By Bharath Teja, IIT Kharagpur Alumnus | CEO, Nine Education
Every year, when students finish their 10th class board exams and start thinking about the MPC stream, the first serious question I hear from families is: “What exactly is the IIT entrance exam — and how different is it from what my child studies in Class 11 and 12?” It is the right question to ask, and the earlier you understand the answer, the better positioned your child will be.
I am Bharath Teja. I cleared IIT Kharagpur myself, and I have spent the last fifteen years at Nine Education helping thousands of MPC students across Hyderabad understand and crack the IIT entrance exam. In this guide, I am going to walk you through the complete IIT JEE syllabus that begins after 10th class — what subjects it covers, how the exam is structured, and why starting early in Class 11 gives your child a decisive edge.
What Is the IIT Entrance Exam?
The IIT entrance exam is a two-stage national competitive exam that determines admission to the 23 Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and several other top engineering colleges across India.
- JEE Main — the first stage, conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA). It is also the gateway to NITs, IIITs, and Government Funded Technical Institutes (GFTIs). JEE Main tests Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics at Class 11 and 12 levels.
- JEE Advanced — the second stage, conducted by one of the IITs on rotation. Only the top 2.5 lakh candidates who qualify JEE Main are eligible to appear for JEE Advanced. This is the exam that determines IIT admission.
Both stages draw their syllabus from the same two-year MPC curriculum — everything your child studies in Class 11 and Class 12 under the MPC stream is relevant. This is the most important thing to understand: the IIT entrance exam is not a separate subject you study alongside school. It is a deeper, application-heavy version of the MPC syllabus itself.
The Complete IIT JEE Syllabus After 10th — Subject by Subject
Here is the full syllabus your child will cover across Class 11 and Class 12 as part of MPC preparation at Nine Education.
Physics
Class 11 topics:
- Units and Dimensions
- Kinematics (motion in one and two dimensions)
- Laws of Motion (Newton’s laws, friction, circular motion)
- Work, Energy and Power
- System of Particles and Rotational Motion
- Gravitation
- Properties of Solids and Liquids
- Thermodynamics and Kinetic Theory of Gases
- Oscillations and Waves
Class 12 topics:
- Electrostatics (electric field, potential, capacitors)
- Current Electricity
- Magnetic Effects of Current and Magnetism
- Electromagnetic Induction and Alternating Currents
- Electromagnetic Waves
- Optics (ray optics and wave optics)
- Dual Nature of Radiation and Matter
- Atoms and Nuclei
- Electronic Devices
In my experience, Physics is the subject that differentiates toppers from average scorers in the IIT entrance exam. Mechanics (Class 11) and Electromagnetism (Class 12) are the two heaviest chapters. Students who master these two clusters typically score in the 90th percentile and above.
Chemistry
Class 11 topics:
- Basic Concepts of Chemistry (mole concept, stoichiometry)
- Structure of Atom
- Classification of Elements and Periodicity
- Chemical Bonding and Molecular Structure
- States of Matter: Gases and Liquids
- Thermodynamics
- Equilibrium (chemical and ionic)
- Redox Reactions
- Hydrogen and s-Block Elements
- p-Block Elements (Group 13 and 14)
- Organic Chemistry: Basic Principles, Hydrocarbons
- Environmental Chemistry
Class 12 topics:
- Solid State
- Solutions
- Electrochemistry
- Chemical Kinetics
- Surface Chemistry
- General Principles of Extraction of Metals
- p-Block Elements (Group 15–18)
- d and f Block Elements
- Coordination Compounds
- Haloalkanes and Haloarenes
- Alcohols, Phenols and Ethers
- Aldehydes, Ketones and Carboxylic Acids
- Organic Compounds Containing Nitrogen
- Biomolecules and Polymers
- Chemistry in Everyday Life
Chemistry has the most memory-intensive syllabus of the three subjects. Organic Chemistry, in particular, requires a strong conceptual understanding of reaction mechanisms — not rote learning. Students who try to memorise Organic Chemistry without understanding the logic behind reactions consistently struggle in the IIT entrance exam.
