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JEE Main 2026 Complete Preparation Guide

How to prepare for JEE Main 2026 from scratch — month-wise study plan, subject strategy, best books, mock test schedule, and common mistakes to avoid.

To crack JEE Main 2026, you need 6–18 months of structured preparation: master NCERT first, solve 5,000+ problems from reference books, take 30+ full-length mock tests, and focus 60% of your time on high-weightage chapters. This guide covers the exact month-by-month plan, subject-wise strategy, book list, and mock test schedule used by students scoring 200+.

JEE Main 2026 — Exam Overview

DetailInformation
Conducting BodyNTA (National Testing Agency)
Exam ModeComputer Based Test (CBT)
SessionsJanuary + April (best of 2 scores considered)
Total Marks300 (Physics 100 + Chemistry 100 + Maths 100)
Total Questions90 (attempt 75 — 20 MCQ + 5 numerical per subject)
Duration3 hours
MarkingMCQ: +4 correct, -1 wrong. Numerical: +4 correct, 0 wrong
MediumEnglish, Hindi, and 11 regional languages
EligibilityClass 12 pass/appearing with Physics + Maths (and any one of Chemistry/Biology/Biotechnology/Technical Vocational)

Month-by-Month Study Plan

JEE Main preparation timeline — 4 phases

Phase 1: Foundation (12–10 months before exam)

  • Goal: Complete NCERT for all 3 subjects. Build conceptual clarity.
  • Maths: Algebra (Complex Numbers, Quadratic Equations, Sequences & Series), Coordinate Geometry basics, Trigonometry
  • Physics: Mechanics (Kinematics, Laws of Motion, Work-Energy, Rotational Motion) — this is 30% of the paper
  • Chemistry: Physical Chemistry basics (Mole Concept, Atomic Structure, Chemical Bonding), start Organic Chemistry (GOC, Hydrocarbons)
  • Daily schedule: 4–5 hours. Solve 20–30 problems per subject daily.

Phase 2: Advanced Concepts (9–7 months before)

  • Goal: Complete remaining chapters. Start reference books.
  • Maths: Calculus (Limits, Continuity, Differentiation, Integration), Vectors & 3D Geometry
  • Physics: Electrodynamics (Electrostatics, Current Electricity, Magnetism), Optics, Modern Physics
  • Chemistry: Complete Organic reactions, Inorganic Chemistry (p-block, d-block), Thermodynamics, Equilibrium
  • Daily schedule: 5–6 hours. Start solving previous year questions chapter-wise.

Phase 3: Problem-Solving Intensive (6–4 months before)

  • Goal: Solve 2,000+ problems. Build speed and accuracy.
  • Focus: High-weightage chapters first (see weightage table below)
  • Start mock tests: 1 full-length test per week, followed by detailed analysis
  • Identify weak areas: Maintain an error log — categorise mistakes as conceptual, calculation, or silly errors
  • Daily schedule: 6–8 hours. 60% problem-solving, 20% revision, 20% new concepts.

Phase 4: Revision & Mock Tests (3–1 months before)

  • Goal: Revise everything. Take 20+ mock tests. Optimise exam strategy.
  • Week 12–9: 2 mocks per week + chapter revision
  • Week 8–5: 3 mocks per week + formula revision
  • Week 4–1: 4 mocks per week + only weak topic revision
  • Last 3 days: Only formula sheets. No new problems. Sleep well.

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Subject-Wise Strategy

Mathematics (100 marks — highest scoring potential)

Chapter GroupWeightageStrategy
Coordinate Geometry~16–20 marksFormulaic. Memorise all formulas + solve 50 problems per chapter. Quick marks.
Calculus~24–28 marksHighest weightage. Master Limits, Differentiation, Integration, Application of Derivatives. Solve 100+ problems.
Algebra~20–24 marksMatrices, Determinants, P&C, Probability, Complex Numbers. Mix of formula + concept.
Trigonometry~8–12 marksIdentity-based. Memorise all formulas. Quick to revise, easy marks.
Vectors & 3D~8–12 marksFormula application. 10–15 practice problems enough for full marks here.
Statistics & Mathematical Reasoning~4–8 marksOften easiest questions in the paper. Do not skip.

Physics (100 marks — most conceptual)

Chapter GroupWeightageStrategy
Mechanics~28–32 marksFoundation of Physics. Master Newton's Laws, WEP theorem, Rotational Motion. Solve H.C. Verma fully.
Electrodynamics~24–28 marksSecond highest. Electrostatics + Current Electricity + Magnetism. Numerical-heavy.
Modern Physics~12–16 marksPhotoelectric effect, Atoms, Nuclei, Semiconductors. Scoring — mostly direct formula application.
Optics~8–12 marksRay Optics + Wave Optics. Medium difficulty. Ray diagrams are key.
Thermodynamics & Waves~8–12 marksKTG, Thermodynamics, Waves, Sound. Moderate difficulty.
Properties of Matter~4–8 marksFluid mechanics, elasticity, surface tension. Often 1–2 easy questions.

Chemistry (100 marks — easiest to score 80+)

SectionWeightageStrategy
Physical Chemistry~32–36 marksFormula-based. Mole Concept, Thermodynamics, Equilibrium, Electrochemistry. Practise numericals daily.
Organic Chemistry~32–36 marksReaction mechanisms + Named Reactions. GOC → Hydrocarbons → Functional groups → Biomolecules. NCERT is 70% sufficient.
Inorganic Chemistry~28–32 marksNCERT is king — 90% questions come directly from NCERT. p-block, d-block, Coordination Chemistry. Read NCERT 5 times.

