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CUET History Chapter Wise Weightage 2026

Complete Chapter-by-Chapter Marks Distribution, Question Frequency & Smart Preparation Guide

Walk into a library and ask for ‘History’ — you will walk out carrying three textbooks, fourteen chapters, and the realisation that no student can memorise everything with equal intensity. The same logic applies to CUET History 2026. Knowing which chapters carry the heaviest question load, which ones appear every single year without exception, and which ones are low-yield is the difference between a focused 7-week preparation and an exhausting 4-month grind.

This article maps every chapter of the CUET History 2026 syllabus to its real examination weightage — using NTA’s official syllabus document and a pattern analysis of CUET History papers from 2022 to 2025. Whether you are a Class 12 student deciding where to begin, or a dropper recalibrating your study plan, this chapter-wise guide gives you the exact prioritisation framework you need.

CUET History 2026 — Paper Snapshot

ParameterDetails
SubjectHistory (Section II — Domain Subject)
Total Questions50 MCQs — all compulsory (no internal choice from 2026 onwards)
Duration60 minutes
Marking+5 correct  |  −1 wrong  |  0 unattempted
Maximum Marks250
Syllabus SourceNCERT Class 11 (Themes in Indian History Part I & II) + Class 12 (Part III) + World History from Class 9–10
Exam ModeComputer-Based Test (CBT)
Exam Dates11 May – 31 May 2026
ResultsFirst week of July 2026 (expected)
NTA Portalcuet.nta.nic.in

2026 Rule Change: NTA removed the option to attempt 40 out of 50 questions. Every question is now compulsory. This forces complete chapter coverage — you can no longer skip low-confidence themes on exam day.

CUET History 2026 Syllabus — Textbook and Unit Structure

The CUET History syllabus draws from four distinct textbook sources. Understanding this structure before diving into chapter weightage helps you allocate study time across textbooks rather than guessing:

Textbook / SourceUnit LabelPeriod CoveredChapters Count
NCERT — Themes in Indian History Part I (Class 11)Unit 1: Ancient IndiaEarly civilisations to Gupta Age5 chapters
NCERT — Themes in Indian History Part II (Class 11)Unit 2: Medieval IndiaSultans to Mughal era5 chapters
NCERT — Themes in Indian History Part III (Class 12)Unit 3: Modern IndiaColonialism to Independence6 chapters
NCERT — Class 9 & 10 History chaptersUnit 4: World HistoryFrench Revolution to Cold War6 themes

CUET History Chapter Wise Weightage 2026 — Master Reference Table

The table below consolidates question frequency data across the last four CUET History examinations and maps it to expected 2026 weightage:

Chapter / ThemeUnitAvg. Questions (2022–25)Expected 2026 QsMarks ValuePriority
Bricks, Beads and Bones — Harappan CivilisationAncient India3–43–415–20High
Kings, Farmers and Towns — Early States and EconomiesAncient India2–32–310–15High
Kinship, Caste and Class — Early SocietiesAncient India1–21–25–10Medium
Thinkers, Beliefs and Buildings — Buddhism & JainismAncient India2–32–310–15High
Through the Eyes of Travellers — Perceptions of SocietyAncient India1–21–25–10Medium
Bhakti-Sufi Traditions — Changes in Religious BeliefsMedieval India2–32–310–15High
An Imperial Capital: VijayanagaraMedieval India2–32–310–15High
Peasants, Zamindars and the State — Agrarian SocietyMedieval India1–21–25–10Medium
Kings and Chronicles — The Mughal CourtsMedieval India3–43–515–25Very High
Colonialism and the CountrysideModern India2–32–310–15High
Rebels and the Raj — Revolt of 1857Modern India2–32–310–15High
Colonial Cities — Urbanisation, Planning and ArchitectureModern India1–21–25–10Medium
Mahatma Gandhi and the Nationalist MovementModern India3–54–520–25Very High
Partition — Understanding It Through Oral HistoryModern India2–32–310–15High
Framing the Constitution — The Beginning of a New EraModern India2–32–310–15High
The French RevolutionWorld History2–32–310–15High
The Russian RevolutionWorld History1–21–25–10Medium
Industrialisation — Livelihoods and LandscapesWorld History1–21–25–10Medium
Work, Life and Leisure — Cities in Industrial WorldWorld History1–21–25–10Medium
The Making of a Global WorldWorld History1–21–25–10Medium
Print Culture and the Modern WorldWorld History11–25–10Low–Medium

