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By rohit.pandey1
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Updated on 26 Mar 2026, 11:38 IST
JEE Main 2026 Session 1 (January Session) was conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA) across 5 exam days — January 21, 22, 23, 24, and 28, 2026 — in two shifts per day. This gives students 10 complete question paper sets to practice with. The JEE Main 2026 question paper PDF with solutions for all these shifts are available for free download on this page.
Download official NTA question papers and expert solutions for all 10 shifts (Jan 21–28, 2026). Physics, Chemistry & Maths PDFs available subject-wise. Includes shift-wise difficulty analysis, chapter weightage & score calculator — 100% free, no login required.
| Parameter | Details |
| Conducting Body | National Testing Agency (NTA) |
| Session 1 Dates | January 21, 22, 23, 24, 28 — 2026 |
| Shift 1 Timing | 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM (Morning) |
| Shift 2 Timing | 3:00 PM – 6:00 PM (Evening) |
| Total Questions | 90 (75 to be attempted — Sec A: 20, Sec B: 10 per subject) |
| Total Marks | 300 |
| Subjects | Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics |
| Correct Answer | +4 marks |
| Wrong Answer (MCQ) | −1 mark |
| Unattempted | 0 marks |
| Mode | Computer-Based Test (CBT) |
| Paper 2A/2B (B.Arch/BPlan) | January 29, 2026 |
Download JEE Main 2026 January Session 1 question papers with solutions in this complete collection. It includes official NTA PDFs and memory-based papers by Infinity Learn experts. Download instantly without login or registration.
| Subject Name | JEE Main 2026 Question Paper PDF with Solution PDF Download Link |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 Jan 21 Physics Question Paper PDF |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 Jan 21 Chemistry Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Maths | JEE Main 2026 Jan 21 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Subject Name | JEE Main 2026 Question Paper PDF with Solution PDF Download Link |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 Jan 21 Physics Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 Jan 21 Chemistry Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Maths | JEE Main 2026 Jan 21 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Subject Name | JEE Main Question Paper PDF with Solution Download Link |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 Jan 22 Physics Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 Jan 22 Chemistry Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Maths | JEE Main 2026 Jan 22 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Subject Name | JEE Main Question Paper PDF with Solution Download Link |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 Jan 22 Physics Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 Jan 22 Chemistry Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Maths | JEE Main 2026 Jan 22 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Subject Name | JEE Main 2026 Question Paper PDF with Solution PDF Download Link |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 Jan 23 Physics Question Paper PDF with Solution PDF |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 Jan 23 Chemistry Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Maths | JEE Main 2026 Jan 23 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Subject Name | JEE Main 2026 Question Paper PDF with Solution PDF Download Link |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 Jan 23 Physics Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 Jan 23 ChemistryQuestion Paper PDF with Solution |
| Maths | JEE Main 2026 Jan 23 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Subject Name | Question Paper PDF with Solution PDF Download | Video Solutions |
| Physics | Download Jan 24 Shift 1 Physics Question Paper PDF | Watch Live Analysis |
| Chemistry | Download Jan 24 Shift 1 Chemistry Question Paper PDF | Watch Live Analysis |
| Maths | Download Jan 24 Shift 1 Maths Question paper PDF | Watch Live Analysis |
| Subject Name | Question Paper PDF with Solution PDF Download | Video Solutions |
| Physics | Download Jan 24 Shift 2 Physics Question Paper PDF | Watch Live Analysis |
| Chemistry | Download Jan 24 Shift 2 Chemistry Question Paper PDF | Watch Live Analysis |
