Bihar Board 10th result 2025 scrutiny, compartment exam registrations from April 4
BSEB Class 10 Result 2025: The registration process for scrutiny and compartment exam will close on April 12.
After completing 10th grade, students have a wide range of course options to choose from. This eBook provides comprehensive details about the various courses available after 10th.
Download EBook
Alivia Mukherjee | March 29, 2025 | 02:42 PM IST
NEW DELHI: The Bihar School Examination Board Patna (BSEB) will commence the registration process for Bihar Board Class 10 scrutiny and compartment exam 2025 from April 4. The Bihar Class 10th result scrutiny 2025 and compartment exam registration link will be accessible on the official website, secondary.biharboardonline.com. Bihar Board Matric Results 2025 Out Live
As per the official notice, BSEB Class 10th result scrutiny registration process will end on April 12. The last date to apply for the BSEB Class 10 compartment exam 2025 is also April 12. As per Bihar Board 10th toppers list 2025 , Sakshi Kumari, Anshu Kumari, Ranjan Verma grabbed first rank. A total of 123 students secured top 10 ranks in BSEB Class exams 2025.
Bihar Class 10 Result Scrutiny 2025: Fee details
The BSEB Class 10 result scrutiny notice did not mention the fee details. However, last year students were required to pay a BSEB Class 10 scrutiny fee to complete the registration for re-evaluation. As per past trends, students will be required to pay Bihar Class 10 result scrutiny fee of Rs 120 per subject. In case of any discrepancies found during the scrutiny process, the BSEB will publish revised results for the candidates.
BSEB Class 10 compartment exam 2025
Students who have failed in up to two subjects but have a total score of at least 150 marks are eligible to apply for the Bihar Board 10th compartment exam 2025. However, those who fail in more than two subjects are not permitted to take the BSEB compartment exams. The Bihar Class 10th compartment exam results will be announced by May 31.
The BSEB conducts compartment exams to help students who did not pass one or more subjects in their regular exams. The Bihar Class 10 compartment exam 2025 allows students to clear those subjects without repeating the entire academic year.
Bihar board 10th result 2025: Pass percentage stands at 82.11%
The Bihar board 10th result 2025 has been declared today, March 29. A total of 1,558,077 students appeared in the Bihar Class 10 exam 2025. The Bihar Board Class 10 pass percentage stands at 82.11%. As per BSEB 10th result 2025, the boys pass percentage stood at 83.65%, and girls pass percentage stood at 80.67%.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]
CBSE syllabus 2025-26 for Class 10, 12 out; new ‘best of 2’ exam format, must-know changes
CBSE Syllabus PDF 2025-26: The CBSE Class 10 board exam 2026 will be held twice a year - in February and April - from the academic year 2025-26. CBSE Class 12 exams 2026 will commence on February 17, 2026.
Anu ParthibanFeatured News
]- ICSI study material enough to clear CSEET; absolutely against private coaching: President
- Navigating Uncertainty: How Ivy League aspirants can tackle US visa challenges
- Education in Manipur: Futures at risk as ethnic violence derails academic dreams of over 50,000 students
- SC enrollment 5.2%, ST’s negligible 1%: Panel flags forward caste dominance in top private universities
- ITEP set for exponential growth as 1,400 institutes seek to launch new four-year teacher training course
- Holding CBSE Class 10 twice can lead to ‘paper leaks, irregularities’, warns parliament panel
- Reservation in private universities, NTA annual reports, CUET review among Parliament panel’s recommendations
- Biodiversity Courses: Central University of Odisha caught in the middle of research vs jobs debate
- ‘Not justified’ to withhold SSA funds over PM SHRI schools: Parliament panel
- PhD admission gaps: Why marginalised candidates struggle to fill reserved seats across central universities