180 Marks JEE Main Percentile: What 180/300 Means for Percentile, Ranks and NIT/IIIT Chances 2026

Updated Apr 2, 2026 — A raw score of 180 in JEE Main (out of 300) typically maps to a high 98–99+ percentile. See expected percentile range, subject-wise marks and category-wise opening/closing ranks for 2026.

Edited by Amit Sharma

Updated April 3, 2026 3:37 AM

    180 Marks JEE Main Percentile — What 180/300 Means (Updated Apr 2, 2026)

    Article updated: Apr 2, 2026. A raw score of 180 out of 300 in JEE Main usually sits in the high 98 to 99+ percentile range. This note gives percentile bands, subject-wise splits and likely category ranks based on recent trends and expert estimates.

    Expected 180 Marks JEE Main Percentile Range

    Experts and past trends put 180 marks roughly between 98.7+ and 99.3+ percentile , with chances to cross 99.5 in some shifts. Percentile varies by shift because of NTA's normalisation method.

    Marks Range Expected Percentile (2026 prediction)
    300–290 100 – 99.99+
    250–240 99.85+ – 99.5+
    200–180 99.3+ – 98.7+
    130–120 95+ – 93+

    180 Marks JEE Main Percentile: Subject-wise and Rank Estimates

    To reach 180 , typical subject splits seen in recent papers are: Physics 55–70 , Chemistry 60–75 , Mathematics 45–65 . You can hit 180 with different combinations; strong performance in one subject offsets weaker marks in another because of normalisation.

    Subject Typical Marks for 180 Total
    Physics 55–70
    Chemistry 60–75
    Mathematics 45–65

    General All-India Rank for a 180 score usually falls in a broad band. Final AIR depends on session-wise percentiles, total test-takers and category reservation rules.

    Category Expected Opening Rank Expected Closing Rank
    General (CRL) 4,500 – 7,000 8,000 – 12,000
    OBC-NCL 1,500 – 3,500 5,000 – 8,000
    EWS 800 – 2,000 3,000 – 6,000
    SC 500 – 1,500 2,000 – 4,000
    ST 200 – 800 1,000 – 3,000

    What 180 Means for Admissions and JEE Advanced Eligibility

    A percentile around 98–99 typically makes you eligible for JEE Advanced, subject to official cutoffs that year. With 180 , you stand a good chance for many NITs, IIITs and GFTIs, especially in non-CSE branches or under reserved categories.

    Remember: percentile is computed per session; if you took multiple sessions, the final rank uses the best performance rules announced by the exam authority.

    Key points to note

    • Total JEE Main marks = 300 . Normalisation creates shift-wise percentile variation.
    • Ranks are derived from final percentiles across sessions.
    • Category reservations materially change opening and closing ranks.

    FAQs

    Is 180 marks considered a good score in JEE Main? A: Yes. It typically places candidates in the 98.8–99.4 percentile range and is competitive for many NITs, IIITs and GFTIs.
    How is the percentile calculated for JEE Main? A: Percentile uses normalisation across shifts; it measures the percentage of candidates scoring equal to or below a raw score in a session.
    Can I get into NITs with 180 marks? A: Yes. Many NITs and IIITs are attainable at 180 , especially for non-CSE branches and reserved categories.
    Do shifts affect the percentile for the same raw marks? A: Yes. Easier shifts usually need higher raw marks for the same percentile; tougher shifts reward the same marks with higher percentiles.
    Does 180 guarantee JEE Advanced eligibility? A: Typically yes, since 98–99 percentile often meets JEE Advanced eligibility, but final cutoffs are set by the exam authority.
    What affects final AIR for a 180 score? A: Total candidates, exam difficulty, normalisation and category reservations.
    Are subject-wise marks for 180 fixed? A: No. The typical ranges are guidelines; different combinations across Physics, Chemistry and Maths can sum to 180 .

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