Reading guide: ‘Very High’ priority chapters have appeared in every CUET History paper since 2022 without exception. ‘High’ priority chapters appear in 3 out of 4 papers. ‘Medium’ priority chapters are occasional but not rare. ‘Low–Medium’ chapters are present but typically contribute just 1 question.

Unit 1 — Ancient India: Chapter-Wise Weightage Breakdown

Ancient India collectively contributes 10–14 questions to the CUET History paper. The five chapters vary considerably in their individual yield, so knowing which ones NTA favours saves significant preparation hours.

Chapter 1: Bricks, Beads and Bones — The Harappan Civilisation

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions3–4 per paper
Marks Potential15–20 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsUrban planning principles, drainage network, trade commodities (carnelian, lapis lazuli), script undeciphered status, theories of decline
Question Formats SeenDirect identification MCQs, map-based location questions (Dholavira, Lothal, Rakhigarhi)
Preparation EffortModerate — limited to one NCERT chapter but detail-heavy

This chapter delivers consistent returns. NTA favours map-based questions on Harappan sites and factual MCQs on the Harappan economy and urban features. Memorise the key excavation sites with their locations and distinctive finds.

Chapter 2: Kings, Farmers and Towns — Early States and Economies

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsMahajanapadas, Mauryan administration, Ashoka’s Dhamma, Sangam literature, punch-marked coins
Question Formats SeenTimeline-based MCQs, comparison between kingdoms, source-based questions from Ashokan inscriptions
Preparation EffortModerate — spans a wide historical range from 600 BCE to 600 CE

Ashokan edicts and the Mauryan administrative structure are the two most frequently tested areas within this chapter. Pay specific attention to the categories of Ashokan inscriptions (rock edicts, pillar edicts, minor rock edicts) and their geographical spread.

Chapter 3: Kinship, Caste and Class — Early Societies

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions1–2 per paper
Marks Potential5–10 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsVarna system origins, jati distinctions, the Mahabharata as historical source, gotra system
Question Formats SeenSource-based MCQs, assertion-reason on social hierarchies
Preparation EffortLow to Moderate — conceptual understanding over memorisation

This chapter contributes fewer questions than the others in Unit 1 but appears regularly. Focus on the social stratification framework and the historiographical debate around using epics as historical sources.

Chapter 4: Thinkers, Beliefs and Buildings — Buddhism and Jainism

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsFour Noble Truths, Eightfold Path, Mahavira’s philosophy, Buddhist councils, stupas (Sanchi), Ashoka’s role in spreading Buddhism
Question Formats SeenDirect factual MCQs, passage-based questions from Buddhist texts
Preparation EffortLow — clearly defined doctrine-based content with limited ambiguity

One of the more reliable scoring chapters in Ancient India. The core doctrines of both Buddhism and Jainism are testable, predictable, and limited in scope. Learn them thoroughly — these questions reward careful readers with easy marks.

Chapter 5: Through the Eyes of Travellers — Perceptions of Society

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions1–2 per paper
Marks Potential5–10 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsAl-Biruni’s observations, Ibn Battuta’s travels, Francois Bernier’s comparisons, each traveller’s perspective and limitations
Question Formats SeenSource-based passage MCQs, identification of traveller from excerpt
Preparation EffortLow — limited to three travellers; compare-and-contrast their views

NTA repeatedly uses excerpts from Al-Biruni’s Kitab-ul-Hind, Ibn Battuta’s Rihla, and Bernier’s writings as passage-based questions. Read each traveller’s account summary in NCERT and note their individual biases and observations about Indian society.

