CSAB Counselling Cutoff 2026 – Full Details

CSAB Counselling Cutoff 2026 is the closing JEE Main rank of the last candidate admitted in a specific institute, branch, and category during CSAB Special Rounds. If you are planning to participate in CSAB 2026 and want to know what rank is good enough for your target college or branch, understanding the cutoff pattern is the most practical way to set realistic expectations.

The official CSAB Counselling Cutoff 2026 will only be available once all three of the CSAB Counselling Special Rounds have been completed; however, results from prior years by round will provide you with the best tool for reference until CSAB publishes its Counselling Cutoffs.

What Is CSAB Counselling Cutoff?

The CSAB cutoff is not a fixed number announced before admissions begin. It is the closing rank of the last candidate who secured a seat in a particular program, institute, and category in a given Special Round.

Every year, three cutoff figures are generated, one for each Special Round. Round 1 cutoff is the most competitive. Cutoffs for Round 2 and Round 3 are progressively more relaxed because:

  • Seats that were not filled in Round 1 become available
  • Candidates who withdrew or surrendered create additional vacancies
  • Fewer candidates remain in the pool in later rounds

This means if you missed a seat in Round 1, you still have a genuine chance in Round 2 or Round 3, especially for less popular branches or institutes in smaller cities.

Factors That Determine CSAB Cutoff

Several things influence where the cutoff lands for a particular institute and branch each year:

  • Total seats available in that institute, branch, and category after JoSAA rounds
  • Number of registered candidates and their JEE Main rank distribution
  • Popularity of the branch – CSE and IT branches consistently have tighter cutoffs
  • Location of the institute – NITs in metro cities attract more competition than those in smaller states
  • Category – SC, ST, OBC-NCL closing ranks are numerically higher than General category
  • Withdrawals and surrenders in earlier rounds that open up seats

CSAB vs JoSAA Cutoff: What Is the Difference?

A common question candidates have is whether CSAB cutoffs are better or worse than JoSAA cutoffs for the same seat. The answer is: CSAB cutoffs are generally more relaxed than JoSAA cutoffs.

ParameterJoSAA CutoffCSAB Cutoff
When It AppliesDuring 6 JoSAA Rounds (June-July)After JoSAA, in 3 Special Rounds
Seats AvailableFull seat matrixOnly remaining vacant seats
Competition LevelHigher (more candidates)Lower (fewer active candidates)
Closing RankUsually tighter (better rank needed)Usually more relaxed
Who Can ParticipateAll JEE Main qualified candidatesJEE Main qualified candidates not satisfied with JoSAA or not allotted

This makes CSAB Special Rounds a genuine second opportunity for candidates who just missed their target branch or institute during JoSAA.

CSAB Cutoff Trends by Branch

Based on patterns from previous years, here is a general picture of how competitive different branches tend to be:

BranchCutoff Trend
Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)Tightest closing rank across all institutes and rounds
Information Technology (IT) / CSE with AI/MLSecond most competitive; close to CSE cutoffs
Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE)Competitive in top NITs; more relaxed in GFTIs
Electrical Engineering (EE)Accessible for candidates with mid-range ranks
Mechanical Engineering (ME)Wide range depending on institute
Civil Engineering (CE)Higher closing ranks numerically; more accessible
Chemical Engineering (CH)Generally the most relaxed cutoff in most institutes

Key observation: The gap between CSE and other branches is significant. A candidate who cannot get CSE at a top NIT through JoSAA might still be able to secure CSE at a mid-tier NIT or GFTI through CSAB, especially in Round 2 or Round 3.

