AISSEE Class 6 Boys Safe Scores by Zone

When parents look at AISSEE safe scores, the first mistake is to treat them like final admission cut-offs.

They are not.

The school-wise list for medical examination has already been released, and candidates shortlisted by AISSAC are currently undergoing medicals. The key point parents must understand is this: for every available seat, around 3 candidates have been called for medical examination category-wise and school-wise, only to speed up the admission process. The list issued for medicals is not the final merit list, not the final selection list, and not a confirmation of school allotment.

That changes how safe scores should be understood.

A safe score is not a “confirmed admission score.” It is better seen as a competitive benchmark to stay within the serious selection band. Even after getting called for medicals, final admission still depends on successful medical fitness, document verification, category position, domicile rules, counselling movement, and final allotment.

This is exactly why parents should not look at one generic AISSEE cut-off circulating online. They should look at the school, the zone, the category, and the actual competition level around that school.

Why the “3 candidates per seat” point matters

This is one of the most important realities of AISSEE counselling.

If a school has 100 available seats in a category mix, it does not mean only 100 students are kept in contention at this stage. Roughly three times the number of vacancies are shortlisted for medicals. That means many students who are now undergoing medicals will still compete further for the final seat list.

So when we analyze safe scores, we are really analyzing the score range that keeps a student in a strong enough position to enter that serious competition zone.

That is why safe score should be used as a planning number, not as a guaranteed admission number.

North Zone

The North Zone has some of the strongest schools in this dataset.

  • Mainpuri: GEN 284, OBC 279, SC 268, ST 221, DEF 277
  • Jhansi: GEN 282, OBC 277, SC 266, ST 209, DEF 275
  • Amethi: GEN 282, OBC 277, SC 266, ST 209, DEF 275
  • Chittorgarh: GEN 277, OBC 273, SC 252, ST 255, DEF 272
  • Jhunjhunu: GEN 277, OBC 273, SC 244, ST 252, DEF 271
  • Rewari: GEN 277, OBC 267, SC 249, ST 78, DEF 268
  • Kunjpura: GEN 274, OBC 265, SC 241, ST 78, DEF 262
  • Nagrota: GEN 269, OBC 200, SC 248, ST 257, DEF 261
  • Sujanpur Tira: GEN 264, OBC 217, SC 231, ST 235, DEF 250
  • Kapurthala: GEN 228, OBC 195, SC 177, ST 69, DEF 196
  • Ghorakhal: GEN 51, OBC 233, SC 223, ST 213, DEF 269

South Zone

The South Zone shows a wide spread.

  • Korukonda: GEN 277, OBC 271, SC 263, ST 261, DEF 268
  • Kalikiri: GEN 275, OBC 270, SC 259, ST 261, DEF 266
  • Kodagu: GEN 274, OBC 268, SC 267, ST 263, DEF 262
  • Bijapur: GEN 274, OBC 267, SC 266, ST 263, DEF 262
  • Amaravathinagar: GEN 262, OBC 252, SC 236, ST 142, DEF 250
  • Kazhakootam: GEN 216, OBC 181, SC 135, ST 89, DEF 191

At Amaravathinagar, parents shortlisted for medicals have also been instructed to report at 07:30 hrs, complete the first five pages of the medical form, carry required documents, and ensure basic readiness before the examination. Addl Instruction

East Zone

The East Zone is led strongly by Bihar schools.

  • Gopalganj: GEN 288, OBC 285, SC 279, ST 265, DEF 276
  • Nalanda: GEN 288, OBC 286, SC 283, ST 269, DEF 278
  • Tilaiya: GEN 274, OBC 269, SC 247, ST 262, DEF 245
  • Purulia: GEN 264, OBC 225, SC 244, ST 221, DEF 252
  • Sambalpur: GEN 258, OBC 238, SC 231, ST 229, DEF 247
  • Bhubaneswar: GEN 253, OBC 225, SC 202, ST 213, DEF 225

West Zone

The West Zone is dominated by Maharashtra schools.

  • Chandrapur: GEN 285, OBC 279, SC 268, ST 266, DEF 264
  • Satara: GEN 284, OBC 279, SC 268, ST 266, DEF 264
  • Balachadi: GEN 277, OBC 264, SC 226, ST 252, DEF 207

Central Zone

  • Rewa: GEN 282, OBC 274, SC 269, ST 211, DEF 272
  • Ambikapur: GEN 253, OBC 237, SC 201, ST 233, DEF 200

Northeast Zone

  • Imphal: GEN 276, OBC 269, SC 248, ST 246, DEF 264
  • Goalpara: GEN 229, OBC 191, SC 142, ST 186, DEF 162

Final takeaway

Parents should read AISSEE safe scores in the right way:

  • not as final cut-offs,
  • not as guaranteed admission marks,
  • but as school-wise and category-wise competitive benchmarks.

Because the medical list already includes roughly 3 candidates for every 1 seat, the real competition is still active even at this stage. That is why the safest strategy is to aim not just for the borderline score, but for a clear buffer above it.

At AceJoule, we believe parents deserve more than guesswork. They deserve clear benchmarks, honest analysis, and a preparation path aligned to real competition. That is why we use AISSEE not only as an admission exam, but as a national benchmark to measure a child’s academic strength, exam discipline, and competitive readiness. When parents understand the numbers the right way, they make better decisions — and that clarity is exactly what AceJoule is built to provide. Visit this page for more info: https://acejoule.com/

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