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Understanding CTET eligibility is the first step before registering for the September 2026 examination. CTET has two separate papers targeting different teaching levels, and eligibility conditions differ significantly between them. Paper I eligibility centres on elementary education training (D.El.Ed or equivalent), while Paper II eligibility centres on a graduate degree with B.Ed. Applying for the wrong paper due to eligibility confusion wastes the application fee and can result in disqualification during document verification at the recruitment stage.
The CTET September 2026 notification was released on May 11, 2026, and all eligibility conditions for the 22nd edition of the examination are as prescribed in the notification. The registration window is open from May 11 to June 10, 2026.
This page covers every aspect of CTET 2026 eligibility: paper-wise qualification requirements, minimum marks in qualifying degrees, age conditions, attempt limits, eligibility for final-year students, NCTE institution recognition requirements, category-wise conditions, and common eligibility misconceptions.
Official Source: CTET 2026 eligibility is officially confirmed in the Information Bulletin at ctet.nic.in released May 11, 2026. Always verify from the official document before registering.
Visit the CTET complete guide for the full exam overview, dates, syllabus, cutoff, and all resources.
| Parameter Paper I (Classes I-V) Paper II (Classes VI-VIII) | ||
| Teaching Level | Primary (Classes I to V) | Upper Primary (Classes VI to VIII) |
| Core Qualification | Senior Secondary + D.El.Ed. | Graduation + B.Ed. |
| Minimum Marks (Sr. Secondary) | 50% (General); 45% (Reserved) | Not the primary criterion |
| Minimum Marks (Graduation) | Not primary for Paper I | 50% (General); 45% (Reserved) |
| Alternative Qualification | B.El.Ed., Special Education Diploma | B.A./B.Sc.Ed. integrated, B.El.Ed. |
| Age Limit | No age limit (CBSE) | No age limit (CBSE) |
| Attempt Limit | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| Final Year Students | Eligible | Eligible |
| NCTE Recognition | Required for training institution | Required for training institution |
Paper I qualifies candidates to teach in Classes I to V at central government schools. There are multiple eligibility pathways.
Qualification 1: Passed Senior Secondary (Class 12 or equivalent) with at least 50% marks AND passed or appearing in final year of 2-year Diploma in Elementary Education (D.El.Ed.) from an NCTE-recognised institution.
| Condition Requirement | |
| Class 12 Minimum Marks (General) | 50% aggregate |
| Class 12 Minimum Marks (Reserved categories) | 45% aggregate |
| D.El.Ed. Duration | 2 years |
| D.El.Ed. Institution | Must be recognised by NCTE |
| Appearing in final year | Eligible to appear in CTET; must complete before joining |
D.El.Ed. (Diploma in Elementary Education) was previously called BTC (Basic Training Certificate) in states like Uttar Pradesh. Candidates with any state-recognised D.El.Ed. from an NCTE-approved institution are eligible under this pathway.
Qualification 2: Passed Senior Secondary (Class 12 or equivalent) with at least 50% marks AND passed or appearing in final year of 4-year Bachelor of Elementary Education (B.El.Ed.) integrated programme.
| Condition Requirement | |
| Class 12 Minimum Marks (General) | 50% aggregate |
| B.El.Ed. Duration | 4 years (integrated undergraduate programme) |
| B.El.Ed. Institution | Must be NCTE-recognised |
B.El.Ed. is an integrated 4-year programme available at select colleges (notably Delhi University colleges). Candidates in the final year of B.El.Ed. are eligible.
Qualification 3: Passed Senior Secondary with at least 50% marks AND passed or appearing in final year of 2-year Diploma in Education (Special Education) from an RCI-recognised institution.
This pathway is for candidates who completed special education training from Rehabilitation Council of India (RCI)-recognised institutions.
Qualification 4: Passed or appearing in final year of Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.) from an NCTE-recognised institution. Candidates must also pass a Special Programme in Elementary Education as stipulated by NCTE/CBSE within 6 months of appointment.
Note: B.Ed. graduates are also eligible for Paper I, but they must complete a bridge programme after appointment. This pathway has specific conditions that vary by NCTE guidelines in force at the time of recruitment.
