WBCAP GuideWBCAP Guide

How to use these updates

WBCAP news should be checked against official sources

The WBCAP blog collects admission updates, eligibility explainers, college planning notes, and comparison guides for students following the 2026 admission cycle. These articles are written to make the process easier to understand, but final decisions should always be checked against wbcap.in and the official website of the relevant college.

During active admission periods, students often see screenshots, partial notices, and forwarded messages. A blog guide can help explain what a notice means, but it cannot replace the official notice. Before paying fees, confirming admission, waiting for an upgrade, or reporting to a college, verify the current instruction from an official source.

Recommended reading order

Start with the latest news and notification guide if you want a quick overview of the current stage. Then read the eligibility guide if you are unsure about marks, category, or document requirements. If you are comparing admission routes, the WBCAP vs JEE Main article can help frame the difference between a state centralised admission process and a national entrance-based pathway.

Students who are already near the merit list and allotment stage should also read the merit list, login, round 1 allotment, and documents guides linked from the homepage. Those pages are more action-oriented and include deadlines, safety notes, and verification steps for the admission window.

How we choose topics

WBCAP Guide focuses on topics that students and parents search during the admission cycle: merit list status, login problems, seat allotment meaning, upgrade round choices, college-wise lists, required documents, important dates, and backup planning. The goal is to reduce confusion at moments when deadlines are close and official language can feel dense.

New articles should answer practical questions: what happened, who is affected, what should a student check, what documents or credentials are needed, which deadline matters, and where the official source is. This keeps the blog useful for both search engines and real students trying to make a decision quickly.