Last Updated: May 2026
CUET 2027 score normalisation confuses most aspirants. The NTA conducts CUET across multiple shifts and days. Different shifts get different question papers. To make scores comparable, the NTA applies a percentile-based equipercentile normalisation method. Your final score on the scorecard is not your raw marks — it is your normalised percentile-converted score.
Why Normalisation is Necessary
Imagine 200,000 candidates writing CUET Physics over four shifts on three days. Shift 1’s paper might be objectively harder than Shift 4’s. Without normalisation, a candidate who scored 120/200 in an easy shift would beat someone with 110/200 in a brutal shift — even if the second candidate was actually a stronger student. Normalisation fixes this.
The NTA Equipercentile Formula (Official)
NTA uses the equipercentile method recommended by the JEE Joint Admission Board. The steps:
- Calculate raw score for each candidate per subject per shift
- Compute percentile of each candidate within their shift: P = (Number of candidates with raw score ≤ candidate’s score / total candidates in shift) × 100
- Map this percentile to the cumulative distribution of all shifts combined
- The mapped value becomes the candidate’s NTA Score (out of 250 for 50-Q paper, 200 for 40-Q paper)
Worked Example
Suppose Aman scored 110/200 in Physics Shift 1 (which had 30,000 candidates). 28,500 candidates scored ≤ 110.
Aman’s shift percentile = 28,500 / 30,000 × 100 = 95.00 percentile.
The NTA looks at the combined distribution across all four shifts. The score that corresponds to 95.00 percentile in the combined distribution is, say, 165. Aman’s NTA Score = 165.
If Bhavna in a harder Shift 3 also reaches 95.00 shift-percentile (raw 95/200), she also gets NTA Score 165 — fair.
What This Means for You
| Belief | Reality |
|---|---|
| “My raw 130 is enough for DU” | Your NTA Score, not raw, is used for cutoffs |
| “Easy shift = high score” | Easy shift = lower percentile rank for same raw → similar NTA Score |
| “All shifts equal” | NTA Score equalises them, but shift assignment is random |
| “99 percentile = top 1%” | Yes, that’s the meaning |
| “Higher attempts = better” | +5 correct, –1 wrong scoring punishes guessing |
Marking Scheme (CUET 2027 Likely)
- +5 for each correct answer
- −1 for each wrong answer
- 0 for unattempted
- Multiple correct selected → −1 (treated as wrong)
- For ambiguous questions answered correctly by candidates → bonus marks possible
Section II domain subjects: 50 questions, 40 to be attempted, 200 marks. Some subjects (Mathematics) keep all 50 mandatory. General Test: 60 questions, 50 to attempt, 250 marks.
Cutoff Strategy — What Score Targets to Aim For
| Target University | Indicative NTA Score (out of 200) | Equivalent Percentile |
|---|---|---|
| DU (top course like Eco/CS) | 180–195 | 99.5+ |
| JNU (BA Languages) | 160–175 | 97–98 |
| BHU (top courses) | 165–180 | 97–99 |
| HCU (Hyderabad) | 150–170 | 95–98 |
| AMU (top courses) | 140–165 | 92–97 |
| State central universities | 120–150 | 85–93 |
How to Maximise Your Normalised Score
- Don’t fear hard shifts — normalisation protects you
- Optimise attempt count — at –1 for wrong, attempt only when 60%+ confident
- Master 4 high-yield subjects rather than spreading thin across 6
- Practice mock tests on the actual NTA CBT interface — try our CUET CBT Simulator
Practice MCQs — Score Calculation Awareness
Quiz data missing.
FAQ
Q1. Will my raw score be on my scorecard?
No. Only the normalised NTA Score is shown. The raw score is not disclosed.
Q2. Why is my percentile decimal-precise (e.g. 99.873)?
Because percentile is calculated to 7 decimal places to break ties. This affects rank order at the top.
Q3. Can normalisation hurt me?
Only if your shift was relatively easy and your raw score was just above the median — then your percentile drops. But the NTA Score still aligns with the combined distribution, so it is fair.
Q4. How is the General Test scored differently?
General Test is 60 questions, 50 to attempt, 250 maximum marks (5 marks per question, –1 for wrong). Same equipercentile normalisation applies.
Q5. What if a subject is conducted in only one shift?
If only one shift, normalisation is unnecessary — raw score = NTA Score. Less common subjects (Sanskrit, French) often fall in this bucket.