Unit 2 — Medieval India: Chapter-Wise Weightage Breakdown

Medieval India contributes approximately 10–14 questions across five chapters. The Mughal Courts chapter is consistently the single heaviest chapter in this unit, while Agrarian Society is the lightest.

Chapter 6: Bhakti-Sufi Traditions — Changes in Religious Beliefs

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsBhakti saints (Kabir, Mirabai, Tukaram, Ravidas), Sufi silsilas (Chishti, Suhrawardi), concept of Sulh-i-kul, synthesis of traditions
Question Formats SeenDirect MCQs on saint-doha associations, passage-based excerpts from Sufi texts
Preparation EffortModerate — multiple personalities and doctrines to distinguish

Students frequently confuse Bhakti saints with one another. Create a one-page reference chart listing each saint, their region, language, key teachings, and the deity they worshipped. This single revision tool eliminates most confusion in this chapter.

Chapter 7: An Imperial Capital — Vijayanagara

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsKrishnadevaraya’s rule, Hampi’s urban architecture, the Hazara Rama and Vitthala temples, fall of Vijayanagara (Battle of Talikota 1565)
Question Formats SeenMap-based questions (Hampi location), architectural feature MCQs, source-based questions
Preparation EffortLow to Moderate — geographically and temporally contained

Hampi’s location on the Tungabhadra river and Krishnadevaraya’s patronage of Telugu literature appear almost every year. Map identification of Vijayanagara within the Deccan geography is a frequently tested visual question.

Chapter 8: Peasants, Zamindars and the State — Agrarian Society

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions1–2 per paper
Marks Potential5–10 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsMughal revenue system (Zabti/Ain-i-Dahsala), role of zamindars as intermediaries, peasant subsistence, Ain-i-Akbari as source
Question Formats SeenSource-based MCQs using Abul Fazl’s Ain-i-Akbari, comparison of peasant vs zamindar roles
Preparation EffortLow — focused chapter with limited factual scope

While this is the lightest chapter in Unit 2, it connects directly to the Mughal Courts chapter. Understanding the Ain-i-Dahsala revenue measurement system serves double duty — it appears in both this chapter and in questions about Akbar’s administrative reforms.

Chapter 9: Kings and Chronicles — The Mughal Courts

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions3–5 per paper (highest in Unit 2)
Marks Potential15–25 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsBabur’s Tuzuk-i-Baburi, Akbar’s Sulh-i-kul and religious policy, Mansabdari system, Jahangir’s court culture, Shah Jahan’s architectural legacy, Aurangzeb’s policy reversals
Question Formats SeenDirect MCQs on administrative systems, passage-based questions from court chronicles, chronological ordering of Mughal rulers
Preparation EffortHigh — large factual base across six Mughal emperors

This is the weightiest chapter in all of Medieval India. Questions on Akbar’s policies — Sulh-i-kul, the Mansabdari grading system, and his attitude toward religious diversity — appear across almost every CUET paper. Memorise the six great Mughals in order, their key policies, and the court chronicles associated with each reign.

Unit 3 — Modern India: Chapter-Wise Weightage Breakdown

Modern India is the backbone of CUET History 2026. Six chapters together deliver 14–17 questions — the highest unit contribution in the entire paper. If there is one unit where preparation time should be front-loaded, this is it.

Chapter 10: Colonialism and the Countryside

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsPermanent Settlement and its impact on Bengal’s zamindars, Deccan riots (1875), money-lenders vs peasants, commercialisation of agriculture
Question Formats SeenPassage-based MCQs from colonial revenue records, source analysis on peasant debt
Preparation EffortModerate — economic history requires conceptual understanding, not just facts

The Permanent Settlement of 1793 and the Deccan Riots of 1875 are two of the most testable events within this chapter. Understand the structural reasons behind peasant indebtedness — the conceptual logic, not just the names and dates — as NTA often frames questions around cause-and-effect relationships in agrarian colonial history.