| Maths | Download Jan 24 Shift 2 Maths Question Paper PDF | Watch Live Analysis |
| Subject | Download Question Paper PDF with Solution (PDF) |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 28 Jan Shift 1 Physics Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 28 Jan Shift 1 Chemistry Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Mathematics | JEE Main 2026 28 Jan Shift 1 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Subject | Download Question Paper PDF with Solution (PDF) |
| Physics | JEE Main 2026 28 Jan Shift 2 Physics Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Chemistry | JEE Main 2026 28 Jan Shift 2 Chemistry Question Paper PDF with Solution |
| Mathematics | JEE Main 2026 28 Jan Shift 2 Maths Question Paper PDF with Solution |
Understanding the difficulty level and topic distribution of the JEE Main 2026 January Session is critical for anyone preparing for April Session 2. Based on Infinity Learn’s expert analysis of all 10 shifts, here is a comprehensive breakdown that no other page provides in one place.
The overall difficulty of the January 2026 session ranged from Easy-Moderate to Tough depending on the shift. Mathematics was consistently the most challenging subject across shifts, while Chemistry remained the most accessible and scoring section. Physics showed moderate difficulty throughout, with isolated instances of tough numerical questions.
| Exam Date and Shift | Physics Difficulty | Chemistry Difficulty | Maths Difficulty | Overall Level | Good Attempts (out of 75) |
| Jan 21 – Shift 1 | Moderate | Easy | Moderate | Moderate | 62–68 |
| Jan 21 – Shift 2 | Easy | Moderate | Tough | Moderate | 58–64 |
| Jan 22 – Shift 1 | Moderate | Easy | Moderate | Moderate | 62–66 |
| Jan 22 – Shift 2 | Easy | Easy | Moderate | Easy–Moderate | 66–72 |
| Jan 23 – Shift 1 | Tough | Moderate | Tough | Tough | 50–58 |
| Jan 23 – Shift 2 | Moderate | Moderate | Tough | Moderate–Tough | 55–62 |
| Jan 24 – Shift 1 | Moderate | Easy | Moderate | Moderate | 60–66 |
| Jan 24 – Shift 2 | Easy | Moderate | Tough | Moderate | 58–64 |
| Jan 28 – Shift 1 | Moderate | Easy | Moderate | Moderate | 60–66 |
| Jan 28 – Shift 2 | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | 62–68 |
The following chapter weightage is derived from analyzing all 10 shifts together. Chapters marked High appeared in most or all shifts and are the highest-priority topics for April Session 2 preparation. Chapters marked Medium appeared in 5–7 shifts, and Low chapters appeared in fewer than 4 shifts.
| Chapter | Weightage Level | Average Questions per Shift |
| Modern Physics (Photoelectric Effect, Nuclei, Atoms) | High | 3–4 |
| Electrostatics and Capacitors | High | 3–4 |
| Rotational Mechanics and Moment of Inertia | High | 2–3 |
| Current Electricity and Circuits | Medium | 2 |
| Electromagnetic Induction and AC Circuits | Medium | 2 |
| Ray Optics and Wave Optics | Medium | 2 |
| Thermodynamics and Kinetic Theory | Low | 1 |
| Semiconductors and Logic Gates | Low | 1 |
| Waves and Sound | Low | 1 |
| Chapter | Weightage Level | Average Questions per Shift |
| General Organic Chemistry (GOC) and Named Reactions | High | 3–4 |
| Thermodynamics (Physical Chemistry) | High | 2–3 |
| Electrochemistry | High | 2–3 |
| Coordination Compounds | Medium | 2 |
| Amines and Alcohols (Organic) | Medium | 2 |
| Chemical Equilibrium and Ionic Equilibrium | Medium | 2 |
| Biomolecules and Polymers | Low | 1 |
| p-Block Elements | Low | 1 |
| Isomerism and Purification | Low | 1 |
| Chapter | Weightage Level | Average Questions per Shift |
| Calculus – Definite and Indefinite Integration | High | 4–5 |
| Coordinate Geometry (Circles, Conics, Ellipse) | High | 3–4 |
| Matrices and Determinants | High | 2–3 |
| Sequences and Series (AP, GP, HP) | Medium | 2 |
| Differential Equations | Medium | 2 |
| Probability and Statistics | Medium | 2 |
| Complex Numbers | Low | 1 |
| 3D Geometry and Vectors | Low | 1–2 |
| Relations, Functions, and Sets | Low | 1 |
Every year, students ask us: should I use the memory-based paper or wait for the official NTA paper? The answer depends on what you need it for. Here is a clear comparison:
The official JEE Main 2026 January question paper PDFs are available on the National Testing Agency’s official website. Here is a step-by-step guide to accessing your personalized question paper:

