

Morning Shift Analysis

  1. Physics:

Physics was predominantly conceptual in the morning slot and thus manageable. The balance of numericals and theory was reasonably ample so as not to exhaust students. The breakdown of topics were as follows:

  • Electromagnetism: 32%
  • Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM): 14%
  • Modern Physics: 14%
  • Particle Dynamics: 9%
  • Geometrical Optics: 9%
  • Heat & Thermodynamics: 9
  • Miscellaneous Topics: 13%​

Overall, a student with consistent preparation could comfortably score well in this section.

  1. Chemistry:

Chemistry was labelled as easy and direct with a benefit for students who had selectively studied the NCERT textbooks. This subject also had a near-equal distribution amongst the three main branches of Chemistry.

  • Inorganic Chemistry: 30%
  • Organic Chemistry: 30%
  • Physical Chemistry: 40%​

There were many direct factual and conceptual questions with fewer analytical ones.​

  1. Mathematics:

Mathematics was undoubtedly the most challenging of the three sections in the morning shift. It was not only long, but the included question were quite tricky and required a lot of depth of understanding. Here is how the subjects were broken down:

  • Algebra: 36%
  • Calculus: 36%
  • Vector and 3D Geometry: 12%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 12%
  • Trigonometry: 4%
  • Mixed/Interdisciplinary Problems: 8%​

Time pressure was a major issue, and many students couldn’t attempt all the questions.

Evening Shift Analysis

  1. Physics:

Like in the other shifts, the Physics section offered an easy question paper that revolved around conceptual questions primarily on familiar topics. The topic-wise division lies on:

  • Electromagnetism: 28%​
  • Particle Dynamics: 20%
  • SHM (Simple Harmonic Motion): 16%
  • Modern Physics: 8%
  • Heat & Thermodynamics: 8%
  • Geometrical Optics: 4%
  • Other Topics: 16%​

Questions were largely formula-based with a few application-oriented problems.

  1. Chemistry:

Students found Chemistry quite friendly, if they understood NCERT and practice assertion-reason type questions. The weightage favour to Physical Chemistry slightly more:

  • Physical Chemistry: 44%
  • Organic Chemistry: 28%
  • Inorganic Chemistry: 28%​

Many of the questions were based on statements or conceptual facts, with limited numerical involvement.

  1. Mathematics:

Mathematics again emerged as the hardest section of the exam, students commented in attempting to discuss all questions in the time frames as it was long and complicated. The topic’s weightage were:

  • Calculus: 36%
  • Algebra: 32%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 16%
  • Vector & 3D Geometry: 12%
  • Mixed Topics: 4%​

Many questions required multiple steps, and speed along with accuracy became key differentiators.

JEE Main 2025 – 29 January Session 1 Complete Paper Analysis (Shift-wise & Subject-wise)

The JEE Main 2025 Session 1 exam, held on 29th January, was rated as moderately difficult overall. However, the Mathematics section was moderate to difficult for the paper as a whole, and was more difficult in the evening shift. To clarify the trends and difficulty levels of the questions, we will provide a subject-wise and shift-wise analysis for aspirants.

Overall Difficulty Level – 29 January

  • ​ Physics: Moderate level of difficulty and balanced across the topics.
  • ​ Chemistry: Moderate level of difficulty, dominated by Physical Chemistry.
  • ​ Mathematics: Considered the most difficult subject of the day (particularly the second session) as the questions were lengthy and involved considerable effort.

 

Morning Shift Analysis
  1. Physics:

Physics was rated as moderate level of difficulty, with a good emphasis on conceptual questions. Students saw questions from a wide range of topics with some topics appearing more than once:

  • Work, Power & Energy
  • Elasticity – 3 questions
  • Heat and Thermodynamics
  • Geometrical Optics – 2 questions
  • Electromagnetic Waves
  • Kinematics
  • Modern Physics
  • Electromagnetic Induction (EMI)
  • Units and Dimensions
  • Capacitance
  • Center of Mass

The paper contained a mixture of theoretical ideas and numerically sided questions, which made it a balanced but somewhat time pressured section of the exam.

  1. Chemistry:

Chemistry was closer to being moderate, but Physical Chemistry was emphasized as it is essential that students are capable of working through calculations and random formulas. The major topics of Chemistry were:

  • Electrochemistry
  • Chemical Kinetics
  • Liquid Solutions
  • Chemical Equilibrium
  • Atomic Structure
  • Mole Concept

 

Inorganic Chemistry saw a few direct questions:

  • Periodic Table – 1 question
  • Coordination Compounds – 3 questions
  • D-block Elements – 2 questions

 

Organic Chemistry was also covered with topics such as:

  • IUPAC Nomenclature
  • General Organic Chemistry (GOC)
  • Acid-Base Strength
  • Alkyl Halides
  • Carbonyl and Aromatic Compounds
  • Biomolecules

Overall, Chemistry was well-distributed and balanced, though leaning slightly more toward Physical and Organic segments.

