Quick Facts
- CUET UG 2026 morning shift was delayed by about two hours on May 30, 2026.
- TCS reported a technical glitch at its end as the cause of the disruption at some centres.
- NTA confirmed all morning-shift candidates received full compensatory time to finish their exam.
- Afternoon session reporting was moved to 2:30 PM and exam start pushed to 4:00 PM.
The CUET UG 2026 Delay on May 30 lasted nearly two hours after a TCS technical glitch disrupted the morning shift at exam centres across India.
Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) is the technology partner for the CUET UG computer-based test. The NTA (National Testing Agency), which conducts the Common University Entrance Test for Undergraduate (CUET UG) programmes, confirmed the issue was fixed and exams resumed with full candidate time protected. Afternoon session timings were also revised. Visit cuet.nta.nic.in for official updates.
What Caused the CUET UG 2026 Delay on May 30?
TCS manages the computer-based test (CBT) delivery for CUET UG at exam centres across India. On Saturday, a technical fault at TCS prevented some centres from starting the morning session on time. NTA confirmed on X (formerly Twitter) that the disruption was at the TCS end, not a broader network issue.
K Krithivasan, CEO and MD of TCS, issued a public statement on the day. He said the fault was “promptly identified and resolved” by the company’s technical teams. He added that the disruption had no impact on the sanctity of the examination.
How Were Candidates Affected by the CUET UG 2026 Delay?
Students and parents reported long waits outside exam centres on social media platform X. Many said there was no communication from centre staff during the hold. Candidates at one Delhi centre reported that exams scheduled to conclude by 10:30 AM had not even started by 11 AM. The CUET UG 2026 determines admission to central universities and more than 260 other participating institutions, so the anxiety on exam day was real.
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi commented on the disruption publicly, linking it to other recent exam management failures. The episode has added to scrutiny of how India conducts large-scale computer-based exams.
Revised CUET UG 2026 Schedule on May 30, 2026
| Session | Original Timing | Revised Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Morning Shift | As scheduled | Delayed approx. 2 hours. Full duration given. Exit after completion only. |
| Afternoon: Reporting and Entry | Before 2:00 PM | From 2:30 PM |
| Afternoon: Exam Start | 3:00 PM | 4:00 PM |
NTA moved the afternoon exam start from 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM. This gave morning-shift candidates time to complete their papers without displacing the next batch of students.
About NTA
The National Testing Agency (NTA) is the central body that conducts major national entrance exams in India. Its exams include CUET UG, NEET UG (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test), and JEE Main (Joint Entrance Examination). NTA was set up by the Ministry of Education in 2017 and manages exams at thousands of centres. Visit nta.ac.in for official information.
What This Means For You
If you are a student
The CUET UG 2026 Delay did not shorten your exam time. NTA confirmed that all morning-shift candidates received full compensatory duration. Check our exam calendar for your upcoming CUET UG 2026 dates. If you have a grievance about your centre experience, write to NTA through the official portal.
If you are a parent
Your child’s exam time was protected. NTA revised the afternoon session to avoid any further crowding or overlap. Keep watching cuet.nta.nic.in for official notices. If your child sat at an affected centre, retain the admit card and any receipts from that day.
If you are a school principal or teacher
Advise students to report delays at exam centres immediately and note the exact start time. If problems occur, documenting the experience at the centre level helps when raising a grievance with NTA later.
CampusFeed Take
This is not the first time CUET UG has faced tech disruptions. Similar failures hit the exam in 2022 and again in 2025. The pattern raises a pointed question: do vendor contracts with TCS carry enforceable penalties for exam-day downtime? NTA and the Ministry of Education (MoE) should publish a post-incident report within two weeks. That report should name the exact fault, the number of affected centres, and the specific steps taken to prevent a repeat. Until that accountability is public, the anxiety around India’s biggest entrance exams will continue. By CampusFeed Desk.
What Is Next
Upcoming CUET UG 2026 exam dates will be published on cuet.nta.nic.in. Candidates who experienced the disruption on May 30 should save their admit cards and any slips issued by exam centre staff. NTA may publish a detailed root-cause notice in the coming days. Is your exam date coming up? What has your centre experience been like so far?
Frequently Asked Questions
What caused the CUET UG 2026 Delay on May 30?
A technical glitch at TCS, the technology partner for the CUET UG computer-based test, caused the delay. TCS said its teams identified and resolved the fault the same morning. NTA confirmed all morning-shift candidates received full compensatory time.
Did the CUET UG 2026 Delay affect all exam centres across India?
No. NTA confirmed the disruption was limited to some centres. Candidates at unaffected centres continued their exams as originally scheduled on May 30, 2026. The exact number of affected centres was not disclosed by NTA.
What were the revised afternoon session timings after the CUET UG delay on May 30?
NTA moved afternoon session reporting to 2:30 PM and the exam start to 4:00 PM, one hour later than the original 3:00 PM slot. Morning-session candidates were required to complete their full paper before exiting the centre.
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and is based on publicly available information at the time of publishing. Exam dates, cutoffs, fees, deadlines, eligibility criteria, and scholarship details can change without notice. Always verify the latest information from the official portal of NTA (cuet.nta.nic.in) before taking any action. CampusFeed and its authors are not responsible for decisions made based on this article. This is not legal, financial, or career advice. Please consult a qualified professional for individual guidance.
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