JEE Main 2026: The National Testing Agency (NTA) will conduct the JEE Main exam in two sessions next year, in January and April 2026. The dates have been announced. Candidates appearing for the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE Main) 2026 can fill out the online application for Session 1 by visiting jeemain.nta.nic.in, and the exams will be conducted in Computer-Based Test (CBT) mode. However, the application forms have not been released yet. They are expected to be released this week.
Session 1 exam will be held on these dates.
The NTA is also working on increasing the number of exam centers for the convenience of engineering students. Online applications for Session 1 are available on their official website, and the exams will be held between January 21st and 30th next year. Session 2 will be held in April 2026, and online application forms will be available in the last week of January. The exams will be held from April 1st to 10th, 2026.
NTA will obtain the name, date of birth, gender, photograph, and address from UIDAI through Aadhaar authentication. However, since father/mother/guardian names etc., are not recorded in Aadhaar, candidates will have to fill these details separately in the online application form.
If there is any error in the Aadhaar card and the 10th class educational certificate/marksheet of a candidate, NTA will provide an option to correct it during the online application.
Disclaimer: This content has been sourced and edited from NDTV India. While we have made modifications for clarity and presentation, the original content belongs to its respective authors and website. We do not claim ownership of the content.
You may also like

Bihar elections: Rahul Gandhi skips Mahagathbandhan presser; joint manifesto released in Patna

Trump health fears as 'confused' President salutes at wrong time and wanders aimlessly

'Better than most' horror movie that's perfect for Halloween is now on Netflix

BJP MP Surya meets Dy CM Shivakumar; discusses Bengaluru tunnel project, traffic congestion

MCX trading halted for over four hours due to technical glitch, probe initiated




