
A Remarkable Year for JEE and NEET 2025: Unlocking STEM Opportunities at Scale
The 2025 JEE and NEET results are in, marking a significant turning point in our mission to provide quality STEM education to students from underserved communities. Our partnerships with government schools and our focused efforts to empower girls have driven a remarkable increase in student outcomes, proving that scalable, tech-enabled solutions can deliver high-quality results when integrated into public education systems.
Key Highlights from JEE and NEET 2025

- 1,485 students qualified for the JEE Main, with 452 projected to secure placements in top institutions, including IITs and NITs.
- A significant leap in NEET success, with 53 students securing MBBS seats, a substantial increase from 35 students in 2024.
- Our JEE Advanced Centres of Excellence (CoEs), which focus on IIT/NIT preparation, saw outstanding results: 90% of students qualified for JEE Main, and we expect 78% to be placed into an IIT or NIT, with over half securing a spot at an IIT.
- An impressive 1,138 students came from government-run, system-wide programs where we partnered to implement our Avanti Gurukul online learning platform, conduct test series, and facilitate in-person summer bootcamps. This approach has led to massive increases in outcomes for several states.
Leading the Way in Gender Equity
We are committed to increasing the representation of girls in STEM, and our results from this year show significant progress.

- We doubled the number of female JEE Main participants from 220 to 443.
- This led to a 35% increase in girls qualifying for JEE Advanced.
- Our physical high-touch programs, which account for less than 10% of female applicants in the JNV system, contributed to nearly half of all girls selected into IITs/NITs.
- This year, 22.7% of female candidates qualified for admission to the IITs, the highest pass percentage for female students in the last five years.
Success Stories
These numbers reflect the dedication and resilience of our students, and we’re proud to share some of their personal journeys.
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A. Rajeshwari, the daughter of a single mother who works as a daily wage labourer at construction sites. She is set to be the first student from a government tribal residential school in Tamil Nadu to secure admission to an IIT. Rajeshwari received study materials, scholarships, and access to Avanti’s online JEE classes and mock tests through the school's support, which helped her prepare for both the NEET and JEE exams. Keen to study aerospace engineering, she is set to enroll at IIT Madras.
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Jaspreet Kaur, the daughter of a labourer, ranked 778 in the JEE Advanced exam this year. With a family income of ₹8,000 per month and no access to private coaching, she relied on her school teachers, Avanti’s broadcast classes and weekly test series to prepare for the exam. Jaspreet’s remarkable resilience has earned her a seat at IIT Ropar, where she will pursue a degree in Computer Science Engineering.
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From CoE Kokrajhar, Assam, Lima Hazarika is en route to IIT Guwahati. When Lima was in grade 9, her father died unexpectedly, and her mother worked very hard to provide for her and her younger brother. Coming from a village near the Assam-Arunachal Pradesh border that offered limited access to education and development, Lima was determined to succeed against the odds and scored 97.12 percentile in JEE Main.
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At CoE Puducherry, Vijaylakshmi’s perseverance has borne fruit. Her parents are daily wage labourers in Karnataka, and when she won a place at the CoE, they were unable to afford the travel costs. Recognizing her determination to study, her teachers stepped in to help the family. As Vijaylakshmi prepared for JEE, her mother took ill. In spite of the financial and emotional turmoil at home, she scored 90.27 percentile in JEE Main and is heading to NIT Puducherry to study Computer Science Engineering.