JNTUK Result Updates

Real-time correction stage tracking for JNTU Kakinada B.Tech results. All semesters, all regulations.

Last updated: 21 Feb 2026, 1:30 PM IST

Key Takeaways

  • Official portal: jntukresults.edu.in is the only primary source. Third-party sites mirror data from here.
  • Result timeline: JNTUK publishes B.Tech results 30 to 50 days after the last exam, depending on student volume and semester.
  • Active regulations: R23 (current batch), R20, R19, and R16 (supply/backlog students).
  • Server crashes are expected: On result day, use schools9.com or manabadi.co.in as backup portals.
  • Download immediately: Save your mark sheet PDF the moment results appear. Older results become inaccessible on the portal after a few months.
  • Revaluation success rate: About 15-20% of revaluation applications result in grade changes. Worth applying if you failed by a narrow margin.
  • This page tracks live stages: The dashboard above shows where each semester's results are in the correction-to-publication pipeline, updated from verified sources.

What Are JNTUK Result Updates?

Short answer: JNTUK result updates are official notifications from Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University Kakinada about the publication of examination results. They cover B.Tech, B.Pharmacy, MBA, MCA, and M.Tech results for regular examinations, supplementary (supply) examinations, revaluation, and recounting across all active regulations.

If you are a B.Tech student under JNTUK, your academic timeline depends on these updates. Whether you are waiting for your 1-1 semester R23 regular result or tracking a 4-1 supply under R16, the question is always the same: "When is my result coming?"

Unlike universities with fixed result calendars, JNTUK follows a multi-stage correction process where timelines shift based on the number of answer scripts, examiner availability, and verification requirements. This unpredictability is exactly why we built the live tracking dashboard above. It shows you what stage your semester is actually at — based on verified data from official notifications and college-level sources — instead of rumours circulating on WhatsApp groups.

Latest JNTUK Results Released (February 2026)

Here are the most recently published JNTUK results. This section is updated every time the university releases a new set of results.

B.Tech 3-1 Sem (R23, R20, R19, R16) Regular/Supply Results Nov 2025
18 Feb 2026 Released
B.Tech 2-1 Sem (R23, R20, R19, R16) Regular/Supply Results Nov 2025
17 Feb 2026 Released
B.Tech 4-1 Sem (R20, R19, R16) Reg/Supply Results Nov 2025
19 Jan 2026 Released
B.Pharmacy 4-1 Sem (PCI) Regular/Supply Results Nov 2025
18 Dec 2025 Released
B.Pharmacy 1-1, 1-2 Sem (PCI) Regular/Supply Results Sept 2025
25 Oct 2025 Released
MCA 2nd Sem (R24, R20, R19) Regular/Supply Results July 2025
22 Oct 2025 Released
B.Tech 1-1 Sem (R23, R20, R19, R16) Revaluation Results June 2025
20 Sep 2025 Released
B.Tech 1-2 Sem (R23, R20, R19, R16) Revaluation Results June 2025
20 Sep 2025 Released

Upcoming: B.Tech 2-2 Supply and 3-2 Supply results are expected to release soon. Both semesters have completed marks entry and are in the final review stage. Check the dashboard above for live tracking.

How JNTUK Processes and Releases Results

Understanding the internal pipeline helps you estimate when your result will actually appear, instead of refreshing the portal every hour for weeks. Here is what happens after your last exam:

Stage 1: Examination Completion (Day 0)

After exams end across all JNTUK-affiliated colleges in Andhra Pradesh, answer scripts are collected and transported to centralized evaluation centres. This logistics step takes 3 to 5 days because scripts come from colleges spread across multiple districts.

Stage 2: Phase-1 Correction (Days 5-20)

Subject experts evaluate answer scripts in the first correction round. For a heavy semester like 2-1 with thousands of students across R23, R20, R19, and R16, this phase can take 10 to 15 days. Examiners follow a standardized marking scheme provided by the university's examination branch.

Stage 3: Phase-2 Correction (Days 20-30)

A second set of evaluators reviews already-corrected scripts. This is a verification check — not a full re-evaluation. They look for unmarked questions, totaling errors, and deviations from the marking scheme. This takes 5 to 10 days.

