AILET 2026 second merit list out for LLB, LLM admission; pay fee by January 27
Sundararajan | January 21, 2026 | 08:20 PM IST | 1 min read
AILET Counselling 2026: Candidates can download the second provisional merit list through the official website, nationallawuniversitydelhi.in.
The National Law University (NLU) Delhi has published the second provisional merit list for the All India Law Entrance Test (AILET 2026) counselling today, January 21. Candidates who registered for the counselling process can download the AILET 2026 second merit list through the official website, nationallawuniversitydelhi.in.
According to the AILET second merit list, a total of 16 students have been shortlisted for the Bachelor of Legislative Law (LLB) (Honours) programme. In the first merit list, 110 students were shortlisted, and 16 seats remain vacant.
In the AILET second merit list, 9 students have been shortlisted for the Master of Laws (LLM) programme. In the first merit list, 70 students were shortlisted, leaving 9 seats vacant.
AILET 2026: Pay Rs 50,000 admission fee
Candidates shortlisted in the AILET 2026 second merit list are required to pay the admission confirmation fee of Rs 50,000 by 11 am on January 27.
The AILET merit list 2026 pdf includes the All India Rank (AIR), admit card number, vertical reservation, and horizontal reservation status.
Candidates will have to use their login credentials, such as email ID and password, to download the AILET 2026 admission offer letter.
NLU Delhi will release the AILET 2026 merit list for each counselling round. Candidates will get seats based on their ranks in the merit list. The AILET 2026 first provisional merit list of selected candidates was issued on January 8, 2026.
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
]The Bar Council of India problem: Why legal education needs reform at the top
Bar Council of India’s prescriptions can be a straitjacket for law schools that no longer produce just lawyers, but build legal expertise for a range of professions. Academics, parliament panels, even courts suggest reform
Shradha Chettri | 1 min readFeatured News
]- Jamia Millia Islamia student’s project can help Delhi’s unauthorised colonies ride out a heat wave
- Jadavpur University pro-VC: Faculty, new curriculum keep its BTech ‘globally relevant’ despite fund crunch
- St. Stephen’s College former principal back as English prof; against rules, say teachers, DU officials
- CBSE makes third language compulsory for Class 9 from July, with Class 6 books and shared teachers
- IIT Ropar’s ANNAM.AI is ‘green intelligence in action’ and future of agriculture technology: Project director
- Delhi HC halts recruitment at DU’s St. Stephen’s College after ad hoc teachers allege irregularities
- IIT Kharagpur tackling mental health crisis with ‘mothers’, mentors and an app: First student wellbeing dean
- NEET was far from fair even before paper-leak controversies
- Same Exam, Old Nightmare: NEET 2026 cancelled, paper-leak probe, NTA reform, re-neet – the story so far
- IIT Jodhpur’s Hindi BTech is breaking the English-only mould, model for others to follow: Director