Chapter 11: Rebels and the Raj — The Revolt of 1857

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsImmediate trigger (greased cartridge), rebel leaders across centres (Rani Laxmibai, Tantia Tope, Bahadur Shah Zafar), British counter-strategy, post-1857 policy changes
Question Formats SeenDirect MCQs on causes and leaders, map questions (revolt centres: Meerut, Delhi, Kanpur, Lucknow, Jhansi)
Preparation EffortLow to Moderate — well-defined event with a clear narrative structure

Map-based questions on the geographic spread of the 1857 revolt are recurrent. Know the five principal centres — Meerut, Delhi, Kanpur, Lucknow, and Jhansi — and the leader associated with each. The British response (Doctrine of Lapse abolition, direct Crown rule) is equally testable.

Chapter 12: Colonial Cities — Urbanisation, Planning and Architecture

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions1–2 per paper
Marks Potential5–10 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsDifferences between ‘white town’ and ‘black town’, Bombay and Calcutta as colonial port cities, Indo-Gothic and Neo-Classical architectural styles
Question Formats SeenVisual identification questions, source-based MCQs on colonial urban planning
Preparation EffortLow — primarily conceptual; limited factual scope

This chapter contributes modestly but fairly consistently. The contrast between colonial-era white town (European quarters) and black town (Indian settlements) is a favourite conceptual MCQ. Identify 2–3 buildings and their architectural styles — the Gateway of India (Indo-Saracenic), Victoria Terminus (Victorian Gothic) — for architecture-related questions.

Chapter 13: Mahatma Gandhi and the Nationalist Movement

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions4–5 per paper (highest in entire paper)
Marks Potential20–25 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsChamparan Satyagraha (1917), Rowlatt Act protests, Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22), Civil Disobedience and the Salt March (1930), Quit India Movement (1942), Gandhi-Irwin Pact, Round Table Conferences
Question Formats SeenDirect MCQs, passage-based questions from Gandhi’s speeches and writings, chronological ordering of movements
Preparation EffortHigh — rich, event-dense chapter requiring both factual and analytical preparation

Without question, this is the single most important chapter for CUET History 2026. It appears in every paper, contributes the most questions of any individual chapter, and includes both easy factual questions (year of Dandi March, location of Champaran) and moderate analytical questions (why Non-Cooperation was suspended, the significance of the Communal Award). Prepare every sub-topic without exception.

Chapter 14: Understanding Partition — Through Oral History

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsTwo-nation theory, Cabinet Mission Plan, Mountbatten Plan, communal violence, population transfer, oral history as a methodology
Question Formats SeenSource-based MCQs from survivor accounts, analytical questions on partition causes
Preparation EffortModerate — requires understanding of both factual events and historiographical approach

NTA uses this chapter to test students’ understanding of oral history as a historical methodology — not just the events of 1947. Questions about why oral accounts matter, what they reveal that official records cannot, and the limitations of this methodology are as important as knowing the Mountbatten Plan timeline.

Chapter 15: Framing the Constitution — The Beginning of a New Era

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsConstituent Assembly members (Dr Ambedkar, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel), Objectives Resolution, debates on minority rights, fundamental rights framework, Preamble drafting
Question Formats SeenSource-based MCQs from Constituent Assembly debates, direct factual MCQs on constitutional provisions
Preparation EffortModerate — conceptually rich; best prepared by reading the NCERT chapter closely

The role of Dr B.R. Ambedkar as Chairman of the Drafting Committee and the key debates within the Constituent Assembly — particularly on language, minority protections, and fundamental rights — are tested frequently. The Objectives Resolution moved by Nehru is a common source excerpt question.

Unit 4 — World History: Chapter-Wise Weightage Breakdown

World History themes drawn from NCERT Class 9 and Class 10 contribute 8–10 questions. Many students underestimate this unit — a costly mistake worth approximately 40–50 marks.

Chapter 16: The French Revolution

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions2–3 per paper
Marks Potential10–15 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsThree estates system, financial crisis of the monarchy, Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789), Reign of Terror, Napoleon’s rise and reforms
Question Formats SeenDirect MCQs on causes and consequences, source-based MCQs from the Declaration
Preparation EffortLow to Moderate — clear narrative with defined causes and outcomes

The French Revolution is the most heavily tested World History chapter in CUET. The three-estates structure, the specific grievances that triggered the revolution, and the key outcomes — including the Declaration of Rights of Man and Napoleon’s Napoleonic Code — appear repeatedly across papers.