  1. Mathematics:

Mathematics during the morning shift was difficult, lengthy, and required not only well-formed, conceptual knowledge but also speed in solving problems. The paper was calculative and required exact solutions. The topic-wise breakup was as follows:

  • Calculus: 36%
  • Algebra: 32%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 16%
  • 3D Geometry & Vectors: 16%
  • Statistics & Relations: 4%​

Students found the paper tricky. The paper had some higher-order multi-step questions which made it hard to complete within the time allotted.

Evening Shift Analysis

  1. Physics:

The physics section in the evening shift – the difficulty level was moderate as in the morning paper. The topics to be covered were similar to the morning’s paper, and remained the weightage as in the earlier session, covering areas such as:

  • Kinematics
  • Modern Physics
  • Optics
  • Thermodynamics
  • Electromagnetism
  • Elasticity and Units

The students found that those who had a basic conceptual understanding of the unit plus previous year marks seen following paper patterns would be able to manage this section comfortably.

  1. Chemistry:

Chemistry in session 2 (the evening shift) had a slightly higher percentage of chemistry questions that lay in the Organic and Physical area compared to morning shifts performance. Some of the questions were described at as being of higher-level, particularly in Organic Chemistry. Important areas covered included:

  • Reaction Mechanisms
  • Electrochemistry
  • Coordination Compounds
  • Organic Structures and Nomenclature

A few tough questions concerned students overall but for those students have properly prepared for the NCERT exams and have been revising questions and practicing regularly found this section fairly scoring.

  1. Mathematics:

Most students thought that Mathematics was more challenging in the evening shift than the morning shift. The problems in the evening shift were longer and involved a higher degree of reasoning. The topic weightage was:

  • Calculus: 32%
  • Algebra: 32%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 16%
  • 3D Geometry & Vectors: 12%
  • Trigonometry: 4%
  • Statistics & Relations: 4%

Most students noted that some problems required more than one step, and an in-depth understanding of a concept. Time management was again a big challenge.

JEE Main 2025 – 24 January Paper Review (Session 1, Shift-wise and Subject-wise)

On the third day of JEE Main 2025 (Session 1), the candidates from both shifts felt that the paper was moderate in difficulty. Physics and Maths were somewhat lengthy but Chemistry was fairly balanced. The subject wise feedback from students are as follows.

Morning Shift Analysis

  1. Physics:

Physics was quite concept-style and time-consuming in shift 1. The questions combined a lot of different major chapters and required not just theory but also good calculations. The significant topics were:

  • Geometrical Optics
  • Capacitance
  • Elasticity
  • Thermodynamics & Heat Transfer
  • Fluid Mechanics
  • Modern Physics
  • Semiconductors & Electronic Devices
  • Measurement Errors and Instruments
  • Electromagnetic Waves
  • Circular Motion
  • Kinematics
  • Current Electricity
  • Rotational Motion
  • Gravitation
  • Electrostatics
  • Work, Power & Energy
  • Simple Harmonic Motion
  • Magnetic Effects of Current

Students mentioned that while no topic was overly dominant, the overall number of chapters covered made the paper feel exhaustive.

  1. Chemistry:

Chemistry was slightly easier in the morning, fairly uniform across the branche

  • Inorganic Chemistry: 32%
  • Organic Chemistry: 36%
  • Physical Chemistry: 28%
  • Miscellaneous/Integrated: 4%

We thought the chemistry paper covered most parts of the syllabus well. Some good highlights from the paper included the questions on Coordination Compounds, Reaction Mechanisms, Electrochemistry and Periodic properties.

  1. Mathematics:

Mathematics was lengthy, with careful attention to detail needed which made it a little tricky to keep track of time. Mathematics paper included:

  • Calculus: 40%
  • Algebra: 32%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 12%
  • 3D Geometry & Vectors: 12%
  • Statistics and Relations: 4%
  • Trigonometry: No questions from this topic

Many students found the questions calculative, with several problems needing multiple steps to solve.

Evening Shift Analysis

1. Physics:


The second shift again had a moderate-length and somewhat lengthy Physics section. Key
concepts and chapters remained consistent with the morning paper. Students needed to solve
numerical problems from:
● Electrostatics
● Thermodynamics
● Optics
● EM Waves
● Modern Physics
● Capacitance
● Circular Motion
● SHM
● Gravitation
● Kinematics
● Current & Magnetism
The spread of topics made it a comprehensive test of conceptual clarity.