Once you have downloaded the JEE Main 2026 January question paper with solutions, use the marking scheme below to calculate your expected raw score. This raw score is the starting point before NTA applies percentile normalization to create the final merit list.
| Answer Type | Section A (MCQ) | Section B (Numerical) |
| Correct Answer | +4 marks | +4 marks |
| Wrong Answer | −1 mark | 0 marks (No negative marking) |
| Unattempted | 0 marks | 0 marks |
Total Raw Score = (Number of Correct Answers × 4) − (Number of Wrong MCQ Answers × 1)

JEE

NEET

Foundation JEE

Foundation NEET

CBSE
For example: If you answered 55 questions correctly, got 8 MCQs wrong, and left 12 unattempted: Score = (55 × 4) − (8 × 1) = 220 − 8 = 212 marks out of 300
| Correct Answers | Wrong Answers | Estimated Raw Score | Approximate Percentile |
| 70 | 5 | 275 | 99.5+ |
| 65 | 7 | 253 | 99+ |
| 60 | 8 | 232 | 98–99 |
| 55 | 10 | 210 | 95–97 |
| 50 | 10 | 190 | 92–95 |
| 45 | 12 | 168 | 88–92 |
| 40 | 15 | 145 | 80–88 |
| 35 | 15 | 125 | 70–80 |
The final merit list is prepared using this percentile — not raw marks. Use the Infinity Learn JEE Main Rank and College Predictor to estimate your normalized percentile and expected rank based on your raw score and shift.
The JEE Main 2026 cutoff for JEE Advanced eligibility is the minimum percentile a candidate must secure to qualify for the IIT entrance examination. The final official cutoff is announced after both Session 1 (January) and Session 2 (April) are completed. Based on the difficulty level of the January 2026 session and historical trends, the expected cutoff ranges are as follows:
| Category | Expected Cutoff Marks (Approx.) | Expected Percentile Threshold |
| General (Common Rank List) | 88 – 93 marks | 90 percentile and above |
| EWS (Economically Weaker Section) | 78 – 83 marks | 75 percentile and above |
| OBC-NCL | 72 – 77 marks | 68 percentile and above |
| SC (Scheduled Caste) | 52 – 57 marks | 45 percentile and above |
| ST (Scheduled Tribe) | 40 – 45 marks | 28 percentile and above |
| PwD (All categories) | 0.011 percentile threshold | — |
The 10 JEE Main 2026 January Session question papers are not just for score estimation — they are the single most valuable study resource available for anyone preparing for the April Session. Whether you appeared in January and want to improve your score, or are attempting JEE Main for the first time in April, here is a structured preparation strategy built around these papers.

