AP Inter Grading System 2026: A1–F Grades, Passing Marks, Results, Supplementary, Recounting & Calculation Guide

AP Inter Grading System 2026 explained: grades A1 to F, grade points, passing marks, key dates (exams Feb 24–Mar 23, results Apr 15), supplementary and recounting process for students.

Edited by Vikram Mehta

    AP Inter Grading System 2026: A1–F Grades, Passing Marks, Results, Supplementary, Recounting & Calculation Guide

    AP Inter results 2026 were released on April 15, 2026 , and the AP Inter Grading System now determines final grades for more than 10 lakh students who sat the exams. This guide breaks down the AP Inter Grading System so you can check your grade, convert marks to grade points, understand passing rules and know the next steps if you need a supplementary exam or recounting.

    Introduction: Why the AP Inter Grading System Matters

    BIEAP (Board of Intermediate Education, Andhra Pradesh) uses a standard grading scale for Intermediate (Class 12) exams. The AP Inter Grading System converts marks out of 100 into grades from A1 to F and assigns grade points to each grade.

    This guide is for students, parents and teachers who want clear steps: how final scores are calculated, what counts as passing marks, how divisions are assigned and what to do if you fail. It also lists the key dates you must note for results, recounting, and supplementary exams.

    AP Inter Grading System Explained (A1 to F)

    The AP Inter Grading System uses eight grades from A1 down to F. Each grade corresponds to a marks range and a grade point. Below is the official breakdown you will find on the BIEAP mark sheet.

    Grade Marks range (out of 100) Grade points
    A1 91–100 10
    A2 81–90 9
    B1 71–80 8
    B2 61–70 7
    C1 51–60 6
    C2 41–50 5
    D1 35–40 4
    F 34 and below Failed

    What F means: F is a fail grade — you scored 34 or below in that subject. An F in any subject means you have not cleared that paper and must look at supplementary options or reappear as per board instructions.

    How the Final Score Is Calculated

    BIEAP follows a weightage model for the final Inter score: 80% comes from the final public exam and 20% from internal assessment. Each paper is of 100 marks .

    Step-by-step example (one subject):

    1. Suppose your final exam mark = 70 out of 100. Internal assessment = 16 out of 20. Convert internal assessment to the same scale (out of 100) by treating it as 20% of the final score.
    2. Final weighted score = (Final exam marks * 0.8) + (Internal marks * 0.2).
    3. Using example: (70 * 0.8) + (16 * 1) [internal already on 20 — treat as contribution] = 56 + 16 = 72 total (out of 100).

    After computing the total out of 100 for each subject, the board assigns the corresponding grade and grade point using the grading table above.

    How to compute aggregate percentage: add the marks obtained in all subjects (each out of 100) and divide by number of subjects. This gives your average percentage which the board uses for division classification.

    Passing Criteria and Division-Wise Classification

    Passing marks and division cut-offs are crucial. Here are the rules you must know:

    • Minimum passing mark per subject: 35 .
    • Minimum aggregate required to pass: 35% (aggregate across all subjects).

    Division-wise classification (total marks basis):

    Division Total marks range (out of 500/400 depending on subjects)
    Distinction 400 and above
    First division 300–399
    Second division 225–299
    Third division 150–224

    Note: These division ranges are based on the board’s published cutoffs. Meeting per-subject passing marks but not the aggregate can still mean you fail overall; similarly, meeting aggregate but failing a subject still results in an F in that subject. You must meet both the per-subject and aggregate criteria to pass outright.

    AP Inter Results 2026: Key Dates & How to Check

    Key dates you must remember:

    Event Date
    Practical exams hall ticket release Jan 24, 2026
    AP Intermediate exams start Feb 24, 2026
    AP Intermediate exams end Mar 23, 2026
    AP Inter Results 2026 released Apr 15, 2026
    Recounting & Reverification applications begin Apr 20, 2026
    Supplementary exams for failed students May 2026
    Time table release (board notice) Apr 15, 2026

    How to check AP Inter results 2026 (what you need):

    • Keep your hall ticket/roll number and date of birth handy.
    • Visit the official BIEAP website (the board’s results portal) and enter your roll number and DOB to view results.
    • You can download a result printout, but remember the official marks memo must be collected from your school.

    Alternate ways: the board may publish results on multiple official result portals; always verify on the official BIEAP site and collect the original marks memo from your school.

    If You Get an F: Supplementary Exams and Next Steps

    If you receive an F in any subject, you are eligible to appear in the AP Inter supplementary exam scheduled for May 2026 . The supplementary gives you one more chance to clear failed subjects without waiting a full year.

    What to expect for supplementary exams:

    • Eligibility: students who have failed in one or more subjects (F grade).
    • Registration: the board will publish a notification with registration windows and procedure (watch the official website after results day).
    • Admit card: you will receive an admit card/hall ticket for the supplementary exam — use the same hall ticket/roll number.

    After the supplementary exam, results and updated marks memos will be issued. You still must collect your official mark sheet from the school.

    Recounting and Reverification: Process & Timeline

    The board opens the window for recounting and reverification soon after results. For 2026, applications begin on Apr 20, 2026 .