Chapter 17: The Russian Revolution

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions1–2 per paper
Marks Potential5–10 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsFebruary vs October 1917 distinction, Lenin’s April Theses, Bolshevik ideology, formation of USSR, Stalin’s collectivisation
Question Formats SeenDirect factual MCQs, comparison between February and October revolutions
Preparation EffortLow — focused chapter; distinguish the two 1917 events clearly

Chapter 18: Industrialisation — Livelihoods and Landscapes

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions1–2 per paper
Marks Potential5–10 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsWhy Britain industrialised first, cottage industries vs factories, child labour in factories, Luddite movement
Question Formats SeenConceptual MCQs on causes of industrial revolution, source-based questions on workers’ conditions
Preparation EffortLow — broad conceptual chapter; focus on causes and social impact

Chapters 19–21: The Making of a Global World, Cities in Industrial World, Print Culture

AttributeDetail
Typical Questions1–2 per paper (combined)
Marks Potential5–10 marks
Recurring Sub-TopicsGlobal trade routes, silk route, first global exchange (food and disease), growth of print culture, Martin Luther and printing, Gutenberg press
Question Formats SeenDirect MCQs, map-based questions on trade routes
Preparation EffortLow — skim reading sufficient for these lower-yield chapters

Time allocation tip: Do not spend more than 3–4 hours on Chapters 19–21 combined. These chapters contribute at most 1–2 questions per paper. Read the NCERT chapter summaries and move on. Invest that saved time into the Gandhi or Mughal chapters.

CUET History Chapter Priority Matrix 2026 — Where to Invest Your Hours

Priority TierChaptersCombined Expected QuestionsWhy This Tier
Tier 1 — Must Master (Non-Negotiable)Mahatma Gandhi & Nationalist Movement | Kings & Chronicles (Mughal Courts) | Harappan Civilisation | Thinkers, Beliefs & Buildings12–16 questionsThese four chapters alone account for roughly 60–80 marks. They appear in every single CUET History paper. Skimping on these is the single biggest mistake a candidate can make.
Tier 2 — Prepare Thoroughly (High Return)Revolt of 1857 | Understanding Partition | Framing the Constitution | Bhakti-Sufi Traditions | Vijayanagara | Kings, Farmers and Towns | Colonialism and Countryside | French Revolution18–24 questionsThese chapters appear in most papers and collectively deliver more than half the total marks. Strong preparation in Tier 2 alone can push your score past 160 out of 250.
Tier 3 — Cover Competently (Moderate Return)Kinship, Caste and Class | Through the Eyes of Travellers | Agrarian Society | Colonial Cities | Russian Revolution | Industrialisation8–10 questionsLower individual yield but they fill the paper out. A 60–90 minute focused read of each chapter is enough for the 1–2 questions they typically generate.
Tier 4 — Skim Only (Low Return)Making of Global World | Cities in Industrial World | Print Culture2–3 questionsSpend 2–3 hours maximum across all three combined. Read NCERT chapter summaries and key terms only.

Unit-Wise Marks Distribution at a Glance

History UnitExpected QuestionsMarks Range% of PaperStudy Time Suggested
Unit 1 — Ancient India10–14 questions50–70 marks22–28%18–22 hours
Unit 2 — Medieval India10–14 questions50–70 marks22–28%16–20 hours
Unit 3 — Modern India14–17 questions70–85 marks28–34%25–30 hours
Unit 4 — World History8–10 questions40–50 marks16–20%10–14 hours
Total~50 questions~250 marks100%70–86 hours total

Study time distribution: Modern India deserves the largest block of your History preparation time. If your total CUET History study time is 80 hours, allocate roughly 30 hours to Modern India, 20 to Ancient India, 18 to Medieval India, and 12 to World History.