Paper II qualifies candidates to teach in Classes VI to VIII at central government schools.
Qualification 1: Passed Graduation with at least 50% marks AND passed or appearing in final year of Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.) from an NCTE-recognised institution.
| Condition Requirement | |
| Graduation Minimum Marks (General) | 50% aggregate |
| Graduation Minimum Marks (Reserved categories) | 45% aggregate |
| B.Ed. Duration | 1 year (old) or 2 years (post-2015 NCTE regulation) |
| B.Ed. Institution | Must be NCTE-recognised |
| Appearing in final year | Eligible |
The B.Ed. programme was standardised to 2 years by NCTE from academic year 2015-16 onwards. Both 1-year B.Ed. (completed before this change) and 2-year B.Ed. (current) qualify for CTET.
Qualification 2: Passed or appearing in final year of 4-year Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Science with Education (B.A.Ed./B.Sc.Ed.) integrated programme from an NCTE-recognised institution.
Qualification 3: Passed or appearing in final year of 4-year Bachelor of Elementary Education (B.El.Ed.) integrated programme from an NCTE-recognised institution.
B.El.Ed. graduates are eligible for both Paper I and Paper II, making this programme one of the most versatile NCTE qualifications for CTET.
Qualification 4: Passed or appearing in final year of B.Ed. (Special Education) from an RCI-recognised institution with graduation having at least 50% marks. Subject to passing a Special Programme in Elementary Education within 6 months of appointment.
CBSE does not prescribe any minimum or maximum age limit for CTET. Any candidate meeting the educational qualification requirements can appear regardless of age.
However, individual recruiting organisations have their own age conditions:
| Organisation Upper Age Limit (General) Age Relaxation (Reserved) | ||
| KVS (Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan) | 30 years (PRT) | As per government norms |
| NVS (Navodaya Vidyalaya Samiti) | 35 years | As per government norms |
| CBSE Schools (Private) | Varies by school policy | Not standardised |
Candidates should verify the age requirements of their specific target recruitment organisation, not just CTET itself.
There is no limit on the number of times a candidate can appear in CTET. A candidate who has appeared in CTET multiple times and not qualified can continue to appear in every subsequent edition without restriction.
There is also no restriction based on previous qualification attempts. A candidate who failed CTET in 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 can appear in CTET 2026 without any penalty or additional conditions.
Candidates who are in the final year of their qualifying examination (D.El.Ed., B.Ed., B.El.Ed.) at the time of CTET registration are eligible to appear.
If such candidates qualify CTET, they receive a conditional CTET pass mark sheet. The certificate is issued only after they complete the qualifying examination successfully. Recruitment organisations typically require proof of completing the qualifying degree before appointment even if CTET was cleared while in the final year.
This provision is particularly relevant for candidates appearing in both their B.Ed. final exams and CTET in the same year, which is a common situation.
| Category Minimum Marks in Class 12 | |
| General / UR | 50% |
| OBC-NCL | 45% |
| SC | 45% |
| ST | 45% |
| PwD | 45% |
The minimum marks apply to the Senior Secondary (Class 12) qualification. There is no minimum marks requirement specified for the D.El.Ed. programme itself in the CTET notification, though NCTE-recognised institutes have their own internal standards.
| Category Minimum Marks in Graduation | |
| General / UR | 50% |
| OBC-NCL | 45% |
| SC | 45% |
| ST | 45% |
| PwD | 45% |
The minimum marks apply to the graduation degree. For candidates who completed graduation before the adoption of CGPA systems, the percentage directly applies. For CGPA-based systems, the university's official conversion formula applies.
All teacher training institutions from which candidates hold their qualifying degree (D.El.Ed., B.Ed., B.El.Ed.) must be recognised by the National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE).
Candidates from unrecognised or non-NCTE-approved institutions are not eligible for CTET regardless of their academic performance. This is a critical check that many candidates overlook.
How to verify NCTE recognition: Visit the official NCTE portal at ncte.gov.in and search for your institution. Alternatively, contact your institution's administration to confirm current NCTE recognition status. Recognition must be valid at the time of your programme completion, not just at the time of CTET application.
