JoSAA Strategy Guide

JoSAA State of Eligibility (NOT domicile)

Your State of Eligibility decides Home State quota for NIT+ seats. One wrong selection can remove HS seats from your pool.

Golden rule

State of Eligibility = the state where you FIRST appeared for Class XII (or equivalent), not your domicile or current residence.

How State of Eligibility works

  1. Used for NIT+ seat allocation to determine Home State (HS) vs Other State (OS) options.
  2. State code is based on where you first appeared for Class XII, not improvement exam location.
  3. If Class XII was outside India, state code is determined via permanent address in Indian passport.

Common mistakes

  • Selecting domicile/permanent residence instead of Class XII first-appearance state.
  • Using improvement-exam state instead of first-appearance state.
  • Assuming this does not matter for NIT+/IIIT/GFTI options.

Before final submit (30-second checklist)

  • Confirm the state where you first appeared for Class XII.
  • Ignore improvement-exam state if it differs.
  • If studied abroad, use passport permanent-address state.

The Trap

You currently live in Maharashtra but first appeared for Class XII in Rajasthan. Selecting Maharashtra can distort HS/OS logic and cost valid seats.

The Smart Way

Select the first-appearance Class XII state (Rajasthan in this example), even if your present residence is elsewhere.

Build a safer JoSAA list

Generate a structured preference list and avoid quota mistakes before locking choices.

Open JoSAA Strategy Tool

Always verify against latest JoSAA business rules for your session. Rules (2025) · Business Rules PDF