Exam at a glance
Offline, pen and paper
3 hours (4 hours for eligible PwD candidates)
English only
Not applicable, evaluation is qualitative
Pass or Fail (no marks, no rank)
Joint Implementation Committee, JEE (Advanced) 2026
How AAT is evaluated
AAT is a qualitative test. JEE (Advanced) does not publish a numerical marking scheme or sectional weights. After the test, the Joint Implementation Committee evaluates each candidate's overall performance across the five syllabus areas and decides a Pass/Fail status. There is no AAT marksheet, no percentile, and no separate rank.
What this means in practice
- You cannot trade strength in one section against weakness in another. Demonstrate competence across all five areas.
- Speed matters: 3 hours for a typical 16-question paper means roughly 11 minutes per question. Sketch quickly, refine selectively.
- Sketch quality matters less than spatial accuracy and design judgment. Photorealism is not the goal.
- Architectural awareness, often under-prepared, can be the deciding signal between two evenly-skilled candidates.
- If you Pass, your B.Arch seat at IIT Roorkee, IIT Kharagpur, or IIT (BHU) Varanasi depends on JEE (Advanced) 2026 All India Rank. If you Fail, no IIT B.Arch seat is allotted that year.
Compared to NATA
NATA is partly online (MCQ/NCQ) and partly offline (Drawing), publishes per-section marks, and gives a percentile. AAT is fully offline, has no published marking scheme, and gives only a Pass/Fail. Both end up testing similar drawing and design fundamentals; AAT additionally weights architectural awareness, while NATA leans more on aptitude reasoning.