A major controversy has emerged over the JEE Main 2026 Session 1 provisional answer key, with the Career Forum of India (CFI) alleging that the answer key contains at least 17 errors. The organisation has warned that even a single mark difference can significantly impact candidates’ ranks, affecting their chances of admission to top engineering institutes.
According to CFI, JEE Main is an extremely competitive examination where lakhs of students appear, and minor discrepancies in marks can lead to a difference of thousands of ranks. In such a scenario, errors in the answer key may unfairly disadvantage deserving candidates.
Demand for Bonus Marks and Corrections
CFI has pointed out that several disputed questions reportedly suffer from:
More than one correct answer
Options not aligned with the prescribed syllabus or standard reference books
Ambiguous or technically incorrect question framing
Based on these issues, CFI has demanded that the National Testing Agency (NTA) either revise the answer key or award bonus marks for the affected questions to ensure fairness in evaluation.
Student Anxiety on the Rise
The allegations have triggered concern among students and parents alike. Many candidates claim that answers they marked confidently are being shown as incorrect in the provisional key, raising doubts about their expected scores, percentiles, and overall ranks.
Aspirants fear that if the alleged mistakes are not addressed before the declaration of the final result, it could directly impact admissions to IITs, NITs, IIITs, and other centrally funded technical institutions.
Pressure Mounts on NTA
CFI has urged the NTA to:
Conduct a transparent, expert-level review of all objections
Rectify all genuine errors before releasing the final answer key
Take a student-centric and unbiased approach in finalising results
With the final answer key and results of JEE Main 2026 Session 1 awaited, all eyes are now on the NTA’s response to these allegations. The issue once again highlights concerns around accuracy, accountability, and transparency in one of India’s largest engineering entrance examinations.