The three-stage pipeline for IIT B.Arch
Getting into IIT B.Arch is a three-stage process. Skipping any stage closes off the IIT B.Arch route, even if you cleared the others.
- Stage 1: JEE Main Paper 1. You need to qualify JEE Main Paper 1 to be eligible for JEE Advanced. The cutoff varies year to year, typically requires being in the top 2.5 lakh candidates.
- Stage 2: JEE Advanced. You need to clear JEE Advanced subject and aggregate cutoffs. For 2025, this was 35% aggregate for Open category, 31.5% for OBC and EWS, 17.5% for SC, ST, and PwD.
- Stage 3: AAT. Register for AAT, appear, get a Pass result. The actual allotment in JoSAA uses your JEE Advanced AIR.
What AAT actually tests
AAT is a 3-hour pen-and-paper test. It assesses architectural aptitude across:
- Freehand drawing: Quick observational sketches from imagination or memory
- Geometrical drawing: Precise drafting of 2D and 3D forms
- Three-dimensional perception: Visualisation of forms from given views
- Imagination and aesthetic sensitivity: Composition, harmony, contrast tests
- Architectural awareness: Recognition of significant structures across history
The exam is conducted physically at IIT Roorkee, Kharagpur, BHU, and Guwahati centres. Bring your own drawing instruments. The format has not changed materially in recent years.
Pass or Fail, that is it
This is what trips up most aspirants. AAT is a qualifying test. There is no AAT score that helps your JoSAA rank. Either you clear AAT (and become eligible for IIT B.Arch through your JEE Advanced AIR) or you do not (and you cannot get any IIT B.Arch seat regardless of your Advanced rank).
Two candidates with the same JEE Advanced AIR who both Pass AAT have identical chances at IIT B.Arch. The AAT score itself does not differentiate them.
Why this matters strategically
Because AAT is Pass or Fail, every candidate cleared for JEE Advanced who has any interest in IIT B.Arch should attempt AAT. The downside is a few hours and one trip to a centre. The upside is keeping the IIT B.Arch route open. Skipping AAT to focus only on B.Tech is a one-way door, you cannot come back to IIT B.Arch later.
2026 AAT timeline
- JEE Advanced 2026: May 17, 2026
- JEE Advanced result: June 2, 2026 (expected)
- AAT registration: June 2 to 3, 2026 (window of 24 to 48 hours)
- AAT 2026 exam: June 4, 2026
- AAT result: June 7, 2026
- JoSAA Round 1 starts: Mid June 2026
The AAT registration window is short. If you cleared JEE Advanced, decide quickly whether to register. The default for any architecture-curious candidate should be: register, take the exam, do not foreclose the option.
IITs that offer B.Arch through AAT
- IIT Roorkee: JEE Advanced AIR range 1,500 to 2,800 (Open)
- IIT Kharagpur: JEE Advanced AIR range 2,000 to 3,500 (Open)
- IIT BHU: Smaller intake, ranges vary
Other IITs (Delhi, Bombay, Madras, Kanpur, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Mandi, Indore, etc.) do not offer B.Arch. The only path to B.Arch at any IIT is the JEE Advanced plus AAT route at one of the three IITs above.