How to Score 70%+ in UGC NET History: Cutoff Strategy for General Category
70%+ Score Strategy & Cutoff Analysis 2026
The UGC NET History examination for the June 2026 cycle is scheduled for 25 June 2026 (Shift 2, 3:00 PM to 6:00 PM), as per the official notification on the NTA website (ugcnet.nta.nic.in). For General Category candidates, the stakes are uniquely high. While the minimum qualifying marks are set at 40% aggregate across both papers, the actual cut-off tells a very different story.
Here is the hard truth: scoring 40% will not get you anywhere near qualifying for JRF or even Assistant Professor eligibility in History. The competition is fierce, and the cut-offs have been climbing steadily. In the December 2025 session, the General Category JRF cut-off for History touched 216 marks (out of 300) , while the Assistant Professor cut-off stood at 192 marks.
This post breaks down exactly what it takes to score 70%+ (210+ marks) in UGC NET History—a score that places you firmly in the safe zone for General Category—and provides a battlefield-tested strategy to get there.
Understanding the Cut-Off Landscape: Know Your Target
Before you can plan your attack, you need to know the enemy. The cut-off for History varies significantly across sessions based on exam difficulty and the number of candidates. Here is a clear picture of where the bar has been set:
| Session | General JRF Cut-Off | General Assistant Professor Cut-Off |
|---|---|---|
| December 2025 (Official) | 216 | 192 |
| June 2025 (Official) | 180 | 162 |
| December 2024 | ~206 | ~184 |
| June 2024 | ~180-185 | ~160-165 |
| June 2019 (Reference) | 186 | 164 |
What this tells you: The cut-off fluctuates based on paper difficulty. In easier sessions (like December 2025), it can soar past 210. In tougher sessions (like June 2025), it drops to around 180. A score of 210+ (70%) is a safe bet in any scenario.
Your target, therefore, is not just to clear the cut-off but to build a buffer of 15-20 marks above the highest expected cut-off. That means aiming for 210-220 marks (70-73%) .
The Mathematics of 70%: How Many Questions Do You Need?
The exam has 150 questions across two papers (Paper 1: 50 questions, 100 marks; Paper 2: 100 questions, 200 marks). There is no negative marking.
To score 210+ marks (70%):
- You need 105 correct answers out of 150.
- With no negative marking, you can attempt all questions without fear of penalty. Every question you leave unanswered is a missed opportunity.
Strategic implication: The “no negative marking” rule is your greatest weapon. Never leave a question blank. Even an educated guess gives you a chance to score.
The 70% Blueprint: A Three-Pillar Strategy
Pillar 1: Master the “Big Three” (60-65 Questions)
Ancient, Medieval, and Modern Indian History together contribute 55-65 questions per paper. This is your goldmine. Master these three, and you have already secured more than half the marks you need.
Ancient India (20-25 Qs):
- Must-know: Indus Valley Civilization (town planning, seals), Mauryan and Gupta administration (Arthashastra, Ashokan edicts, land grants), Buddhist and Jain councils (chronology is key).
- Strategy: Focus on administrative systems and sources, not minor dynastic details.
Medieval India (18-22 Qs):
- Must-know: Delhi Sultanate (Alauddin Khalji’s market reforms, Balban’s theory of kingship), Mughal administration (Mansabdari system—Zat and Sawar ranks, revenue classification), Maratha administration (Asta Pradhan council).
- Strategy: Memorize revenue terms and administrative hierarchies. These are repeatedly tested.
Modern India (20-25 Qs):
- Must-know: British constitutional acts (Regulating Act 1773, Charter Acts, Government of India Acts—chronology is critical), economic drain and famines, peasant movements, and the National Movement (Surat Split, Lucknow Pact, Non-Cooperation Movement).
- Strategy: This is the most scoring section. Create a timeline of acts and movements. Practice chronological arrangement questions.
Pillar 2: Conquer Historiography (8-12 Questions)
Historiography is the most predictable unit in the entire paper. The NTA draws from a fixed pool of thinkers and their works.