CSAB Cutoff by Institute Type

An institute’s type and location are key factors determining the degree of competition involved with their cut-off scores. Thus:

  • The cutoffs for the top NITs (NIT Trichy, NIT Warangal, and NIT Surathkal) are very tight for CSAB. The rank requirements are relatively close to the JoSAA closing ranks for CSE.
  • The mid-tier NITs have moderately competitive cut-offs that change quite a bit from round 1 to round 3 in terms of being more relaxed.
  • NITs in the north-eastern states and in small towns have less of a competitive atmosphere, thus candidates who are numerically higher in their ranks will likely secure admission there.
  • IIITs (either government-funded or PPP) have a wide range of competition; however, the government-funded IIITs tend to be more competitive, whereas the PPP-mode IIITs tend to be more accessible.
  • GFTIs (Government Funded Technical Institutes) generally have noted relaxed cut-offs making them better suited for candidates with higher JEE Main ranks relative to their need for a spot in a GFTI.

CSAB Cutoff by Category

Reserved category closing ranks are numerically higher than General category closing ranks for the same branch and institute. This means reserved category candidates can secure seats with a higher (numerically) JEE Main rank than what would be needed in the general pool.

  • SC and ST categories typically have the highest (most relaxed) closing ranks
  • OBC-NCL closing ranks fall between General and SC/ST
  • GEN-EWS closing ranks are usually close to or slightly above General closing ranks
  • PwD candidates have their own separate closing ranks within each category

If you belong to a reserved category, always check the category-specific cutoff, it will be significantly different from the General category cutoff for the same seat.

Download Previous Year CSAB Round-Wise Cutoff

We have compiled the round-wise CSAB cutoff data from previous years covering all institutes, branches, and categories. Use these to plan your choice list before CSAB registration opens.

YearDownload Link
CSAB Cutoff 2025 – Special Round 1, 2 and 3Download PDF
CSAB Cutoff 2024 – Special Round 1, 2 and 3Download PDF
CSAB Cutoff 2023 – Special Round 1, 2 and 3Download PDF

Once CSAB Special Rounds 2026 conclude, we will update this section with the live 2026 round-wise cutoff data for all institutes and categories. Bookmark this page and check back after each round result is declared.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. What is CSAB Counselling Cutoff?

A. CSAB Cutoff will be the actual last assigned rank given to every candidate who was selected to be admitted in each program / branch / category for all the CSAB special round admissions. 

Q. Is CSAB cutoff better than JoSAA cutoff?

A. CSAB has a much lower threshold since fewer candidates apply for the remaining vacant seats compared to JoSAA.

Q. Which branch has the tightest CSAB cutoff?

A. Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) program has the lowest average cut-off of any programme at all CSAB institutes / categories.

Q. Where is the official CSAB 2026 cutoff published?

A. The official website csab.nic.in will host the cutoff; the cutoff will be available once the results for each special round are released, and no other site will have official cutoff information.

Q. Can I use JoSAA closing ranks to predict CSAB cutoff?

A. You may use them as a general reference for the cutoff, but typically CSAB cutoffs are more lenient than JoSAA; recommended that you utilize previous years’ CSAB specific cutoffs as a more reliable guide.

Q. Are category-wise cutoffs available separately?

A. CSAB publishes separate closing ranks for each of the following categories: General, OBC-NCL, EWS, SC, ST, and PwD in their respective categories.

Q. When will CSAB Cutoff 2026 be available?

A. Expected release is between late July and late August 2026 and it will be available on csab.nic.in after the results of each allotment round.

Admission Counsellor & Founder, GLN Admission Advice

Rajesh Mishra is an admission counsellor and the founder of GLN Admission Advice Pvt. Ltd. with more than 16 years of experience in student counselling and admission guidance. He has worked with thousands of students and parents seeking clarity in complex admission processes across India.

His guidance approach is practical, transparent, and strategy focused. Rajesh Mishra helps families understand counselling systems, admission rules, and college selection in simple language so they can make informed decisions.

Through GLN Admission Advice, he provides guidance for Medical, AYUSH, Engineering, MBA, PGDM, and Law admissions, and regularly shares content to help students understand counselling procedures, cutoff trends, and common mistakes during admission counselling.