Which CUET tool should I use first?
Start with the eligibility checker, then validate subject combinations. Score and college tools are more useful after you know your target course is eligible.
Plan CUET eligibility, subjects, normalized score, college bands, and study strategy from one mobile-friendly hub.
Estimate normalized score from raw marks, shift average, and shift difficulty assumptions.
Check basic Class 12 percentage, category, and course-fit signals before shortlisting universities.
Match your Class 12 subjects with common CUET domain requirements for target courses.
Turn your CUET score and stream into a practical college option band for preference planning.
Use days left, weak subjects, and target score to create a focused prep split.
Quick reminders for score planning, subject choice, and preference list decisions.
CUET eligibility is not decided by score alone. Most universities check your Class 12 subjects, minimum percentage, category rules, course-specific requirements, and the CUET subjects you selected. Before filling preferences, confirm that your domain subjects match the target course. For example, commerce courses may expect accountancy, business studies, mathematics, economics, or general test combinations depending on the university. The eligibility checker helps you catch basic mismatches early, before you spend time building a preference list around a course you may not qualify for.
A safe CUET score is the score range where your chances are comfortable for a course and university tier, not a fixed number for every student. Competitive central universities usually need higher normalized scores, while emerging universities and less competitive courses may remain possible at moderate scores. Use the college predictor for a broad band, then keep reach, target, and backup options in your preference list. A score can be safe for one course and risky for another, so always evaluate score, subject fit, and demand together.
For daily preparation, use these tools in a loop. After every mock, enter your raw score in the normalization simulator, review your weaker subjects, and update your strategy plan. When your score improves, revisit the college band tool and adjust your preference list. This keeps your preparation connected to real admission decisions instead of only chasing marks in isolation.
Start with the eligibility checker, then validate subject combinations. Score and college tools are more useful after you know your target course is eligible.
A safe score depends on university, course, category, subject combination, and yearly competition. Treat safe score as a planning range, not a guarantee.
Normalization can adjust raw marks to account for shift difficulty. The simulator gives a planning estimate, while official results decide the final normalized score.
Yes. The CUET tools are built as lightweight mobile pages with large tap targets and simple inputs.
NEET students can jump straight to marks-vs-rank planning, while school and college students can use the core calculators.