2. Chemistry:


The Chemistry paper in the evening was significantly easier than the morning session of
Chemistry. The distribution of the Chemistry paper as follows:
● Inorganic Chemistry: 26%
● Organic Chemistry: 39%
● Physical Chemistry: 35%
Much of the Chemistry paper was dominated by Organic Chemistry and the topics tested
included Named Reactions, GOC and Aromatic Compounds. The Physical Chemistry questions
remained numerical based, and conceptually were mostly the same as earlier shifts.


3. Mathematics:


Mathematics was again on a moderate level but tedious with a decent volume of questions
based around calculus based topics. The overall distribution of questions in the paper was:
● Calculus: 40%
● Algebra: 28%
● Coordinate Geometry: 16%
● 3D Geometry & Vectors: 12%
● Trigonometry: 4%
Unlike the morning shift Trigonometry had a slightly bigger presence, but the rest of the paper
was highly calculative, time bound and about the same as earlier shifts in difficulty.

JEE Main 2025 – 23 January Paper Analysis (Session 1)

Subject Difficulty Level (Morning Shift) Difficulty Level (Evening Shift)
Physics
Moderate
Moderate
Chemistry
Moderate
Moderate and Lengthy
Maths
Moderate and Lengthy
Moderate and Lengthy

JEE Main 2025 Session 1 – 23 January Paper Analysis (Subject-Wise)

Morning Shift Overview

Chemistry:

The Chemistry importance covered balance across all sections of Chemistry. Approximately 6 questions were focused on Inorganic Chemistry, 8 questions were based on Organic Chemistry and 9 questions were from Physical Chemistry. Finally there were 2 integrated questions based on all three: Inorganic, Organic and Physical Chemistry.

Physics:

The physics questions covered various topics. There were 3 questions from each of Modern Physics, Units & Dimensions, and Geometrical Optics. There were also 2 questions from each of the following topics: Fluid Mechanics, Elasticity, Magnetic Induction etc. Other topics like work, power & energy, gravitation, kinematics, centre of mass, SHM, electrostatics, electro part, passively based one each. The overall level of the paper was rated as moderate, with conceptual questions ruling the paper.

Mathematics:

The Maths paper was rated as moderately difficult, although students generally felt it was easier than the 22nd January shift. The weightage distribution was as follows: 35% questions from calculus, 32% questions from algebra, 8% questions from coordinate geometry, 8% questions from Statistics & Relations, 12% questions from 3D vectors, and 5% questions from trigonometry.

Evening Shift Overview

Chemistry:

For the evening session, the importance of Physical Chemistry led the direction of validity with the highest share of questions. It was approximately 45% from Physical Chemistry, 35% from Inorganic Chemistry and 20% Organic Chemistry. Most students rated the paper as easier compared to the morning shift.

Physics:

The physics paper in the evening shift was comparatively easier. It also retained similar topics with minor variations of the questions hence the overall difficulty level was a bit lower which made it more student-friendly for students having conceptual understanding.

Mathematics:

The maths paper in the evening shift was of moderate level but took longer time to solve the paper entirely. The analysis was relatively similar to the morning shift: 32% questions were based on calculus, 31% were based on algebra, 12% were based on coordinate geometry, 9% were based on statistics and relations, 12% were based on 3D geometry and vectors, and 4% were based on trigonometry.

JEE Main 2025 – 22 January Paper Analysis (Session 1)

Based on the feedback taken from those aspirants who had appeared for the exam on 22 January 2025, it was considered that chemistry and physics sections were easy and straightforward while the maths section was challenging and time-consuming.

Subject Difficulty Level (Morning Shift) Difficulty Level (Evening Shift)
Physics
Moderate
Moderate
Chemistry
Easy to Moderate
Moderate and Lengthy
Maths
Difficult and Lengthy
Difficult and Lengthy

JEE Main 2025 – 22 January Paper Analysis (Subject-Wise)

Morning Shift Analysis

Chemistry:

The Chemistry section was of moderate difficulty level and balanced coverage was observed across all 3 domains.

  • ​ Approximately 30% of the questions were from Inorganic Chemistry, approximately 35% from Organic Chemistry and approximately 35% from Physical Chemistry.
  • ​ Most of the questions were of conceptual type, many questions were taken from NCERT, including reaction mechanisms, chemical bonding and numerical problems in physical chemistry.

Physics:

Physics was organised well, with almost every topic having one-question asked, meaning the syllabus was covered as a whole.

