JEE Main 2026 April 5 Exam Analysis: Shift 1 and Shift 2 Difficulty & Memory-Based Solutions
The JEE Main 2026 Session 2 continued on April 5, 2026, with hundreds of thousands of engineering aspirants appearing for the second day of the April attempt. Initial feedback suggests that while the morning shift (Shift 1) remained relatively balanced, the afternoon session (Shift 2) tested students' endurance with a particularly grueling Mathematics section.

As the NTA moves toward the final shifts on April 6 and 8, these insights are vital for high school students aiming to refine their last-minute strategy.
Shift 2 Analysis (3:00 PM – 6:00 PM)
The afternoon shift is being described by many as the "toughest so far" in the April session, primarily due to the length of calculations in technical subjects.
| Subject | Difficulty Level | Key Observations |
|---|---|---|
| Mathematics | Tough & Lengthy | Heavy focus on Calculus and Algebra. Questions were multi-concept based. |
| Physics | Moderate | Shifted slightly from formula-based to conceptual. Questions from Optics and EM Waves were tricky. |
| Chemistry | Easy to Moderate | Organic Chemistry dominated the MCQ section; Physical Chemistry was limited to Integers. |
Expert Insight: In Shift 2, students who prioritized Chemistry and Physics first were able to secure more "safe" marks, as Mathematics consumed nearly 80–90 minutes for most average-to-above-average candidates.
Shift 1 Memory-Based Solutions (9:00 AM – 12:00 PM)
For the morning shift, several coaching institutes have compiled memory-based questions and solutions. While the official NTA answer key is expected after April 11, these solutions help in calculating an estimated score.
Key Questions Noted in Shift 1:
- Physics: Questions on the de Broglie wavelength and Bohr’s atomic model were direct. A few questions on 'Logic Gates' and 'Communication Systems' were also reported.
- Chemistry: Direct questions from NCERT on Biomolecules and Chemistry in Everyday Life. Periodic Table trends and Coordination Compounds had a significant presence.
- Maths: Focused on Vector 3D (3 questions), Differential Equations, and Probability.
Marks vs. Percentile: Early Trends
Based on the difficulty level of the April 5 shifts, experts suggest a slight shift in the percentile mapping compared to the January session.
- 99 Percentile: Expected at a score of 185–198.
- 95 Percentile: Expected at a score of 145–155.
- 90 Percentile (Cutoff for JEE Advanced): Expected at a score of 105–115.
Note: These are early estimates. The final percentile will depend on the NTA’s normalization process across all shifts. For regular updates on the result declaration, follow Only Education News.
Final Checklist for April 6 & 8 Aspirants
If your exam is scheduled for the coming days:
- Revise NCERT Inorganic Chemistry: It remains the highest ROI (Return on Investment) area.
- Practice Vector & 3D: This chapter alone is accounting for 12–16 marks in almost every shift.
- Time Management: If a Math question takes more than 3 minutes, mark it for review and move on. Don't let one tough question ruin your temperament.
- Admit Card: Ensure you have the latest printout with the self-declaration filled.
For a comprehensive list of NIT and IIIT seat matrices or to check the 2025 opening and closing ranks, visit the Only Education Engineering Exams List or explore the Engineering Course List.