Mathematics
Class 11 topics:
- Sets, Relations and Functions
- Trigonometric Functions
- Principle of Mathematical Induction
- Complex Numbers and Quadratic Equations
- Linear Inequalities
- Permutations and Combinations
- Binomial Theorem
- Sequences and Series
- Straight Lines and Conic Sections
- Introduction to Three-Dimensional Geometry
- Limits, Derivatives and Mathematical Reasoning
- Statistics and Probability
Class 12 topics:
- Relations and Functions (advanced)
- Inverse Trigonometric Functions
- Matrices and Determinants
- Continuity and Differentiability
- Applications of Derivatives
- Integrals and Applications of Integrals
- Differential Equations
- Vectors and Three-Dimensional Geometry
- Linear Programming
- Probability (advanced)
Mathematics in JEE Advanced is notoriously the toughest of the three subjects. Calculus — covering differentiation, integration and differential equations — forms nearly 30% of the Mathematics paper in most years. Class 11 Algebra and Coordinate Geometry form the bedrock on which all of Class 12 Mathematics is built. We do not rush through 11th-class Mathematics at Nine Education. We spend extra time on foundations here because it pays compounded dividends later.
How the IIT Entrance Exam Is Structured
Understanding the exam format helps your child prepare smarter, not just harder.
JEE Main format:
- 3 sections: Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics
- Each section: 20 MCQs (single correct) + 10 Numerical Value questions (attempt any 5)
- Total: 90 questions, 300 marks
- Duration: 3 hours
- Negative marking: −1 for each wrong MCQ answer; no negative marking for numerical questions
- Conducted twice a year (January and April sessions)
JEE Advanced format:
- Two papers (Paper 1 and Paper 2), each 3 hours
- Mixed question types: single correct, multi-correct, integer-type, matching, paragraph-based
- Total marks vary each year (typically 300–360 combined)
- Partial marking and negative marking schemes are complex and vary by question type
The most critical difference between JEE Main and JEE Advanced is the question style. JEE Main tests whether a student knows the concept. JEE Advanced tests whether a student can apply multiple concepts together under pressure. This is why our coaching at Nine Education focuses equally on concept clarity and timed application practice from Day 1 of Class 11.
You can find the official JEE Main information brochure — including exact paper structure and eligibility criteria — at the NTA JEE Main official website. For IIT seat allotment and JEE Advanced cutoffs, JoSAA’s official portal is the authoritative source.
Why Class 11 Is the Most Critical Year for the IIT Entrance Exam
Here is something I tell every family during our orientation session: your child’s IIT result is largely decided in Class 11, not Class 12.
This sounds counterintuitive because the exam is written at the end of Class 12. But here is the logic. The IIT entrance exam syllabus is split roughly equally between Class 11 and Class 12. In Class 11, students encounter genuinely new territory — Mechanics, Organic Chemistry fundamentals, Calculus foundations — for the first time. The habits of study, the ability to sit with a difficult problem without giving up, the quality of notes and revision cycles — all of these are built in Class 11.
Students who treat Class 11 as a warm-up year and plan to “get serious in Class 12” face a brutal problem: they have two years of IIT syllabus to cover in one year, alongside boards, mock exams, and college application stress. I have seen very bright students fail to qualify the IIT entrance exam for exactly this reason.
In our experience with students at Nine Education across Hyderabad, the students who crack IIT JEE Advanced — not just Main — are almost always the students who built strong foundations in Class 11 Mechanics, Algebra, and Organic Chemistry. I have written about the specific study strategies that work in my guide on IIT JEE preparation tips that actually work.
EAMCET and BITSAT: They Are Already Covered
Many parents ask me whether their child needs separate coaching for EAMCET (now called AP/TS EAPCET) and BITSAT alongside IIT JEE preparation. The answer is no — and here is why.
EAMCET draws its syllabus entirely from Class 11 and Class 12 MPC, at a difficulty level below JEE Main. A student who is seriously preparing for the IIT entrance exam is automatically prepared for EAMCET. We do not run separate EAMCET coaching batches at Nine Education. Our MPC programme covers it as part of the same curriculum, with dedicated mock tests scheduled closer to the EAMCET dates.