Stage 4: Marks Entry and Verification (Days 30-37)

After both correction phases, marks are entered into JNTUK's digital examination database. Multiple verification layers catch mismatched hall ticket numbers, wrong subject codes, and data entry errors. This stage takes about 5 to 7 days.

Stage 5: Result Publication (Day 37-50)

The Controller of Examinations gives final approval and results go live on jntukresults.edu.in. Mirror sites like schools9 and manabadi pick up the data within 30 minutes to 2 hours after the official publication.

What this means for you: When the dashboard shows "Phase-2 Correction Completed" for your semester, you can realistically expect results within 7 to 12 days. That is a better estimate than generic "results coming soon" messages.

How to Check Your JNTUK Results — Step by Step

This seems straightforward, but on result day — when the server is barely responding and giving you timeout errors — a clear plan saves genuine frustration.

  1. Keep your hall ticket number ready. You need the full number (e.g., 20B01A0501). Lost it? Contact your college exam cell, or re-download from jntuksdc.co.in if the window is still active.
  2. Visit jntukresults.edu.in — the official portal. If it does not load, skip to step 3.
  3. Try mirror sites. Open schools9.com or manabadi.co.in in separate tabs. They pull from the same JNTUK database and handle traffic better.
  4. Select the correct exam link. Match your exact combination: semester + regulation + exam type (Regular/Supply). Example: "B.Tech 2-1 Sem (R23) Regular Results Nov 2025."
  5. Enter your hall ticket number carefully. A single wrong digit shows "No records found" and students often panic thinking they failed — when they just mistyped.
  6. Download your mark sheet PDF immediately. The result page shows subject-wise grades, internal/external marks, and SGPA. Save the PDF or take a screenshot. Do not assume you can come back later.

Tip: If the portal errors out on result day, try between 11 PM and 6 AM IST when server load drops. Using mobile data instead of college WiFi can also help — ISP-level caching sometimes serves stale error pages.

Where to Check JNTUK Results: Platform Comparison

Students often ask which site is "best" for checking results. They all pull from the same JNTUK database, but their reliability, speed, and experience differ significantly. Here is what we have observed across multiple result cycles:

Feature jntukresults.edu.in Schools9 Manabadi
Data source Official (primary) Mirror of official Mirror of official
Server stability (result day) Poor — crashes often Good — handles load well Moderate — occasional slowdowns
Result availability speed First (publishes directly) 30 min to 1 hr delay 1 to 2 hr delay
PDF mark sheet Yes — official format Yes — reformatted Yes — reformatted
Mobile experience Basic — not optimised Good — responsive Good — mobile-friendly
Old result archives Limited — recent only Extensive Extensive
Ads / pop-ups None Moderate Heavy
Accepted for official use Yes — university-issued No — reference only No — reference only

Our recommendation: Try jntukresults.edu.in first. If it crashes (on result day, expect this), switch to schools9 immediately. Keep manabadi as a third option. But always go back to the official portal later to download the proper mark sheet — that is the document colleges and employers accept.

Understanding JNTUK Regulations: R23, R20, R19, and R16

When JNTUK students say "I am R20" or "she is R23," they are referring to the curriculum regulation that governs their batch. Here is what each regulation means in practical terms.

What Is a Regulation?

A regulation is the complete academic framework — syllabus, examination pattern, grading scheme, credit system — that applies to students admitted in a particular year. The number (R23, R20, etc.) indicates the year it was introduced.

R23 — Current Regulation (2023 Admissions Onwards)

The newest framework, aligned with NEP 2020 guidelines. R23 features updated syllabi, increased emphasis on practical credits, and some structural changes to the exam pattern. If you are currently in first or second year, this is your regulation.

R20 — 2020 to 2022 Batches

R20 students are in their final year or clearing supply exams. This regulation introduced outcome-based education (OBE) and a choice-based credit system. The SGPA calculation under R20 differs slightly from R19 in how elective credits are weighted.

R19 — 2019 Batch

Most R19 students have graduated, but supply and special supply exams still run under this regulation. If you have backlogs from your R19 batch, you will see "R19 Supply" in result notifications.

