SRMJEEE PG Phase 2 Exam 2025 Today: Remote-proctored online test requirements, dos and don’ts
Anu Parthiban | May 17, 2025 | 07:51 AM IST | 2 mins read
The SRM university will conduct the SRMJEEE phase 2 exam from 10 am to 12.30 am. Candidates are required to login at least an hour before the exam to take a photograph of self and ID proof.
Candidates can download SRMJEEE PG Sample/Question Papers from here.
Free DownloadSRMJEEE PG Phase 2 Exam 2025: SRM Institute of Science and Technology (SRMIST) will conduct the SRM Joint Engineering Entrance Examination - Postgraduate (SRMJEEE PG 2025) phase 2 exam today in a remote-proctored online test. Candidates are required to login to the exam using the details provided in SRMJEEE admit card.
New: Direct Link for SRMJEEE PG 2026 Application Form
Latest: SRMJEEE PG 2026 Syllabus
Don't Miss: SRMJEEE PG Sample Papers
The SRM university will conduct the SRMJEEE phase 2 exam from 10 am to 12.30 am. Candidates are required to login at least an hour before the exam to take a photograph of self and ID proof. Students should note that the reading time will also be included in this one hour between 9 am to 10 am.
“Though the exam is online and the candidate is taking the exam from their home, there will be a proctor monitoring every action remotely along with the help of an AI engine,” it said.
Candidates are not allowed to give the exam in mobile or tablets, but are advised to use a desktop or laptop with a stable internet connection of at least 1MBPS.
SRMJEEE Phase 2 Exam: Dos and don’ts
Candidates can refer to the exam day guidelines issued by the institute for SRMJEEE Phase 2 exam .
SRMJEEE dress code - Candidates should be dressed formally for the remote-proctored test.
No bio-breaks - Candidates are not allowed to move from their seat or take bio-breaks during the exam.
How to sit - Candidates should sit facing the screen throughout the exam. They should not look down or sideways. Make sure that the room has sufficient light.
Things prohibited - Candidates should use mobile phones, digital watches, headphones, sunglasses, or any electronic devices during the exam.
SRMJEEE PG unfair means
Candidates are not allowed to talk to anyone or take assistance from anyone during the exam. Keeping an textual material, bits of paper, or any notes will be considered as use of unfair means. The university will cancel the candidature if the system detects any suspicious actions such as:
- Accessing any other site, screen on your laptop, or personal computers during the exam.
- Trying to log in from multiple devices or trying to switch users.
- If a candidate is found using Google or search from any other source then the exam will be automatically terminated.
- Should not lip-sync or read the questions aloud.
- Do not cover your face with hair, mask, clothing or anything else.
- Do not have any background noise, voices, music, TV.
- No food or beverages are allowed during the exam, except water.
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
]‘NTA failed to provide…’: MP High Court puts NEET result 2025 on hold over power failure at exam centre
NEET UG 2025 Result: The NTA has not yet issued a clarification on inconvenience caused due to power outage. However, the NEET results are scheduled to be declared on June 14.
Anu Parthiban | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- From Rohith to Reform: UGC Equity Regulations 2026, born from tragedies, threaten caste dominance, not merit
- Law School For All: IGNOU is drawing lawyers, cops, CAs, even sitting judges with revamped legal courses
- ‘Autonomy Snatched’: Revised ISI Bill faces opposition in council; academics reject new MoSPI draft
- What are UGC Equity Regulations 2026 and why are they facing ‘general-category’ backlash?
- NITs plan multiple-entry, exit in BTech across institutes, research parks with ADB loan, PhD reform
- Environmental Law: NLU Odisha, Assam, Northeast law schools are making tribal rights core of curriculum
- ‘Generative AI knowledge limited to ChatGPT’: Why law schools are launching artificial intelligence centres
- LLB, LLM courses in English but for lawyers in lower courts, regional language command key to win cases
- Part-time law PhD enrolment on the rise as lawyers, aspiring academics embrace flexible courses
- Student Suicides: ‘Need accountability, not new law; it’s about well-being, not mental health,’ says NTF chief