The wait is almost over for lakhs of students across India! As the CUET UG 2025 results are set to be declared soon on cuet.nta.nic.in, one topic causing confusion and concern among students and parents alike is the normalisation process. Many are wondering: “How is my percentile calculated? What does a normalized score mean? Is it fair?”
We will answer all your doubts and explain how NTA ensures a level playing field in CUET UG through the normalisation of marks.
What is Normalisation in CUET?
Since the Common University Entrance Test (CUET UG) is conducted over multiple shifts and days, with different question paper sets, it’s only fair that scores are adjusted to account for any variation in difficulty.
To do this, NTA uses a normalisation process to bring parity in performance across all shifts, so that no student is at a disadvantage due to a slightly tougher or easier paper.
CUET UG 2025: What Makes This Year Different?
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Over 13.4 lakh candidates registered for CUET UG 2025.
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Exams were conducted in 9 phases across more than 300 cities and 13 mediums.
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To accommodate such a huge number, subject papers were split into different shifts and days—each with different question papers but the same syllabus.
Why Normalisation is Needed?
Imagine two students:
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Student A took the English paper on May 21 (Shift 1).
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Student B took the same subject on May 23 (Shift 2).
Even though the syllabus was the same, the question paper difficulty might have varied slightly. Normalisation ensures their scores are compared fairly, adjusting for any variance in paper toughness.
How Does the CUET Normalisation Work?
Here's a simplified version of the NTA’s normalisation formula (based on the Equi-percentile Method):
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Raw marks obtained by students in each shift are compiled.
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For each subject and shift, the percentile scores are calculated based on how many students scored lower than a particular candidate.
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These percentiles are then normalized across shifts to derive the final score.
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The final normalized percentile score is what students see on their CUET result and is used for college admissions.
Important Things to Note:
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No grace marks are given. The score reflects your standing based on normalised data.
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Raw marks ≠ Percentile scores. Percentile is not your actual marks but your relative performance.
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A 100 percentile does not mean you scored 100 out of 100; it means you’re among the top performers.
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Your best percentile across shifts (if you appeared more than once) is considered.
Final Admission: What Colleges See?
- When universities like Delhi University, BHU, JNU, and others review your CUET score, they refer to the normalized percentile, not your raw marks.
- This ensures every student—regardless of the shift or paper set—gets an equal chance based on performance, not luck.
CUET UG 2025 Result: When and Where?
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Expected Result Date: Second week of July 2025
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Official Website: cuet.nta.nic.in
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Scorecards will reflect percentile scores and normalized marks.
Tips for Students After Result
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Understand your percentile, don’t just look at raw marks.
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Check cutoffs for your preferred universities & courses.
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Use your percentile to apply through CSAS portals (for central universities).
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Keep documents ready for counselling and verification.
CUET UG 2025 is not just a test—it’s your gateway to India’s top universities. While the normalisation process may seem complex, it’s designed to ensure fairness and transparency for all. Don’t stress over raw marks—your percentile is what counts.
Share this with your friends who are confused and stressed about their score and percentile and stay tuned to StudentPatrika.com for the latest updates on CUET results, counselling procedures, and college admission tips!