Do not use these papers casually. Treat each paper exactly like a real exam: sit at a desk, start at 9 AM or 3 PM (whichever timing you prefer), set a 3-hour timer, and attempt the full 75 questions with no breaks, no phone, and no reference material. This conditions your brain to work under pressure and helps you identify where your time management breaks down. Students who complete at least 5 full timed mock attempts before Session 2 consistently report a score improvement of 15–25 marks.
After each timed attempt, go through every question — not just the ones you got wrong. For every incorrect or skipped question, log the chapter, type of question (conceptual, formula-based, or multi-step calculation), and the specific reason you got it wrong (wrong formula, calculation error, misread question, or lack of concept knowledge). After doing this for 4–5 papers, patterns will emerge: you will clearly see which 2–3 chapters in each subject are costing you the most marks. Those become your revision priority list.
Use the chapter weightage table in Section 4 above as your revision guide. In Physics, if you have weak Electrostatics and Modern Physics, fixing those two chapters alone can add 6–10 marks to your score. In Chemistry, NCERT mastery for Organic Chemistry chapters (especially GOC, named reactions, and amines) is non-negotiable — roughly 35–40% of Chemistry questions are directly lifted or adapted from NCERT Books for class 11 and 12. In Mathematics, Calculus and Coordinate Geometry together form nearly 35% of the section, and improving speed and accuracy in these will have the biggest impact on your final Mathematics score.
A common mistake students make between sessions is trying to increase the number of questions attempted. This often backfires due to negative marking. A smarter strategy: if you are currently attempting 65 questions with 55 correct and 10 wrong, your score is 210. If you reduce to 60 attempts but improve accuracy to 57 correct and 3 wrong, your score becomes 225 — a gain of 15 marks despite attempting fewer questions. The January papers let you practice this accuracy-over-speed discipline in a risk-free environment.
Section B (Numerical Type) has no negative marking. This means any attempt carries zero risk. The January 2026 papers reveal that Section B questions in Physics and Maths are often more straightforward than they appear at first glance — many require just clean application of a single formula. Practice these specifically: attempt all 10 Section B questions in Chemistry (the safest section) and at least 4–5 in Physics in every JEE Main mock attempt. Leaving Section B unattempted in the real exam is a common and costly mistake.
Maintain a simple score tracker: after each of the 10 papers, note your Physics, Chemistry, and Maths scores separately. Most students will see Chemistry scores stabilize quickly, Physics scores improve steadily with formula practice, and Maths scores show the most volatility. If your Maths score is not improving after 5 papers, shift to targeted chapter revision (Calculus drills, coordinate geometry practice sets) rather than full paper attempts for the next week, then return to full papers.
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Infinity Learn provides all JEE Main 2026 January Session 1 question papers with expert solutions completely free of charge. No login, registration, or payment is required. Simply click the download buttons in the shift-wise table in Section 2 above. Subject-wise PDFs (Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics) are also available in Section 3.
Scroll to the “January 21, 2026 Question Papers” heading in Section 2 above. Click the “Download PDF” button in the Shift 1 row. You will get the combined question paper with solutions. For subject-specific PDFs, click the Physics, Chemistry, or Mathematics links listed just below the main download table for that shift.
Official papers are released by NTA on the official website (jeemain.nta.nic.in) roughly 5–7 days after the last exam date and are 100% accurate. Memory-based papers are compiled by coaching experts from student and faculty recall immediately after each shift — they are 90–95% accurate and available on the same day as the exam. Use memory-based papers for immediate score estimation on exam day and as extra practice resources. Use official NTA papers for confirmed score calculation and answer key challenges.
Yes, every shift has a completely different and confidential question set. NTA ensures that the overall difficulty level and chapter distribution remain comparable across shifts so no set of students is unfairly advantaged. This is also why NTA uses percentile normalization rather than raw marks for the final merit list — so that a student from a tougher shift is not penalized compared to a student from an easier shift.
Based on analysis of all 10 shifts: in Physics, Modern Physics, Electrostatics, and Rotational Mechanics appeared most frequently. In Chemistry, General Organic Chemistry (GOC) and named reactions, Thermodynamics, and Electrochemistry were dominant. In Mathematics, Calculus (especially Definite Integration), Coordinate Geometry, and Matrices & Determinants had the highest combined question frequency. These chapters are expected to remain high-priority in April Session 2 as well. See Section 4 for the full detailed chapter-weightage table.
Solve all 10 papers under strict timed conditions (3 hours each, no breaks). After each attempt, log every wrong answer and identify your weak chapters. Prioritize those chapters for targeted revision using NCERT and standard reference books. Focus on accuracy over the total number of attempts, and practice Section B (numerical) questions aggressively since there is no negative marking. Track your score improvement across all 10 papers. See Section 9 above for a full step-by-step strategy.
Since multiple shifts have different question sets, raw marks cannot be directly compared across shifts. NTA converts each candidate’s raw score into a percentile score that indicates what percentage of students in their shift scored equal to or below them. For example, a percentile of 95 means you scored equal to or better than 95% of all candidates in your shift. This percentile — not the raw score — is used for the final merit list, rank assignment, and cutoff comparison. Students from tougher shifts are thus protected from being disadvantaged.
For competitive scores, aim to correctly attempt 55–65 questions out of 75. Prioritize accuracy: 55 correct answers with only 5 wrong gives a score of 215, while 65 correct with 15 wrong gives only 245 — the difference is meaningful but the risk is high. A safe strategy for most students is to attempt all questions you are confident about, use educated elimination for questions you partially know, and leave only those you have zero idea about. Always attempt all Section B (numerical) questions since there is no negative marking in that section.