For Paper II, candidates must also select a subject specialisation: either Mathematics and Science OR Social Studies/Social Science. This selection determines which section of Paper II they appear for.
The subject specialisation in Paper II should ideally align with the candidate's graduation subjects. For example:
| Target Teaching Subject Recommended Graduation Subject | |
| Mathematics (Classes VI-VIII) | Mathematics as a main subject in graduation |
| Science (Classes VI-VIII) | Physics, Chemistry, or Biology as graduation subjects |
| Social Science (Classes VI-VIII) | History, Geography, Political Science, or Economics in graduation |
CBSE does not enforce strict graduation subject requirements for appearing in CTET Paper II subject sections. However, recruitment organisations like KVS do verify subject eligibility at the time of appointment. A candidate who teaches Mathematics at KVS must have Mathematics in their graduation or post-graduation.
Candidates who completed their graduate degree or teacher training from a foreign institution must:
Such candidates should contact CBSE's CTET unit directly at ctet@cbse.gov.in for guidance before registering.
OBC-NCL category provides 5 percentage point relaxation in qualifying marks for the educational qualification (45% instead of 50%). Reservation benefits for job recruitment require a valid Non-Creamy Layer certificate.
SC/ST candidates receive 5 percentage point relaxation in qualifying marks (45% instead of 50%). Category certificates from competent state authorities are required at recruitment stage.
PwD candidates with benchmark disability receive the same qualification relaxation as SC/ST (45% minimum). CTET 2026 provides additional time for PwD candidates during the examination.
EWS candidates from the General category with annual family income below Rs. 8 lakh have reservation benefits in teaching jobs. For CTET eligibility itself, they are treated as General category (50% minimum marks required). EWS certificate must be for the current financial year.
Mistake 1: Confusing D.El.Ed. with D.Ed. D.El.Ed. (Diploma in Elementary Education) and D.Ed. (Diploma in Education) are different programmes. D.El.Ed. from an NCTE-recognised institution qualifies for Paper I. A candidate with only D.Ed. from a non-NCTE institution is not eligible.
Mistake 2: Applying for Paper II without 50% in graduation Many candidates applying for Paper II have below 50% in graduation (General category). This makes them ineligible. The minimum 50% applies to the graduation degree, not B.Ed.
Mistake 3: Assuming any B.Ed. qualifies B.Ed. from institutions not recognised by NCTE does not meet CTET eligibility. Private B.Ed. colleges that were de-recognised by NCTE after 2015 are a particular concern. Always verify your institution's current NCTE recognition status.
Mistake 4: Not checking if final year counts Candidates in the final year of D.El.Ed. or B.Ed. are eligible to appear in CTET but cannot receive the CTET certificate until they complete their degree. The certificate is conditional on degree completion.
Q1. Can a B.Ed. candidate appear for CTET Paper I? Yes. B.Ed. candidates are eligible for Paper I under Pathway D, but they must complete a bridge programme in elementary education within 6 months of appointment to a primary teaching position. For Paper II, B.Ed. directly qualifies without additional conditions.
Q2. Is there any age limit for CTET 2026? No. CBSE has not prescribed any minimum or maximum age limit for CTET. Candidates of any age can apply provided they meet the educational qualifications.
Q3. Can a candidate appearing in D.El.Ed. final year apply for CTET? Yes. Final year students of D.El.Ed., B.Ed., and B.El.Ed. are eligible to appear in CTET. They receive a conditional pass mark sheet; the actual certificate is issued after the degree is completed.
Q4. What is the minimum graduation percentage for CTET Paper II? 50% aggregate in graduation for General/UR category. 45% for OBC-NCL, SC, ST, and PwD categories.
Q5. Is D.El.Ed. from a state board (not NCTE) valid for CTET? Only if the institution is recognised by NCTE. State boards recognise institutions for their state purposes, but NCTE recognition is separately required for CTET eligibility. Verify your institution at ncte.gov.in.
Q6. Can I appear in both Paper I and Paper II in the same CTET session? Yes. Candidates can appear in both papers in the same session if they meet the eligibility criteria for both. The exams are conducted in different shifts: Paper II in the morning and Paper I in the evening on September 6, 2026.