JET 2026 Phase 4 is scheduled for June 25, 2026 — and based on JET 2025 trends, its qualifying cutoff is expected between 45 and 53 percent for General category students, broadly similar to Phases 1, 2, and 3.
Jain University conducts the Jain Entrance Test (JET) 2026 in four phases to give students multiple attempts for undergraduate admission. A common question before Phase 4 is whether this final session is harder than earlier ones and whether its qualifying cutoff differs significantly. This article compares difficulty levels and qualifying cutoffs across all four JET 2026 sessions so you can make an informed decision.
- JET 2026 Phase 4 is the last session for UG admissions, scheduled for June 25, 2026.
- The exam pattern, syllabus, and total marks are identical across all four phases.
- Based on JET 2025 trends, the qualifying cutoff ranges from 40 to 55 percent across phases depending on the program.
- Phase 4 typically draws the fewest test-takers, which can slightly ease the qualifying threshold.
- Jain University considers your best score across all phases you have attempted for merit-list preparation.
| Direct Link to JET 2026 Official Website (Active) www.jainuniversity.ac.in/jet-ug |
JET 2026 Phase-wise Schedule Overview
JET 2026 runs across four phases from February to June 2026. Each phase is an independent online computer-based test. Jain University uses the best score across all phases a student has appeared in when preparing the merit list.
| Phase | Tentative Date | Mode | Typical Student Footfall |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | February 2026 | Online (CBT) | Highest |
| Phase 2 | March 2026 | Online (CBT) | High |
| Phase 3 | May 2026 | Online (CBT) | Moderate |
| Phase 4 | June 25, 2026 | Online (CBT) | Low to Moderate |
Phase 1 attracts the largest number of students as it is the earliest session, giving the most time for score improvement before seat allotment. Phase 4, being the final window, draws students who want to improve their score from an earlier phase or who registered later in the cycle.
Phase 4 vs Phase 1, 2, 3: Difficulty Level Comparison
All four JET 2026 phases follow the same syllabus, pattern, and question-type distribution — no phase is officially set to a higher difficulty than another. However, real-world paper difficulty varies between sessions depending on the specific question set used. Based on student feedback from JET 2025, the table below shows how each phase compared:
| Phase | Overall Difficulty | Reasoning Section | Subject Section | Good Attempts (% of questions) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | Moderate | Easy to Moderate | Moderate | 70–75% |
| Phase 2 | Moderate to Difficult | Moderate | Moderate to Difficult | 65–70% |
| Phase 3 | Moderate | Easy | Moderate | 72–78% |
| Phase 4 | Easy to Moderate (Expected) | Easy (Expected) | Easy to Moderate (Expected) | 75–80% (Expected) |
Based on JET 2025 trends, Phase 4 papers have leaned slightly easier than Phase 2 and broadly comparable to Phase 1 and Phase 3. An easier paper can push average scores up across the cohort, which in turn keeps the qualifying cutoff from dropping significantly even with lower footfall.
JET 2026 Session-wise Qualifying Cutoff Comparison
The qualifying cutoff for JET 2026 is expected to range between 40 and 55 percent across all four phases, based on JET 2025 trends. The cutoff is the minimum percentage score required to be eligible for the merit list and counselling. Session-wise expected cutoffs are as follows:
| Phase | General Category (Expected Cutoff %) | Reserved Category (Expected Cutoff %) | Key Observation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | 48–55% | 40–45% | High competition keeps cutoff elevated |
| Phase 2 | 45–52% | 38–43% | Tougher paper slightly eases the cutoff |
| Phase 3 | 47–54% | 39–44% | Comparable to Phase 1 |
| Phase 4 | 45–53% (Expected) | 38–44% (Expected) | Lower footfall may ease threshold marginally |
These figures are based on JET 2025 qualifying patterns. The variation across phases is relatively narrow — typically within five to seven percentage points. Official cutoffs for each JET 2026 phase will be published by Jain University after results are declared.
