UP Board Class 10, 12 scrutiny window opens with strict rules: Check complete details here
The Uttar Pradesh Madhyamik Shiksha Parishad (UPMSP) has opened the scrutiny process for Class 10 and Class 12 results 2026. Students are offered a final chance to challenge their marks, but have a fixed deadline of May 17, 2026. Students who believe their answer sheets were incorrectly evaluated can apply through the official website. The Board has made it clear that late or incomplete applications will be rejected without exception.
UPMSP has set the scrutiny fee at INR 500 per subject per answer sheet. Written and practical exams are treated separately, meaning students must pay individually for each component if both are to be reviewed.
The payment process remains strictly offline. Candidates must deposit the fee through a treasury challan at a government treasury. No online payments or alternative modes will be accepted.
The scrutiny process involves both online and offline steps, and missing either will lead to rejection. Students must first fill out the online application form using their roll number and centre code. After this, they are required to print the form, attach the original treasury challan, and send the complete set of documents via registered post to their respective regional office.
The Board has issued a blunt warning: applications sent without online registration or received after May 17 will not be considered under any circumstances.
The scrutiny window follows the announcement of UP Board results on April 23. This year, over 27.5 lakh students registered for the Class 10 examinations.
According to Mahendra Dev, the pass percentage stands at 90.42% for Class 10 and 80.38% for Class 12. Despite high pass rates, many students remain dissatisfied with their scores, driving demand for re-evaluation.
Fee fixed, process rigid
UPMSP has set the scrutiny fee at INR 500 per subject per answer sheet. Written and practical exams are treated separately, meaning students must pay individually for each component if both are to be reviewed.
The scrutiny process involves both online and offline steps, and missing either will lead to rejection. Students must first fill out the online application form using their roll number and centre code. After this, they are required to print the form, attach the original treasury challan, and send the complete set of documents via registered post to their respective regional office.
The Board has issued a blunt warning: applications sent without online registration or received after May 17 will not be considered under any circumstances.
Results trigger scrutiny rush
The scrutiny window follows the announcement of UP Board results on April 23. This year, over 27.5 lakh students registered for the Class 10 examinations.
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