R16 — 2016 to 2018 Batches

The oldest active regulation. Students clearing R16 backlogs should monitor special supply notifications closely. JNTUK periodically announces "last chance" exams for older regulations — missing these can mean permanent incomplete status.

Common mistake: Selecting the wrong regulation when checking results shows "No records found." This is not a failure — the system simply cannot match your hall ticket to a different regulation's database. Always verify your regulation before searching.

JNTUK Grading System and SGPA/CGPA Calculation

JNTUK uses a 10-point grading system. Here is the complete grade table and step-by-step calculation method.

Grade Points Table

Marks Range Grade Grade Point Description
90 - 100O10Outstanding
80 - 89A+9Excellent
70 - 79A8Very Good
60 - 69B+7Good
50 - 59B6Average
40 - 49C5Pass
Below 40F0Fail

Calculating SGPA (Semester Grade Point Average)

Formula: SGPA = Sum of (Grade Point x Credits for each subject) / Total Credits in the semester

Worked example: Suppose you have 5 subjects in a semester:

Subject Credits Grade GP Credits x GP
Mathematics-III4A+936
Data Structures4O1040
Digital Electronics3B+721
Environmental Science2A816
DS Lab2A+918

SGPA = (36 + 40 + 21 + 16 + 18) / (4 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 2) = 131 / 15 = 8.73

Calculating CGPA (Cumulative GPA)

Formula: CGPA = Sum of (SGPA x Total Credits per semester) / Total Credits across all semesters

Percentage approximation: JNTUK does not provide an official conversion, but the widely used formula is:

Percentage ≈ (CGPA - 0.5) x 10

A CGPA of 8.5 translates to roughly 80%. Different recruiters may use their own conversion, so clarify when needed.

Common Issues Students Face (and How to Fix Them)

These are the problems students report most frequently on forums, in college groups, and in our own interactions. Each one has a practical solution.

1. Server Crashes on Result Day

Problem: "Server Error," "502 Bad Gateway," or the page simply will not load. The official portal gets overwhelmed by hundreds of thousands of students refreshing simultaneously.

Fix: Stop refreshing — you are making the problem worse. Switch to schools9 or manabadi. If you must use the official site, try after 11 PM IST. Incognito mode can help because your browser will not load cached error pages.

2. "No Records Found" Error

Problem: You entered your hall ticket number and the system says no records exist.

Fix: Check three things — (a) Is your hall ticket number correct, including the year prefix? (b) Did you select the right regulation? An R23 student searching R20 results will get nothing. (c) Are you on the correct exam link? Supply and regular results have separate pages.

3. Regulation Confusion

Problem: You are unsure whether you are R23, R20, or R19, especially with a year gap or lateral entry.

Fix: Check your hall ticket — the first two digits usually indicate batch year. Lateral entry students follow the regulation of the batch they joined, not the year they would have started in first year. Your college academic section can confirm.

4. Cannot Find Old Semester Results

Problem: You need a previous mark sheet for a job application but it is gone from the portal.

Fix: Try schools9 or manabadi — both maintain extensive archives. For official documentation, apply for a Consolidated Marks Memo (CMM) through your college, which includes all semesters in one verified document.

5. Mobile Display Issues

Problem: The official portal does not render properly on your phone, or PDF downloads fail.

Fix: Request the desktop version in your mobile browser settings. For PDFs, ensure you have a PDF reader installed. Schools9 and manabadi have better mobile layouts for quick grade checks.

6. Mark Discrepancies

Problem: A subject shows a grade that does not match your performance, or a wrong subject appears.

Fix: Report it to your college exam cell immediately. They raise a formal objection with JNTUK's Controller of Examinations. Act within the correction window — usually 7 to 10 days after publication.

Revaluation and Recounting: What You Need to Know

If you failed narrowly or believe your script was under-evaluated, JNTUK offers two options. They are different processes with different costs and outcomes.

Revaluation (RV)

A different examiner re-evaluates your entire answer script from scratch. Choose this if you believe your answers were correct but the original examiner under-marked them.