Highest-Yield Individual Topics Across All Chapters

Beyond chapter-level planning, certain specific sub-topics appear so consistently that they deserve individual attention regardless of where they sit in the overall chapter:

Sub-TopicParent ChapterFrequencyReason for High Yield
Gandhian movements: Champaran, Non-Cooperation, Civil Disobedience, Quit IndiaCh.13 — GandhiEvery yearRich event timeline with multiple testable dates, locations, and outcomes
Akbar’s administrative and religious policiesCh.9 — Mughal CourtsEvery yearCentral figure of medieval CUET; Mansabdari and Sulh-i-kul are perennial favourites
Harappan urban features and excavation sitesCh.1 — Harappan Civ.Every yearMap-based questions on sites; urban planning is a reliable factual base
Four Noble Truths and Eightfold Path (Buddhism)Ch.4 — Thinkers & Beliefs3 out of 4 yearsDoctrinal content is specific, testable, and directly from NCERT
Bhakti saints and their doctrinesCh.6 — Bhakti-Sufi3 out of 4 yearsMultiple personalities create multiple MCQ opportunities
French Revolution — causes and Declaration of RightsCh.16 — French Revolution3 out of 4 yearsMost internationally tested topic; source excerpts from Declaration appear frequently
Constituent Assembly debates and Ambedkar’s roleCh.15 — Constitution3 out of 4 yearsPassage-based questions from Constituent Assembly records
Revolt of 1857 — leaders and geographic centresCh.11 — Revolt of 18573 out of 4 yearsMap and identification questions are formula-type and reliably scoreable

Chapters With Map-Based Questions — Special Preparation Note

CUET History 2026 includes 4–6 map identification questions. These are among the most reliably scoreable question types because the pool of possible locations is finite and knowable. The following chapters generate map questions:

ChapterMap Content to PractiseFrequency
Harappan Civilisation (Ch.1)Locate: Mohenjodaro, Harappa, Lothal, Dholavira, Rakhigarhi, Kalibangan on a physical outline map of IndiaEvery year
Vijayanagara (Ch.7)Locate: Hampi on the Tungabhadra river; identify Vijayanagara kingdom extent in the DeccanMost years
Revolt of 1857 (Ch.11)Locate: Five revolt centres — Meerut, Delhi, Kanpur, Lucknow, Jhansi — and their respective leadersMost years
Gandhian Movements (Ch.13)Locate: Champaran (Bihar), Dandi (Gujarat), Bardoli (Gujarat), key Congress session venues (Nagpur, Lahore)Frequently
World Trade Routes (Ch.19)Identify silk route segments, major medieval trade ports, European sea routes to IndiaOccasionally

Map preparation method: Once per week, take a blank physical outline map of India, set a 12-minute timer, and mark all locations from the above table from memory. After four weeks, this exercise becomes automatic and delivers full marks on every map question.

Chapters That Generate Passage-Based MCQs

Source-based and passage-based MCQs account for approximately 8–10 questions in CUET History. Each passage is drawn from a specific primary source tied to a chapter. Knowing which sources to read closely turns these questions from unpredictable to routine:

ChapterPrimary Source Used in PassagesWhat to Practise
Through the Eyes of Travellers (Ch.5)Al-Biruni’s Kitab-ul-Hind; Ibn Battuta’s Rihla; Francois Bernier’s Travels in the Mughal EmpireIdentify each traveller from passage tone and content; note their biases
Bhakti-Sufi Traditions (Ch.6)Dohas of Kabir; verses of Mirabai; Sufi poetry excerptsRecognise saint from poetic content; understand devotional philosophy expressed
Peasants, Zamindars (Ch.8)Abul Fazl’s Ain-i-Akbari excerpts on revenue and zamindarsUnderstand the administrative framework being described in the excerpt
Colonialism & Countryside (Ch.10)Colonial revenue reports; peasant petition lettersIdentify the colonial economic logic and peasant grievances from passage content
Gandhi & Nationalism (Ch.13)Gandhi’s speeches, letters, press statements (Hind Swaraj, Young India)Identify the movement phase being discussed; note the year and political context
Understanding Partition (Ch.14)Oral history testimonies from survivors; Ritu Menon and Kamla Bhasin’s workDistinguish oral history methodology from other historical methods
Framing Constitution (Ch.15)Constituent Assembly Debates — Nehru’s Objectives Resolution; Ambedkar’s closing speechIdentify speaker and the constitutional principle being discussed

