JEE Advanced 2026 Review: Paper 1 & 2 Analysis, Difficulty Level, and What Comes Next
Mathematics proved brutal. Chemistry gave hope. Physics sat somewhere in between. Here’s everything you need to know about today’s exam.
Today was the day. Roughly 1.8 lakh students across 221 cities in India — and two international centres — sat down to take the JEE Advanced 2026, one of the world’s toughest undergraduate entrance exams. After months of sacrifice, doubt, and very strong coffee, it all came down to six hours of computer-based testing.
IIT Roorkee, this year’s organizing institute, conducted the exam smoothly in two back-to-back sessions. Paper 1 ran from 9 AM to noon. Paper 2 kicked off at 2:30 PM and wrapped at 5:30 PM. Both papers are compulsory — there is no opting out of either one.
So how was the paper? Let’s get into it.
JEE Advanced 2026: Quick Overview of the Exam
The JEE Advanced is the second stage of the Joint Entrance Examination and the gateway to India’s 23 Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs). To even sit this exam, you must rank within the top 2,50,000 candidates in JEE Main 2026 — making the applicant pool already quite elite.
The exam covers Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics from Class 11 and 12 syllabi. But unlike JEE Main, where one question usually tests one concept, JEE Advanced deliberately combines multiple ideas in a single problem. Think of it as JEE Main’s unhinged older sibling.
Each paper carries 180 marks, making the total a maximum of 360 marks. The question types shift every year — a mix of single-correct MCQs, multi-correct MCQs, numerical answer type (NAT) questions, and matching-type questions. Negative marking applies to certain sections, so guessing blindly is a risky business.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Conducting Body | IIT Roorkee (on behalf of JAB 2026) |
| Exam Mode | Computer-Based Test (CBT) |
| No. of Papers | 2 (both compulsory) |
| Subjects | Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics |
| Total Marks | 360 (180 per paper) |
| Eligible Candidates | Top 2,50,000 in JEE Main 2026 |
| Exam Cities | 221 cities in India + 2 international centres |
| Official Website | jeeadv.ac.in |
JEE Advanced 2026 Paper 1 Review — Subject-Wise Difficulty
Paper 1 ended at noon. Students walked out looking like they had just survived a mathematical hostage situation. Here is what they reported:
Mathematics — The Nightmare Continues
Mathematics was the toughest section in Paper 1. Students reported lengthy and calculation-heavy questions, particularly from indefinite integrals, application of derivatives, and functions. Many problems required multi-step reasoning — not the kind you can shortcut your way through.
This is consistent with recent trends. In 2024, Mathematics was the most time-consuming section. In 2025, it remained one of the hardest. JEE Advanced clearly has a favourite subject to torture students with.
Physics — Conceptual and Lengthy
Physics in Paper 1 tested conceptual clarity more than raw formula application. Candidates reported several lengthy numerical questions that demanded both speed and accuracy. Students with a strong grip on fundamentals fared better, but many found time management difficult.
“The paper tested deeper understanding compared to JEE Main. Several questions required multi-step reasoning and careful interpretation.” — Student reactions compiled by Careers360, May 17, 2026
Chemistry — The Relative Saviour
Chemistry was comparatively the easiest section in Paper 1. Most questions followed NCERT concepts closely, covering Organic, Physical, and Inorganic Chemistry in a balanced way. Students who revised their NCERT thoroughly found this section manageable — even scoring-friendly.
That said, there were a few tricky Organic Chemistry questions that caught less-prepared students off guard.
*Based on early student feedback compiled post-exam. Not official data.
JEE Advanced 2026 Paper 2 Review
Paper 2 began at 2:30 PM. While students arrived at the afternoon session hoping for some relief, the paper had other plans — particularly in Physics.
Physics — Toughest in Paper 2
Physics flipped the script in Paper 2. Students reported it as the most difficult and time-consuming section of the entire afternoon slot. Questions were analytical and deep, continuing the JEE Advanced tradition of making Physics genuinely hard at least once in the exam.
