Each year, a multitude of candidates take the JEE Main examination; however, when the outcome gets released, many of the applicants become confused with regards to the differences between percentile scores and ranks. The official scorecard that provides you with your NTA percentile score does not provide you with the actual All India Rank (AIR). This leads to a frequent question that appears in relation to JEE Main 2026:
How to calculate JEE Main 2026 rank from NTA percentile score?
This article will provide a detailed overview of how ranks are calculated, how percentiles are calculated, and how to estimate a potential rank based on your NTA score.
Before calculating a rank based on an NTA Percentile Score, it’s essential to understand what an NTA Percentile Score means.
The NTA Percentile Score represents the percentage of candidates in the same session who scored equal to or lower than your score.
For example:
It is important to note that the Percentile does not equate to your actual score.
The formula used by NTA is:
Percentile = (Number of candidates with raw score ≤ your score / Total candidates in the session) × 100
Since JEE Main is conducted in multiple shifts, normalization ensures fairness across different difficulty levels.
JEE Main All India Rank (AIR) will be founded on:
The rough equation to determine where you can be is:
Expected Rank = (100-Percentile Score) × total number of candidates /100.
It is not the official formula but it provides an approximation.
It should be noted that the calculation below is not possible, since the percentile is an integer value.
Let’s assume:
Estimated Rank ≈ (100 – 98) × 12,00,000 ÷ 100
= 2 × 12,00,000 ÷ 100
= 24,000
So your expected rank would be around 24,000.
Again, this is an estimation, not the official rank.
Assuming 12 lakh candidates:
|
Percentile |
Expected Rank Range |
|
99.9 |
1 – 1,200 |
|
99.5 |
6,000 |
|
99 |
12,000 |
|
98 |
24,000 |
|
95 |
60,000 |
|
90 |
1,20,000 |
|
85 |
1,80,000 |
Note: Final ranks depend on actual number of candidates in 2026.
If you take both Session 1 and Session 2, your percentile score will be taken from your highest session, therefore you will have a second opportunity to take advantage of your scores.
This gives students a second chance to improve their performance.
In case there is a tie between two or more candidates who possess the same percentile, tiebreakers are resorted to. They are applicable in the following sequence:
In case the tiebreaker fails to break the tie, the two candidates will be ranked as similar.
Percentile indicates the performance of an applicant as compared to that of other applicants who are undertaking the test.
Rank is a measure of how much you rank in general with others in the country.
For example, two candidates taking the test in different sessions could have the same actual score; however they might earn significantly different percentiles due to the normalization process.
Approximate/expected qualifying percentiles for JEE Advanced 2026 will vary by category of candidates:
Only those who score above the minimum qualifying percentile will qualify for JEE Advanced.
You can only estimate and not predict an actual rank. There are four criteria which will be used to determine an actual rank for a candidate:
Official AIR is released only after Session 2 results.
If your score was low compared to your expectations, here are a few steps to take:
Improving just one percentile will help you move thousands of ranks.
In the case of working with Origin Educare, you will get organized preparation that will be based on the maximum score and increase in your all-India rank.
Our system includes:
By continuously following our strategy, you will significantly improve your JEE Main rank in 2026.
Rank is determined using the best NTA percentile and the number of students taking the exam. A general formula to follow is:
(100-Percentile Rank) times Total Students divided by 100.
Yes! 95 percent will likely give a rank close to 60,000 depending on how many other people took the test, but if you want to attend one of the top NITs, then you’ll need a higher percentile than that.
No! The rank is the last one based on the percentiles and not the raw score.
Normally, a rank under 10,000 needs a rank of 99+ percentile.
The rules that are used to apply tie-breaking are based on Mathematics percentile, Physics percentile, Chemistry percentile, and accuracy ratio.