Most of the questions were very much conceptual, quite familiar areas came up including Electrostatics, Heat and Thermodynamics, Optics, Modern Physics and Laws of Motion.

The paper was not difficult, and good for time management as well.

Mathematics:

Mathematics was moderate in difficulty but of a longer list of questions and lots of working to complete calculations.

Maths relative topic weights were as follows:

  • Calculus: 35%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 9%
  • Statistics and Relations: 6%
  • Vectors and 3D Geometry: 3%​

Although not difficult to understand, many candidates found solving the questions and completing within the time constraint an issue.

Evening Shift Analysis

Chemistry:

In the evening shift Chemistry questions were more statements based, these required a better understanding of theoretical application, where, the concepts were well presented but were slightly more enhanced.

  • ​ Organic Chemistry was more weighty and was more of the paper was carrying application and reaction based questions.
  • ​ Inorganic Chemistry and Physical Chemistry , were also important but they were secondary.

Physics:

The Physics section was easier in the evening shift compared to the morning shift.

Just like in the morning shift, one question was asked from nearly every big topic, given that there was breadth in the syllabus.

Students indicated that the problems on the paper were more straightforward in terms of numbers and concepts, especially the areas of Modern Physics, Electrostatics, Capacitance, and SHM.

Mathematics:

The Mathematics paper in the evening shift was also more difficult and much more time consuming than the morning shift.

  • Calculus: 35%
  • Algebra: 32%
  • Coordinate Geometry: 10%
  • Vectors & 3D Geometry: 9%
  • Statistics & Relations: 9%
  • Trigonometry: 5%​

The variety and complexity of problems made this section the most demanding, and many students reported running out of time.

JEE MAIN 2024 April Attempt – Paper Analysis (Session 2)

The JEE Main 2024 Session 2 (B.E./B.Tech Paper 1) exam was successfully conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA) on April 4, 5, 6, 8, and 9, 2024, for about 1,179,569 candidates who registered for the examination. Roughly 1,067,959 candidates attempted the exam, with an exceedingly high number of candidates turning up.

This comprehensive paper analysis provides insight into what happened with the paper format structure, trends across subjects, class-wise share of questions.

Date – 4 April 2024 (Morning Shift)

Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
15
15
00
15
9
6
Chemistry
14
16
00
6
20
2
Maths
10
18
2
18
10
2

Date – 4 April 2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
20
5
5
Chemistry
13
17
00
11
18
1
Maths
12
18
00
24
6
00

Date – 5 April .2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
17
8
5
Chemistry
13
17
00
26
6
1
Maths
12
18
00
9
21
00

Date – 5 April.2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
16
8
6
Chemistry
13
17
00
11
18
1
Maths
12
18
00
22
6
2

Date – 6 April 2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
13
17
00
17
7
6
Chemistry
15
15
00
14
15
1
Maths
11
19
00
13
6
1

Date -6 April (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
15
15
00
17
8
5
Chemistry
13
17
00
12
17
1
Maths
12
18
00
19
11
00

Date -8 April 2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
15
15
00
19
7
4
Chemistry
12
18
00
18
11
1
Maths
13
17
00
5
21
4

Date – 8 April 2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
16
14
00
16
6
6
Chemistry
12
18
00
16
14
00
Maths
13
17
00
18
11
1

Date -9 April 2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
13
17
00
18
7
5
Chemistry
12
18
00
15
15
00
Maths
11
17
2
23
7
00

Date – 9 April 2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
11
19
00
16
10
4
Chemistry
10
20
00
14
13
3
Maths
9
21
2
27
2
1

JEE-MAIN 2024 January Attempt – Paper Analysis (Session 1)

The National Testing Agency (NTA) successfully conducted the JEE Main 2024 Session 1 (B.E./B.Tech – Paper 1) on January 28, 29, 30, 31, and February 1, 2024. Out of the 1,221,624 registered candidates, approximately 1,170,048 students appeared for the exam, ensuring a strong turnout. This analysis offers a comprehensive shift-wise breakdown and highlights the subject-wise trends observed across all days of the examination.

