
Who topped JEE Main with 100 percentile last year? Full list of 14 toppers
India Today
JEE Main 2026 Session 1 results are expected to be announced today by the NTA. Find out why this scorecard is crucial for JEE Advanced eligibility, what options candidates have after the result, and how 14 toppers created history by scoring a perfect 100 percentile in both sessions last year.
With lakhs of engineering aspirants anxiously refreshing official portals, the JEE Main 2026 Session 1 result has become one of the most awaited academic announcements of the year.
The National Testing Agency (NTA) is expected to announce the JEE Main 2025 Session 1 results today, bringing an end to the days of anticipation among engineering aspirants. The results were originally scheduled to be declared on February 12, but were postponed and later deferred to February 16.
The declaration is a crucial milestone, as it will determine which candidates qualify to appear for JEE Advanced and who will get another opportunity to improve their scores in the April session of JEE Main.
For many students, this result is more than just a scorecard; it is a decisive step toward admission into the prestigious IITs.
The JEE Main examination serves as the primary gateway for candidates aspiring to pursue undergraduate engineering programs across India. More importantly, only those who clear the prescribed cut-off in JEE Main become eligible to appear for JEE Advanced, the final hurdle for admission into the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs).
Candidates who do not meet the cut-off in Session 1 are not out of the race; they can reappear in Session 2, scheduled for April 2026, to improve their percentile.

Bihar Board Class 12 Result 2026 will be declared soon, bringing an end to the long wait for students. Once announced, students will be able to check their BSEB Inter scores not only on the official BSEB websites but also on the India Today Board Results 2026 platform, ensuring quick and convenient access to their scorecards.

US authorities have arrested Super Micro Computer Co-founder Wally Liaw for allegedly smuggling $2.5 billion worth of Nvidia-powered AI servers to China. The case comes at a time when the US is tightening export rules to stop advanced AI hardware from reaching China amid the growing AI rivalry between the two countries.