Non-Negotiable Thinkers:
- E.H. Carr — What is History? (interpretation over facts)
- R.G. Collingwood — The Idea of History (re-enactment)
- Marc Bloch & Lucien Febvre — Founders of the Annales School (1929)
- Leopold von Ranke — Father of scientific history
- Edward Said — Orientalism (1978)
- Antonio Gramsci — Cultural Hegemony
The Chronological Sequence: Orientalist → Imperialist → Nationalist → Marxist → Subaltern. This sequence appears in almost every paper.
Strategy: This is low-hanging fruit. Memorize these thinkers and their core concepts. You can secure 8-12 marks with minimal effort.
Pillar 3: Master the Question Formats (35-45 Questions)
Understanding how questions are asked is as important as knowing the content. Two formats dominate the paper:
| Format | Frequency | Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Match List I with List II | 15-20 Qs | Focus on pairing “Books with Authors” and “Officials with Duties” |
| Select Correct Statements (A,B,C,D) | 20-25 Qs | Read the stem carefully. They often mix two unrelated facts to confuse you |
| Chronological Arrangement | 12-18 Qs | Use mnemonics for reigns and acts |
| Assertion-Reason | 6-10 Qs | If both are true, check if R is the direct causal reason for A |
Collectively, “Match the List” and “Select Correct Statements” account for nearly 35-45 questions. Practice these formats religiously. They are your key to finishing the paper on time and with accuracy.
The 70% Time Management Strategy
Here is how to allocate your 3 hours (180 minutes) on exam day:
| Section | Questions | Time Allotted | Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paper 1 (General Aptitude) | 50 | 45-50 minutes | Attempt all. This is your warm-up. |
| Paper 2 (History) – Easy Questions | ~40 | 40 minutes | Answer the ones you are 100% sure of first. |
| Paper 2 – Moderate Questions | ~35 | 45 minutes | Apply elimination techniques. |
| Paper 2 – Difficult/Guesswork | ~25 | 30 minutes | With no negative marking, attempt everything. |
| Review | – | 10-15 minutes | Revisit flagged questions. |
Golden Rule: Do not get stuck on a single question. Flag it, move on, and come back if time permits.
The 6-Month Preparation Roadmap
Months 1-3: Foundation Building
- Read NCERTs (Class VI-XII) — This is non-negotiable. They build your conceptual base.
- Read Itihaaskar’s UGC NET/JRF History notes with timelines, key events, and thinker profiles.
- Focus on the “Big Three” — Ancient, Medieval, Modern. Cover them thoroughly.
Months 4-5: Practice and Refinement
- Solve PYQs (Previous Year Questions) — At least 5-6 full papers.
- Analyze your mistakes — Identify weak areas and revisit them.
- Practice question formats — Specifically, Match the List and Correct Statement questions.
- Start attempting full-length mock tests under timed conditions.
Month 6: Revision and Simulation
- Revision is king — Revise your notes at least 3-4 times.
- Focus on Historiography — This is the most repeatable unit. Master it.
- Take at least 10 full-length mocks — Simulate exam conditions.
- Work on speed — The December 2025 paper was described as “lengthy due to conceptual and source-based questions”. Speed is critical.
What 70%+ Looks Like in Practice
Based on the December 2025 exam analysis:
- Ideal attempts: 70-85 out of 100 questions in Paper 2.
- Difficulty: Moderate, but lengthy.
- High-weightage topics: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern Indian History dominated with 60-70% of questions.
- Historiography: Easier scoring section for well-prepared students.
To score 70%+, you need to:
- Attempt at least 80-85 questions in Paper 2.
- Maintain 85%+ accuracy on the questions you attempt.
- Ace the Reading Comprehension passages (10 questions)—they are typically easier and can be scoring.
The Final Word
Scoring 70%+ in UGC NET History is not about knowing everything. It is about knowing the right things with precision and executing under time pressure. The data is clear: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern India + Historiography are your ticket to a top score. Master these, practice the dominant question formats, and use the no-negative-marking rule to your advantage.
With the June 2026 exam scheduled for 25 June 2026, you have a clear runway. Stick to the official syllabus on the NTA website (ugcnet.nta.nic.in), rely on standard reference texts, and let this strategy be your compass. Aim for 210+. The Junior Research Fellowship is not a dream—it is a target. Hit it.
This analysis is based on official cut-off data released by NTA for previous UGC NET History sessions. The June 2026 cut-off may vary; always refer to the official NTA notification at ugcnet.nta.nic.in for the latest updates.