Date – 28 January.2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
18
6
6
Chemistry
19
11
00
21
7
2
Maths
9
20
1
21
8
1

Date – 28 January.2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
20
5
5
Chemistry
11
19
00
20
9
1
Maths
11
19
00
17
9
4

Date – 29 January2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
13
17
00
13
10
7
Chemistry
13
17
00
17
12
1
Maths
12
18
00
19
11
00

Date – 29 January. 2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
14
10
6
Chemistry
14
16
00
27
10
3
Maths
8
21
1
21
7
2

Date – 30 january 2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
13
17
00
16
8
6
Chemistry
15
15
00
19
10
2
Maths
11
19
00
13
15
2

Date – 30 january 2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
15
15
00
15
8
7
Chemistry
11
19
00
17
6
7
Maths
13
17
00
17
13
00

Date – 31 January 2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
15
15
00
16
7
7
Chemistry
14
16
00
15
10
5
Maths
12
17
1
17
10
3

Date – 31 January 2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
14
8
8
Chemistry
16
14
00
16
10
4
Maths
10
20
00
14
10
6

Date – 1 February 2024 (Morning Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
15
15
00
12
10
8
Chemistry
16
14
00
18
7
5
Maths
14
16
00
19
8
8

Date – 1 February 2024 (Evening Shift)

Subject Class wise Question Level Wise
11
12
11+12
Easy
Moderate
Tough
Physics
14
16
00
15
8
7
Chemistry
13
17
00
18
9
3
Maths
10
19
1
14
3
3

JEE Main 2024 Session 2 – Topic-Wise Paper Analysis

Mathematics: Topic-Wise Weightage

The highest weightage in this paper for Mathematics was Calculus and Algebra, confirming their significance in favourable preparation of the examination. The clear breakdown of questions in the Mathematics paper was:

  • Calculus: 100 questions – the most dominant area
  • Algebra: 90 questions – close in weightage to Calculus
  • Coordinate Geometry: 41 questions – significant portion
  • Vector & 3D Geometry: 40 questions – crucial for conceptual clarity
  • Trigonometry: 11 questions – fewer in number but conceptually important

Takeaway: Students need to structure their preparation with highest focus on Calculus and Algebra, but they should not lose balanced performance as these are the subjects of geometry and Trigonometry.

Physics: Detailed Topic Distribution

Physics had a heavy reliance on Electromagnetism and Mechanics, and fairly consistent collective question counts across other topics; an important topic wise breakdown of questions from Physics was:

  • Electromagnetism: 93 questions – highest number in Physics
  • Mechanics: 54 questions – second most covered area
  • Properties of Matter: 41 questions – important for core understanding
  • Modern Physics: 33 questions – essential for scoring
  • Optics: 19 questions – moderate weightage
  • Gravitation: 14 questions
  • SHM & Waves: 10 questions
  • Semiconductors & Communication Systems: 23 questions
  • Units, Dimensions, Vectors & Errors: 13 questions – important for basics and accuracy

Takeaway: A solid knowledge of Electromagnetism and Mechanics is indispensable to obtaining high marks in Physics paper, remember to pay attention to Modern Physics and Semiconductor questions.

Chemistry: Section-Wise Focus

In Chemistry, there was an expeditious and healthy balance across Organic, Inorganic and

Physical Chemistry, but Organic Chemistry led. Here’s the topic-wise breakdown:

Organic Chemistry:

  • Aromatic Compounds: 21 questions
  • General Organic Chemistry (GOC): 15 questions
  • Aldehydes, Ketones & Carboxylic Acids: 23 questions​

Inorganic Chemistry:

  • Chemical Bonding: 23 questions
  • Coordination Compounds: 21 questions
  • D & F Block Elements: 22 questions​

Physical Chemistry:

  • Electrochemistry: 16 questions
  • Atomic Structure: 13 questions
  • Thermodynamics: 12 questions​

Takeaway: Mastery in Organic Chemistry is key, but a comprehensive understanding of Inorganic and Physical Chemistry is equally vital for a strong performance.

JEE Main 2024 Session 1 – Topic-Wise Paper Analysis

Mathematics Overview

  • Calculus: 98 questions – most dominant
  • Algebra: 90 questions – concept-heavy
  • Coordinate & 3D Geometry: 39 questions each – equally significant
  • Trigonometry: 12 questions – least but essential​

Total: 278 questions

Key Point: Focus on Calculus and Algebra, but cover all areas for balanced preparation.

Physics Overview

  • Electromagnetism: 95 questions – top weightage
  • Mechanics: 59 questions – conceptually important
  • Properties of Matter: 42 questions
  • Modern Physics: 31 questions
  • Optics: 22 questions
  • Others: SHM, Waves, Gravitation, Semiconductors, Units & Errors – moderate representation

Key Point: Electromagnetism and Mechanics dominate, but broad understanding across topics is vital.​

Chemistry Overview

Organic Chemistry (119):

  • ​ Aromatic Compounds, Halogen Derivatives, Electronic Effects

Physical Chemistry (81):

  • ​ Mole Concept, Thermodynamics, Electrochemistry​

Inorganic Chemistry (100):

  • ​ Periodic Properties, Chemical Bonding

Key Point: Organic has the edge, but a balanced study of all three branches is crucial.

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