Recounting (RC)

The university re-totals marks on your already-evaluated script. No re-evaluation — just checking if marks were added correctly and if any answered questions were left unmarked.

How to Apply

  1. Wait for the official revaluation notification (usually 5-10 days after results)
  2. Get the application form from your college exam cell
  3. Fill in the subjects, pay the fee
  4. Submit to your college within the deadline — they forward it to JNTUK
  5. Track revaluation result status on this page

Should you apply? If you failed by 5 marks or fewer, revaluation is worth the attempt. For supply exams critical to your graduation, it is almost always worth it. If you passed but want a higher grade, weigh whether the fee and wait time justify the potential improvement.

How We Track Results: Our Research-Based Approach

The live dashboard above is not based on guesswork or WhatsApp forwards. Our tracking methodology relies on multiple verified sources:

This is why our tracker sometimes shows different information from what you see elsewhere. We prefer being accurate over being first. If a stage has not been independently verified, we do not update it.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I check my JNTUK B.Tech result online?
Visit jntukresults.edu.in, select your semester and regulation (R23, R20, R19, or R16), enter your hall ticket number, and click Submit. Your subject-wise grades, internal/external marks, and SGPA will appear. Download the PDF immediately. If the official site is down, use schools9.com or manabadi.co.in as alternatives.
When will JNTUK release results for the current semester?
JNTUK publishes B.Tech results 30 to 50 days after the last exam date. The exact date depends on student volume, examiner availability, and verification requirements. Check the live dashboard at the top of this page for real-time status of your specific semester's processing stage.
What is the difference between regular and supply results?
Regular results are for students who appeared in the scheduled main exam for their current semester. Supply (supplementary) results are for students who failed a subject previously or want to improve their grades. Both are published on the same portal but under separate links — make sure you click the correct one.
How do I calculate my CGPA from JNTUK results?
Multiply each semester's SGPA by that semester's total credits, add them up, and divide by total credits across all semesters. For percentage approximation: Percentage ≈ (CGPA - 0.5) x 10. So a CGPA of 8.5 is approximately 80%. See the detailed calculation section above for a worked example.
What should I do if jntukresults.edu.in is not working?
Server overload on result day is extremely common. Try these alternatives in order: (1) schools9.com, (2) manabadi.co.in. If all are slow, wait 2-3 hours for initial traffic to settle, or try after 11 PM IST. Use mobile data instead of WiFi to bypass ISP caching issues. Avoid constant refreshing — it worsens the server load for everyone.
Can I apply for revaluation even if I passed?
Yes. JNTUK allows revaluation for any subject regardless of your pass/fail status. The fee is approximately Rs. 1,000 per subject. Be aware that revaluation can theoretically result in a lower grade, though JNTUK generally considers the higher of the two evaluations. Confirm the current policy with your college exam cell before applying.
What are JNTUK regulations R23, R20, R19, R16?
Regulations are curriculum frameworks tied to your admission year. R23 covers 2023 admissions (latest), R20 covers 2020-2022, R19 covers 2019, and R16 covers 2016-2018 batches. Your regulation determines your syllabus, grading scheme, examination pattern, and which result link to use on the portal. The first two digits of your hall ticket number usually indicate your batch/regulation.
How do I find old JNTUK results from previous years?
The official JNTUK portal only maintains recent results. For older mark sheets, visit schools9.com or manabadi.co.in — both maintain extensive result archives going back several years. For official documentation (needed for jobs or higher studies), apply for a Consolidated Marks Memo (CMM) through your college, which covers all semesters in a single university-verified document.
What does "Phase-1 Correction Going On" mean?
Phase-1 Correction means the first round of answer script evaluation by subject experts is currently in progress. After this comes Phase-2 verification, then marks entry, and finally publication. When you see Phase-1 in progress, expect at least 15-25 more days before results are published, depending on the volume of papers for that semester.
What happens if I have backlogs under an old regulation like R16?
JNTUK periodically conducts special supply examinations for older regulations, sometimes labelled "last chance" exams. Monitor official JNTUK notifications and this page carefully for such announcements. It is critical to clear backlogs when these opportunities arise, as JNTUK may eventually discontinue exam support for older regulations entirely.