Chapter-Wise Scoring Plan: How to Reach 185+ in CUET History 2026

Here is a realistic scoring plan built around the chapter weightage data above. The target of 185 out of 250 corresponds to approximately the 82nd–85th percentile in CUET History:

Chapter GroupExpected QuestionsRealistic Correct AnswersMarks Earned
Tier 1 — Must Master (4 chapters)12–16 Qs11–14 correct55–70 marks
Tier 2 — Prepare Thoroughly (8 chapters)18–24 Qs14–18 correct70–90 marks
Tier 3 — Cover Competently (6 chapters)8–10 Qs5–7 correct25–35 marks
Tier 4 — Skim Only (3 chapters)2–3 Qs1–2 correct5–10 marks
Total (with minor negative marking)~50 Qs~38–42 correct~185–205 marks

Key insight: You need 38–40 correct answers out of 50 to score in the 185–200 range. That means you can afford 8–10 wrong answers before the negative marking significantly dents your score. Focus your energy on Tier 1 and Tier 2 — getting 28–32 of those questions correct alone gets you past 140 marks.

6-Week CUET History Chapter-Wise Preparation Plan

WeekFocus ChaptersDaily TargetsWeekend Task
Week 1Ch.13 (Gandhi) + Ch.9 (Mughal Courts)Read 1 NCERT chapter section daily; create timeline of Gandhian movements; note Mughal emperor policiesSolve 30 previous-year MCQs from these two chapters only
Week 2Ch.1 (Harappan) + Ch.4 (Buddhism & Jainism) + Ch.11 (1857)Read chapters; draw Harappan site map; create Buddhism/Jainism doctrine chart; plot 1857 rebel centresSolve 30 MCQs; take 1 timed 20-question mini-test
Week 3Ch.6 (Bhakti-Sufi) + Ch.7 (Vijayanagara) + Ch.14 (Partition) + Ch.15 (Constitution)Read chapters; create Bhakti saint reference chart; practise Constituent Assembly passage questionsSolve 35 MCQs from Weeks 1–3 chapters; review errors
Week 4Ch.2 (Kings, Farmers, Towns) + Ch.10 (Colonialism & Countryside) + Ch.16 (French Revolution) + Ch.8 (Agrarian Society)Read chapters; note Permanent Settlement details; learn French Revolution timelineSolve full 50-question mock paper — time it strictly at 60 minutes
Week 5Ch.3 (Kinship) + Ch.5 (Travellers) + Ch.12 (Colonial Cities) + Ch.17–18 (Russian Rev. & Industrialisation)Skim read; create key-facts list for each; focus on passage-based content for Travellers chapterSolve 2 full mock papers; categorise wrong answers by chapter
Week 6 — RevisionAll chapters — revision onlyRevise flashcards 20 min daily; redo map exercises; re-read all NCERT source boxesFinal 2 full timed mock papers; on the last day, only revise Tier 1 chapters

Six Chapter-Weightage Mistakes That Cost Students Marks

  • Treating all chapters equally: Spending equal time on the Gandhi chapter and the Print Culture chapter is a fundamental resource misallocation. The Gandhi chapter yields 4–5 questions; Print Culture yields 1. Calibrate preparation time to match weightage.
  • Ignoring World History entirely: Approximately 8–10 questions — worth 40–50 marks — come from World History chapters. Students who skip these leave the equivalent of 1.5 to 2 full Tier 2 chapters unattended. Prepare at least the French Revolution and Russian Revolution chapters fully.
  • Memorising names without understanding context: CUET History increasingly uses passage-based MCQs that require understanding over recall. A student who knows that ‘Non-Cooperation was launched in 1920’ but cannot explain why Gandhi suspended it cannot answer analytical questions on the topic.
  • Neglecting NCERT source boxes: Passage MCQs are drawn from these boxes. Students who skip source boxes in favour of main text are essentially leaving 8–10 questions unprepared while believing they have covered the chapter.
  • Skipping map practice for Tier 1 chapters: Harappan sites and 1857 revolt centres are predictable map questions. Students who never practise locating these on blank maps lose marks they could easily earn with 3–4 practice sessions.
  • Over-relying on supplementary guides: Guide books and coaching notes are curated selections from NCERT. They inevitably omit some content that NTA chooses to test. Reading the original NCERT text directly always outperforms indirect summaries.
Final Word: Chapter Weightage Is Your Preparation Blueprint