Program-wise Cutoff Trends Across Phases
The qualifying cutoff differs by program because seat availability and demand vary. High-demand programs like B.Tech CSE consistently carry higher cutoffs across all four phases. The table below shows expected program-wise cutoffs based on JET 2025 trends:
| Program | Phase 1 (Expected %) | Phase 2 (Expected %) | Phase 3 (Expected %) | Phase 4 (Expected %) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B.Tech (CSE and related) | 55–60% | 52–58% | 54–59% | 50–57% |
| B.Tech (Other branches) | 48–55% | 45–52% | 47–54% | 44–52% |
| BCA / B.Sc (Computer Science) | 45–52% | 42–49% | 44–51% | 40–48% |
| BBA / B.Com | 42–50% | 40–47% | 41–49% | 38–46% |
If you are targeting B.Tech CSE, aim for at least 55 percent in Phase 4 to stay safely above the expected cutoff threshold. For BBA or B.Com programs, a score above 42 percent in Phase 4 is generally sufficient based on past trends.
Factors That Affect Cutoff Variation Between Phases
The JET qualifying cutoff shifts slightly across sessions due to several interconnected factors:
- Number of test-takers: Phase 1 draws the highest footfall and therefore sees stronger competition. Phase 4’s smaller cohort can ease the qualifying threshold marginally.
- Paper difficulty: An easier paper raises average scores across the cohort, which can push the qualifying cutoff upward. A harder paper has the opposite effect — as seen with Phase 2.
- Remaining seat availability: As phases progress, seats filled through earlier merit lists reduce the available pool. The Phase 4 cutoff reflects the balance between remaining seats and Phase 4 applicants.
- Program demand: High-demand programs like B.Tech CSE sustain higher cutoffs across all phases regardless of session difficulty.
- Category representation: The proportion of reserved-category students in each phase cohort can shift category-specific cutoffs independently of the general cutoff.
Which Phase Should You Attempt?
If you have not yet appeared or want to improve your score, Phase 4 on June 25, 2026 is a viable option with expected cutoffs broadly aligned with earlier phases. Here is a quick guide to help you decide:
- Scored borderline in Phase 1, 2, or 3? Attempt Phase 4 — Jain University uses your best score across all phases, so re-attempting carries no risk.
- Already above 55% in any phase for B.Tech CSE? You are likely clear of the expected cutoff; Phase 4 is optional.
- Registered but skipped all earlier phases? Phase 4 is your final chance — register immediately via the official portal.
- Targeting BBA or B.Com? A score above 42 percent in Phase 4 should place you within the expected qualifying range.
The lower student footfall in Phase 4 can work in your favour for borderline scores. However, prepare at the same intensity you would for any phase — the syllabus and pattern are identical, and the expected paper difficulty is only marginally easier than Phase 1 or Phase 3.
JET 2026 Phase 4 vs Phase 1, 2, 3 FAQs
Ques. Is JET 2026 Phase 4 harder than Phases 1, 2, or 3?
Ans. All four phases follow the same syllabus and exam pattern. Based on JET 2025 trends, Phase 4 is expected to be easy to moderate in difficulty — broadly comparable to Phase 1 and Phase 3, and slightly easier than Phase 2.
Ques. What is the expected qualifying cutoff for JET 2026 Phase 4?
Ans. Based on JET 2025 trends, the expected qualifying cutoff for Phase 4 is between 45 and 53 percent for General category students and 38 to 44 percent for reserved category students. Official cutoffs will be published by Jain University after results are declared.
Ques. If I appeared in Phase 1 and Phase 4, which score does Jain University use for admission?
Ans. Jain University considers your best score across all phases you have attempted. There is no penalty for re-appearing in multiple phases — only your highest score counts.
Ques. Does Phase 4 have lower competition than Phase 1?
Ans. Yes. Phase 4 typically attracts fewer students than Phase 1, which sees the largest cohort. Lower competition can slightly ease the qualifying cutoff for Phase 4, though the difference between phases is usually within five to seven percentage points.
Ques. When will JET 2026 Phase 4 results be announced?
Ans. JET 2026 Phase 4 results are expected within a few days of the June 25, 2026 exam. Results will be available on the official Jain University portal at jainuniversity.ac.in/jet-ug.
Ques. Is the JET 2026 cutoff the same for all programs across all phases?
Ans. No. The qualifying cutoff varies by program due to differences in seat availability and demand. B.Tech CSE carries the highest cutoff (expected 50–60%) across all phases, while programs like BBA and B.Com have lower thresholds (expected 38–50%) based on JET 2025 trends.








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