The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has officially announced a major change in the Class 10 examination system starting from 2026. Students will now appear for the board exam twice a year β once in February and again in May (for improvement).
β Key Highlights of the New Rule
- π Two Exams in One Year
- First Exam (February): Mandatory for all students.
- Second Exam (May): Optional, only for improvement.
- π Result Timeline
- February exam results β April (used for provisional Class 11 admission).
- May exam results β June (final certification for promotion).
- π Improvement Chance
- If a student passes in February but wants to score higher, they can reappear in May.
- Students failing in 3 or more subjects in February β cannot sit for May exam. They will be placed under βEssential Repeatβ and must reappear next year.
- π Internal Assessment (IA)
- To be conducted once every year before the February board exam.
- Covers the entire syllabus.
- Special provisions for β½ sports students, βοΈ winter-school regions, and βΏ children with special needs.

β‘ Why This Change?
βοΈ To reduce exam pressure on students.
βοΈ To provide flexibility and a chance to improve within the same academic year.
βοΈ To align with National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 which recommends reducing the βhigh-stakesβ nature of board exams.
π― What This Means for Students
- No need to wait an entire year for improvement.
- Better chances of securing higher marks for Class 11 admissions.
- Encourages continuous learning rather than one-shot preparation.
π Quick Snapshot
Feature | Details |
---|---|
ποΈ Exam Months | February (mandatory) + May (improvement) |
π Eligibility for May Exam | Fail in < 3 subjects in February |
π« Internal Assessment | Once a year, before Feb exam |
π Result Timeline | April (Feb exam) & June (May exam) |
π― Policy Goal | Reduce stress, give flexibility, NEP 2020 compliance |
π This decision is being seen as a student-friendly reform π‘. While some educators worry about increased workload, many welcome it as a progressive step that gives students a fair second chance without wasting a whole year.