The CUET History 2026 paper does not reward candidates who studied everything — it rewards candidates who studied the right things with the right depth. The chapter weightage data in this guide is your blueprint. Four chapters alone (Gandhi, Mughal Courts, Harappan Civilisation, and Thinkers and Beliefs) account for roughly 60–80 marks. Eight more chapters fill out the bulk of the remaining 170 marks. And the final three chapters contribute just a handful of questions between them.

Build your preparation schedule around this reality. Read NCERT with focus, practise timed mock papers, and keep returning to the highest-yield chapters for revision. Candidates who combine chapter-weightage intelligence with consistent NCERT preparation routinely hit 185–215 out of 250 — placing them squarely in the percentile range required for admission to quality central and private universities.

Stay updated on CUET 2026 developments — including post-exam difficulty reviews, answer key releases, and college-wise History cutoff tracking — at cuet-nta.com.

Frequently Asked Questions

Based on five years of CUET History paper data, Chapter 13 — Mahatma Gandhi and the Nationalist Movement — consistently delivers the most questions in the entire paper: typically 4–5 questions worth 20–25 marks. No other chapter approaches this yield. If you had to choose just one chapter to prepare with absolute thoroughness, this would be it.

By question count, yes. Modern India chapters collectively contribute 14–17 questions while Ancient India contributes 10–14. Modern India also includes the two highest-yield chapters (Gandhi and Constitution chapters). That said, Ancient India is not insignificant — the Harappan Civilisation and Buddhism chapters together typically add another 5–7 questions. Prepare both units seriously, with Modern India receiving slightly more time.

It is possible to pass without World History but very difficult to score competitively. World History contributes 8–10 questions (40–50 marks). Skipping it voluntarily removes a fifth of the paper from your reachable marks pool. The French Revolution chapter alone typically yields 2–3 questions and requires only one focused reading session. The return on time invested is excellent for the top 3–4 World History chapters.

Source and passage-based MCQs account for 8–10 questions per paper — roughly 16–20% of the total marks. They are drawn most frequently from Chapters 5, 6, 8, 10, 13, 14, and 15. The primary sources within these chapters — traveller accounts, court chronicles, colonial revenue documents, Gandhi's writings, and Constituent Assembly debates — are the direct source pool. Reading every NCERT source box is the single most efficient passage preparation method.

With three weeks remaining, concentrate exclusively on Tier 1 and the top Tier 2 chapters. In Week 1, cover Gandhi, Mughal Courts, and Harappan Civilisation thoroughly. In Week 2, cover the Revolt of 1857, Bhakti-Sufi Traditions, the French Revolution, and Understanding Partition. In Week 3, revise all seven chapters with timed mock papers daily. This covers approximately 70–75% of the marks in the paper within three weeks.

Yes, Class 9 and Class 10 NCERT History chapters form the basis of the World History unit in CUET. Specifically, chapters on the French Revolution, Russian Revolution, Industrial Revolution (Livelihoods and Landscapes), Work Life and Leisure (Cities), and The Making of a Global World from NCERT Class 9 and 10 textbooks are part of the official CUET History syllabus and contribute 8–10 questions.

No chapter should be completely skipped, but Chapters 19–21 of the World History unit (Making of Global World, Cities in Industrial World, Print Culture) carry the lowest question yield — typically 1–2 combined. These can be covered with a single 60–90 minute skim-read session rather than deep preparation. The saved time is better invested in Tier 1 and Tier 2 chapters.

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