Best Books for JEE Main 2026

SubjectNCERT (Foundation)Reference BookProblem Practice
PhysicsNCERT Class 11 & 12Concepts of Physics — H.C. VermaDC Pandey (Arihant) for specific topics
ChemistryNCERT Class 11 & 12 (essential for Inorganic)Physical: N. Avasthi. Organic: M.S. ChouhanVK Jaiswal (Inorganic)
MathsNCERT Class 11 & 12Cengage series OR Arihant seriesPrevious year papers (last 10 years)

Rule: Do NOT buy more than 2 books per subject. More books = less completion. NCERT + 1 reference book is the optimal combination.

Mock Test Strategy

TimelineMocks/WeekFocus
6 months before1Get comfortable with 3-hour format. No time pressure — focus on accuracy.
4 months before1–2Start timing yourself. Aim to finish in 2.5 hours.
2 months before2–3Simulate exact exam conditions. Analyse every mistake.
Last month3–4Speed + accuracy optimisation. Skip questions you cannot solve in 3 minutes.

Mock Test Analysis — The Most Important Step

Taking a mock without analysis is wasted time. After every mock:

  1. Categorise every wrong answer: Conceptual gap? Calculation error? Misread question? Time pressure?
  2. Identify patterns: If you consistently lose marks in Electrostatics, that chapter needs extra practice.
  3. Track your accuracy rate: Aim for 80%+ accuracy. If below 70%, you are attempting too many uncertain questions.
  4. Review skipped questions: Could you have solved them with more time? Add those topics to your revision list.
  5. Time analysis: How long did each subject take? Optimal split: Maths 60 min, Physics 55 min, Chemistry 45 min, Review 20 min.

Exam Day Strategy

Time BlockAction
First 10 minScan entire paper. Mark easy, medium, and hard questions mentally.
Next 45 minSolve Chemistry first (fastest subject for most). Target 80+ marks here.
Next 55 minSolve Physics. Do numerical questions first (no negative marking).
Next 60 minSolve Maths. Start with Coordinate Geometry and Calculus (highest weightage).
Last 20 minReview marked questions. Attempt remaining numerical questions. Do NOT guess MCQs.

Golden rule: Never guess an MCQ unless you can eliminate at least 2 options. The -1 penalty means random guessing costs you marks over a full paper.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Buying too many books. NCERT + 1 reference per subject is maximum. Finish what you start.
  2. Ignoring NCERT Chemistry. 60–70% of Chemistry questions come from NCERT lines. Read it 5 times.
  3. Skipping mock test analysis. Taking 50 mocks without analysis is worse than 20 mocks with thorough analysis.
  4. Neglecting numerical-type questions. These have no negative marking — they are free marks if you practise enough.
  5. Studying all chapters equally. Focus 60% of time on high-weightage chapters (Calculus, Mechanics, Physical Chemistry).
  6. Not attempting both sessions. JEE Main has January and April sessions. Take both — NTA considers your best score.
  7. Ignoring board exam preparation. Board marks matter for JEE Advanced eligibility (top 20 percentile in boards required).

Weightage percentages are based on analysis of JEE Main papers from 2020–2025. Actual weightage may vary. Book recommendations are based on topper feedback and coaching institute data. Last updated: February 2026.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many months are enough to prepare for JEE Main?

6 months of focused preparation is the minimum for a competitive score (150+ out of 300). 12–18 months is ideal for 200+ scores. If you are starting from Class 11, you have the best advantage — 2 full years. Even 3 months of intensive preparation can get you into NITs if you are strategic about which chapters to prioritise based on weightage.

Yes. Thousands of students score 200+ without coaching every year. The key requirements: NCERT as your base, 1 good reference book per subject (H.C. Verma, Cengage, M.S. Chouhan), access to previous year papers, and a structured self-study plan. Online resources and apps like Super Tutor can replace classroom coaching if you are disciplined.

It depends on your target: 250+ out of 300 for top NITs and IIT eligibility (JEE Advanced cutoff). 200–250 for good NITs and IIITs. 150–200 for newer NITs and state-funded colleges through JoSAA. 90–150 for admission through state counselling. Below 90 is considered a weak score.

Start with Maths — it has the highest weightage (100 marks) and takes the longest to build speed. Then Physics (conceptual understanding + problem-solving). Chemistry last — especially Physical Chemistry (formula-based, quick scoring) and Inorganic (memorisation-heavy, best done closer to the exam).

Class 11 students: 3–4 hours daily beyond school. Class 12 students: 5–6 hours daily. Droppers: 8–10 hours daily. Quality matters more than quantity — 5 focused hours with active problem-solving beats 10 distracted hours of reading. Use the Pomodoro technique (50 min study + 10 min break) to maintain focus.

NCERT is necessary but not sufficient. For Chemistry: NCERT covers 60–70% of JEE Main questions (especially Inorganic and some Organic). For Physics and Maths: NCERT builds the foundation but you need reference books for JEE-level problem-solving. A safe strategy: complete NCERT first, then solve 1 reference book per subject.

Minimum 30 full-length mock tests over 3–4 months before the exam. Start with 1 per week (untimed, for learning), then move to 2 per week (timed, simulating exam conditions). In the last month, take 3–4 per week. Always analyse your mock — spending 2 hours on analysis is more valuable than taking another test.

JEE Main has 2 papers. Paper 1 (B.E./B.Tech): 90 questions, 75 to attempt, 300 marks, 3 hours. Subjects: Physics (25Q), Chemistry (25Q), Maths (25Q) — each with 20 MCQs (+4, -1) and 5 numerical value questions (+4, 0). Paper 2 (B.Arch/B.Planning) has a different pattern with aptitude and drawing sections.