    What recounting/reverification means:

    • Recounting checks if total marks were added correctly.
    • Reverification (or rechecking) may include rechecking that all answer pages were evaluated and that marks were correctly awarded as per scheme.

    Basic steps you should follow (typical, and found in most board notices):

    1. Note the start date ( Apr 20, 2026 ) and the last date published in the board notice.
    2. Keep your hall ticket/roll number ready.
    3. Apply online on the official BIEAP portal under the result services section.
    4. Fill the application form carefully and select papers you want rechecked.
    5. Pay the applicable fee online — check the official notification for the exact amount.
    6. Submit and save the application receipt and reference number.

    Timelines and outcomes:

    • The board usually processes these requests in a few weeks; expect a formal notification with timelines.
    • Outcomes vary: marks can go up, stay the same, or (rarely) be adjusted down after re-evaluation.

    Tips to improve your application success:

    • Apply for recounting only for papers where you suspect totaling errors or omitted pages.
    • Talk to your teacher before applying; they can advise whether answer scripts should be rechecked.

    If you need scanned copies of your answer scripts, watch the official board notice — some boards provide scanned copies for a fee or under specific rules.

    Practical Tips: Calculating Percentage, Converting Grades & Examples

    You may want a clear method to convert your subject marks to grades and then to an aggregate grade point average (GPA). Below is a simple worked example.

    Example: You have five subjects with the following final marks (each out of 100): 72, 85, 66, 58, 79.

    Subject Marks Grade Grade point
    Subject 1 72 B1 8
    Subject 2 85 A2 9
    Subject 3 66 B2 7
    Subject 4 58 C1 6
    Subject 5 79 B1 8

    Total marks = 72 + 85 + 66 + 58 + 79 = 360

    Average percentage = 360 / 5 = 72%

    Average grade point (GPA) = (8 + 9 + 7 + 6 + 8) / 5 = 38 / 5 = 7.6

    This example shows how marks map to grades and grade points using the AP Inter grading scale.

    Quick checklist you can print and carry on result day:

    • Hall ticket/roll number
    • Date of birth
    • School’s contact details (to collect marks memo)
    • Pen and paper to note grade points and marks
    • Bank/UPI ready for any recounting or supplementary fees (if required)

    Missing Coverage: What Students Often Ask For (and what we don’t have official figures for)

    Students regularly ask about recounting fees, exact revaluation charges, historical pass percentages and state-by-state comparisons of grading. The board publishes fees and detailed procedures in official circulars; those must be checked on the BIEAP website.

    Compassionate or medical cases: the board has provisions for special cases in some years. If you have a medical emergency, contact your principal immediately and ask them to get official instructions from BIEAP. Schools handle such compassionate case requests and supporting documentation.

    Historical pass percentages and year-on-year trends are published in board reports; if you need those figures, request them from your school or check the official board release for the year.

    Conclusion & Quick Resource List

    Key takeaways:

    • The AP Inter Grading System uses grades A1 to F with grade points 10 down to 4 (D1) and F as fail.
    • You need 35 marks in each subject and 35% aggregate to pass.
    • Results were released on Apr 15, 2026 ; recounting applications start on Apr 20, 2026 and supplementary exams are scheduled in May 2026 .

    Action checklist after results:

    • Check your result using your hall ticket/roll number on the official BIEAP portal.
    • Collect the original marks memo from your school.
    • If you failed a subject, note the supplementary schedule and register as per the board notice.
    • If you suspect errors, apply for recounting/reverification starting Apr 20, 2026 via the official portal.

    Where to go for official documents and migration certificate: contact your school first. The school will guide you to download the migration certificate or marks memo once the board issues them.

    Remember: grades are a snapshot of one exam period. If you need to reappear or take supplementary exams, treat them as a planned next step. Talk to teachers and your school counsellor about subject-wise strategy and higher education options.

    Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

    Q: What does A1 mean?

    A: A1 means you scored between 91 and 100 marks in that subject. It carries a grade point of 10 .

    Q: What is the passing mark?

    A: Minimum 35 marks in each subject and 35% aggregate across subjects are required to pass.

    Q: How do I calculate my percentage?

    A: Add the marks obtained in all subjects (each out of 100) and divide by the number of subjects. That gives your average percentage.

    Q: How can I check AP Inter results 2026?

    A: Visit the official BIEAP results portal and enter your roll number and date of birth. Keep your hall ticket ready. Collect the official marks memo from your school.

    Q: What if I fail a subject?

    A: Students who get an F must appear for the AP Inter supplementary exam scheduled in May 2026 . Register as per the board notice.

    Q: When can I apply for recounting or reverification?

    A: Recounting & reverification applications begin on Apr 20, 2026 . Follow the official portal’s application process and pay the prescribed fee.

    Q: Where do I get the migration certificate or marks memo?

    A: The official marks memo and migration certificate are issued through your school once the board finalises results. Contact your school office.

    Q: How are internal assessment marks counted?

    A: AP Inter gives 20% weight to internal assessment and 80% to the final exam. The internal marks contribute to the final subject total out of 100.

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