Chemistry — NCERT to the Rescue Again
Chemistry in Paper 2 was the bright spot. Students widely described it as the easiest of the three sections. Questions came directly from NCERT-style content — Organic Chemistry featured basic mechanisms, Physical Chemistry leaned on standard formulas, and Inorganic Chemistry tested factual recall.
Students who revised NCERT thoroughly reported finishing this section quickly and accurately, which gave them extra time for the harder sections.
Mathematics — Still Demanding
Mathematics remained demanding in Paper 2, though some students found it slightly more approachable than in Paper 1. Topics from Calculus and Algebra carried heavy weightage. Precision was critical — one careless calculation could cost marks.
| Subject | Paper 1 Difficulty | Paper 2 Difficulty | Overall Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mathematics | Very Hard | Hard | Toughest overall |
| Physics | Moderate–Hard | Hard | Challenging, analytical |
| Chemistry | Moderate | Easiest | NCERT-friendly |
Overall Difficulty Level — JEE Advanced 2026
Based on student reactions from both shifts, the overall difficulty order for JEE Advanced 2026 was:
Mathematics ≥ Physics > Chemistry
Multiple students described the overall experience as “mentally exhausting but fair.” The paper tested conceptual depth, not rote learning. It was not designed to trick you — it was designed to filter candidates who truly understand the subject from those who only memorized formulas.
Coaching experts noted that Paper 1 difficulty was on the higher side compared to last year, particularly in Mathematics. This means the expected cutoff may shift accordingly.
JEE Advanced 2026 Expected Cutoff
The official cutoff comes out with the result on June 1, 2026. Until then, expect estimates — not guarantees. Based on previous year trends and the difficulty level observed today, here are the expected qualifying marks for the rank list:
| Category | Expected Qualifying Marks | Approx. % of Total (360) |
|---|---|---|
| General (CRL) | ~86–95 marks | ~24–26% |
| OBC-NCL | ~78–85 marks | ~22–24% |
| SC | ~43–48 marks | ~12–13% |
| ST | ~43–48 marks | ~12–13% |
| PwD (GEN) | ~43–48 marks | ~12–13% |
⚠️ These are estimated values based on trends and expert analysis. Official cutoffs release with JEE Advanced 2026 results on June 1, 2026 at jeeadv.ac.in.
One historical fact worth knowing: no student has ever scored full marks (360/360) in JEE Advanced. The highest score on record is 355/360, achieved by Ved Lahoti in 2024. The exam is genuinely that hard.
What Happens Next? Key Dates After the Exam
Candidates who qualify JEE Advanced get access to JoSAA counselling, which handles seat allocation across all 23 IITs and other premier institutes jointly. This is where your branch and college choice happens.
How JEE Advanced 2026 Compared to Previous Years
| Year | Toughest Subject | Overall Verdict | Notable Remark |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Physics & Maths | Hard | Lengthy and tricky paper |
| 2024 | Mathematics | Moderate–Hard | Chemistry easier; Maths was a “nightmare” |
| 2025 | Physics | Very Hard | Rated one of toughest in recent times |
| 2026 | Mathematics | Hard | Moderate to hard; conceptual depth tested |
The pattern is clear. JEE Advanced alternates the “pain subject” each year. In 2025, Physics was the villain. In 2026, Mathematics took back the throne.
Student Reactions — What Did Aspirants Say?
Social media lit up as soon as Paper 1 ended at noon. Here is a sample of what students were saying across forums and coaching platforms:
“Maths was from a different universe. I feel like I prepared for JEE Advanced, not for whatever that paper was.” — Student reaction, posted on forum boards, May 17, 2026
“Chemistry saved me in both papers. NCERT is underrated. I am not joking.” — Another student, post-exam reaction
Coaching experts called the paper “fair but demanding,” noting that it clearly separated rote learners from students with genuine conceptual understanding. Keshav Agarwal of the Coaching Federation of India confirmed the paper reflected the typical “IIT stamp and standard.”
🔗 Important Official Links
Frequently Asked Questions — JEE Advanced 2026

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