BITSAT (Birla Institute entrance exam) adds English Proficiency and Logical Reasoning sections alongside Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics. We include BITSAT-specific test practice in our Class 12 programme so that MPC students can sit BITSAT without any additional preparation burden.
How Nine Education Covers the Complete IIT JEE Syllabus
At Nine Education, every MPC student follows a structured two-year curriculum designed specifically around the IIT entrance exam syllabus. Here is what that looks like in practice:
- All faculty are IIT alumni — every Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics teacher at Nine Education graduated from an IIT. There are no exceptions to this policy. When a teacher has personally solved JEE Advanced problems as a student, they explain concepts differently. They know exactly where students trip up because they have been through it themselves.
- Batch size capped at 40 — the IIT entrance exam rewards depth, not surface coverage. You cannot go deep in a class of 200 students. Our 40-student cap ensures every student gets individual attention during doubt sessions.
- Daily Practice Problems (DPPs) — concept classes alone do not build JEE-level problem-solving ability. Every topic is followed by structured daily practice sheets that escalate in difficulty from EAMCET-level to JEE Advanced-level over the two-year programme.
- Mock test series — we run full-length JEE Main and JEE Advanced pattern mocks throughout Class 12, with detailed analytics so students know exactly which topic areas are costing them marks.
- Integrated board preparation — boards matter for college eligibility criteria. Our timetable is designed so that board exam preparation is built into the JEE curriculum, not bolted on as a last-minute rush.
If you are still evaluating whether MPC with IIT JEE coaching is the right choice for your child, I would encourage you to read our complete guide on IIT JEE vs NEET: which exam should your child choose after 10th. It covers the aptitude, career path, and long-term decision framework that parents need before choosing a stream.
Common Mistakes Students Make in Their First Year of IIT JEE Preparation
I want to be direct with you about the mistakes I see repeatedly — not to discourage you, but because awareness is the first step to avoiding them.
- Treating Class 11 as a revision of 10th class material. It is not. The jump in difficulty is significant, especially in Physics and Mathematics. Students who coast through the first semester of Class 11 lose ground they cannot easily recover.
- Copying notes without understanding. Notes are only useful if the student has already engaged with the concept independently. Students who copy without understanding will not be able to solve problems in new contexts — which is exactly what the IIT entrance exam demands.
- Skipping mock tests because “I haven’t finished the syllabus yet.” You should never wait until the syllabus is complete to start mock tests. Timed practice from early on builds the exam temperament that determines results on the actual day.
- Over-relying on shortcuts and tricks. The IIT entrance exam, especially JEE Advanced, is designed to expose students who have learned tricks without understanding derivations. Build concepts from first principles first. Shortcuts come naturally once you understand the underlying logic.
- Ignoring weaker subjects. Many students love Mathematics and neglect Chemistry — or vice versa. Each of the three subjects carries equal marks. A 30-mark gap in Chemistry is as damaging as a 30-mark gap in Mathematics.
Start Your IIT JEE Journey with Nine Education
If your child has just completed 10th class and you are planning their MPC preparation for the IIT entrance exam, the most valuable thing you can do right now is visit our campus and have a direct conversation with our faculty.
At Nine Education, we run personalised counselling sessions where we assess your child’s current strengths, map the gaps, and give you a realistic two-year preparation roadmap. There is no sales pressure — just an honest academic conversation based on fifteen years of IIT and NEET coaching experience.
We have 15 branches across Hyderabad including Kukatpally, SR Nagar, Narsingi, Attapur, Neredmet, Boduppal, Suchitra, Vidyanagar, Kothapet, and more. Admission enquiries for the 2026–27 academic year are open now, and batch sizes are limited to 40 students.
Book your free campus visit and counselling session today:
- Visit nineeducation.in/admissions for branch locations and timings
- WhatsApp us directly at +91 80197 97799
The IIT entrance exam is one of the most demanding tests a young person can prepare for. But with the right foundation in place from Class 11, and the right faculty guiding every step, it is absolutely achievable. I have seen it happen hundreds of times. I want to help your child be next.
