Calculators

CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator

Estimate your CLAT cut-off / percentile estimator instantly.

Estimate whether your CLAT score clears the expected cut-off.

CLAT: Likely to clear (+20)

Your %: 60.00%

About CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator

CLAT aspirants can use this Cut-off / Percentile Estimator to project their score or percentile before the official result. It follows the pattern published in the latest CLAT notification.

Everything runs in your browser — enter marks / responses and see your projection instantly.

How to use the CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator

  1. 1Enter attempted, correct and incorrect answers.
  2. 2Apply the CLAT marking scheme (1 or 2 marks each, negative marking).
  3. 3View your raw score, percentage and estimated percentile.

Why use our CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator

  • CLAT-specific default marking.
  • Handles negative marking automatically.
  • Free forever, no signup.
  • Shareable with your coaching group.

Frequently asked questions

Is the CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator really free?

Yes. The CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator on CodeMyindia is 100% free with no signup, no daily quota, no watermark and no hidden charges.

Does the CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator work on mobile?

Yes. It works on Android, iPhone, tablet and desktop browsers — Chrome, Safari, Edge and Firefox.

Do I need to install any app?

No. The CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator runs entirely in your browser. Nothing is installed and nothing is uploaded to a server.

Is my data safe with this CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator?

Absolutely. Every calculation happens locally in your browser — your figures never leave your device, so it's safe for salary, loan or business data.

How accurate is the CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator?

We use standard formulas published by RBI, Income-Tax Department, SEBI and the concerned regulators. Results are indicative — always cross-check with your bank or CA for final numbers.

Can I use the CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator for business or professional use?

Yes. Chartered Accountants, brokers, HR teams, students and consultants across India use CodeMyindia tools for daily work.

Is there a limit to how many times I can use it?

No. Use the CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator as many times as you want — there are no daily or monthly caps.

Do you store my inputs?

No. Nothing is logged, shared or sold. The CLAT Cut-off / Percentile Estimator is a stateless in-browser calculator.

Is this the official CLAT calculator?

No, we're independent. Formulas follow the notification published by the CLAT conducting authority.

What is the passing criteria for CLAT?

Refer to the current-year CLAT notification. Each stage has its own qualifying and cut-off marks published by the commission.

Does this include CLAT sectional cut-offs?

Yes. Where the CLAT notification defines sectional cut-offs, they are considered.

Can reserved-category students use this CLAT tool?

Yes. Category-wise cut-offs (SC / ST / OBC / EWS / PwD) are supported.

How is the CLAT percentile computed?

Percentile = (candidates below your score / total candidates) × 100 — the same formula CLAT uses.

Does normalization affect CLAT scoring?

Yes, in multi-shift papers. The tool works on normalized scores if you enter them.

Where do I find the CLAT answer key?

On the official CLAT website. Use it to compute a raw score before applying the tool.

Is negative marking applied in this CLAT tool?

Yes. The standard negative-marking scheme for CLAT is applied.

Can I estimate my CLAT rank here?

You can estimate a broad rank band, but the true all-India rank depends on the full CLAT candidate distribution released after results.

Does the CLAT tool cover Mains and Interview?

Currently it focuses on the objective / prelims stage where computation is possible. For Mains, use the marks-out-of-max grading approach.

Is coaching required to clear CLAT?

Not mandatory. Many candidates clear CLAT with self-study, mock tests and previous-year papers.

Are CLAT attempts limited?

Yes. Every exam sets its own attempt limits — check the current CLAT notification.

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