JEE Main 2022 session 1 registration ends tomorrow; Know about correction facility
The NTA will hold JEE Main 2022 session 1 exams from June 20 to 29, 2022. JEE Main 2022 correction date, application form details here.
Aspirants who are preparing for JEE Main can download JEE Main 2025 mock test pdf which includes 10 full mock test, high scoring chapters and topics according to latest pattern and syllabus.
Download EBook
Anu Parthiban | April 24, 2022 | 02:02 PM IST
NEW DELHI: The National Testing Agency (NTA) will close the JEE Main 2022 application window tomorrow, April 25, 2022. Candidates who want to apply for the Joint Entrance Examination Main (JEE Main 2022) session 1 will have to register at jeemain.nta.nic.in by 9 PM and pay the application fee by 11.50 PM tomorrow.
JEE Main 2025: Admit Card Link | Study Plan | Official Question Paper (Session 1)
JEE Main 2025: Sample Papers | Mock Tests | PYQs | High Scoring Topics | College Predictor
New: Meet Careers360 experts in your city and get guidance on shortlisting colleges
Apply to TOP B.Tech /BE Entrance exams: VITEEE | MET | AEEE | BITSAT
Also read | CBSE to hold webinar on term 2 tomorrow amid students demand to cancel exams
As per the revised schedule, the NTA will hold JEE Main 2022 session 1 exams from June 20 to 29, 2022. The registration for session 2 JEE Main 2022 will be available on the NTA JEE Main official website later.
The NTA had reopened the online application forms after students' demand on April 18. Earlier, the agency had announced that there will be no correction window facility this year and advised to fill the JEE Main 2022 application form carefully.
However, later it announced to provide the correction facility after it received numerous representations from the candidates regarding giving them an opportunity to edit/modify their particulars. The JEE Main 2022 correction window was opened from April 6 to 8 at jeemain.nta.nic.in 2022. Since the NTA has reopened the registration, it is expected to announce the JEE Main 2022 correction date.
Also read | JEE Main 2022: NTA changes tie-breaking policy; Know details here
JEE Main 2022: How to apply for session 1
Applicants can follow the steps given below to fill the JEE Mains 2022 application form.
- Visit the official website, jeemain.nta.nic.in.
- Candidates will have to register by creating a password and choose security question and answer.
- The system will generate a JEE Main 2022 application number.
- Now, login using the application number and password.
- Fill the JEE Main 2022 application form. Enter personal details, paper applying for, examination cities, provide details of educational qualifications.
- Upload scanned images of candidate’s photograph, signature, and category certificate (if applicable), and PwD certificate (wherever applicable).
- Now, make the payment and ensure all details provided are correct and submit the application form.
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
]Featured 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