The wait is over for law aspirants. The University of Delhi has officially rolled out the DU LLB 2026 cutoffs based on the CUET PG (COQP11) scores. For thousands of students aiming to step into the hallowed halls of DU’s Faculty of Law, these numbers are more than just data—they dictate which centre will become their home for the next three years.
Let's break down the 2026 cutoffs across all three centres—**Campus Law Centre (CLC), Law Centre-1 (LC-1), and Law Centre-2 (LC-2)**—and analyze what these numbers tell us about exam trends, centre preferences, and the ever-evolving demand for a DU LLB degree.
## DU LLB 2026 Official Cutoffs
Here is the exact breakdown of the minimum scores required to secure a seat in 2026 across various categories:
| Category | Campus Law Centre (CLC) | Law Centre-2 (LC-2) | Law Centre-1 (LC-1) |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **UR (General)** | 200 | 170 | 168 |
| **EWS** | 178 | 139 | 140 |
| **OBC** | 168 | 137 | 141 |
| **SC** | 151 | 121 | 122 |
| **ST** | 108 | 67 | 73 |
| **KM** | 91 | 115 | 94 |
| **PWD** | 93 | -1 | -3 |
*(Note: The negative cutoffs for the PwD category in LC-1 and LC-2 are a byproduct of the CUET PG negative marking scheme (+4/-1). It indicates that the number of reserved seats exceeded the number of qualifying applicants in that specific sub-category, granting admission even to those who netted a negative final score).*
---
## 2026 vs. 2025: Analyzing the Score Drop
If we place the 2026 data side-by-side with the 2025 round-one cutoffs, a distinct downward trend emerges:
* **CLC (UR):** Dropped from **213** in 2025 to **200** in 2026.
* **LC-1 (UR):** Dropped from **188** in 2025 to **168** in 2026.
* **LC-2 (UR):** Dropped from **193** in 2025 to **170** in 2026.
We see a massive 13 to 23-mark drop across the Unreserved categories, with even steeper declines in the OBC and EWS categories.
**What does this mean?**
A drop in the cutoff does *not* mean the competition is getting easier. Instead, it directly reflects the **difficulty level of the CUET PG 2026 COQP11 paper**. A tougher paper with trickier legal reasoning and analytical questions naturally drags the average attempt rate down. NTA’s negative marking is brutal; when the paper is highly analytical, blind guessing penalizes students heavily, resulting in a lower ceiling for the top scores.
---
## Is the Demand for DU LLB Decreasing?
Looking at the lower cutoff numbers, a common misconception is that the 3-year DU LLB program is losing its charm. **This is completely false.**
The demand for DU LLB remains exceptionally high. The Faculty of Law is arguably the highest-ROI legal institution in India. Where else can you get an education for a negligible annual fee, surrounded by a peer group preparing heavily for the judiciary, and graduate into an alumni network filled with Supreme Court judges, senior advocates, and top-tier politicians?
The lower cutoffs are strictly an indicator of exam mechanics, not a drop in applicant volume. The sheer concentration of candidates fighting for those limited 2,800+ seats remains as fierce as ever.
---
## Centre Supremacy: Who Wins the Popularity Contest?
Delhi University allows students to state their preference among the three centres. The cutoffs always reveal a clear hierarchy of demand:
### 1. Campus Law Centre (CLC): The Undisputed King
With a UR cutoff of **200**, CLC commands a massive 30-mark premium over the other two centres.
* **Why is it in demand?** CLC is the oldest of the three. It boasts the most legendary alumni base, an incredibly competitive moot court culture, and immense prestige. Even though its infrastructure is older, students happily sacrifice modern amenities to carry the "CLC tag."
### 2. Law Centre-2 (LC-2): The Pragmatic Choice
LC-2 narrowly edged out LC-1 this year (UR 170 vs. 168).
* **Why is it in demand?** The preference for LC-2 over LC-1 almost entirely comes down to **timings**. LC-2 usually operates in the morning shift (around 8:00 AM to 2:00 PM). This schedule is the holy grail for law students because it leaves the entire afternoon and evening free for court internships, part-time jobs, or dedicated judiciary preparation.
### 3. Law Centre-1 (LC-1): The Evening Workhorse
LC-1 typically operates in the late afternoon/evening shift (usually 2:00 PM to 7:30 PM).
* **Why the lower cutoff?** While the faculty and curriculum are at par with the other centres (both LC-1 and LC-2 operate out of the newer Umang Bhawan building), the evening timings can be restrictive. It makes morning internships at district courts or the High Court challenging, which is why it often ends up as the third preference for many candidates.
## The Takeaway for Future Aspirants
If you are gearing up for the 2027 admissions cycle, treat the 2026 drop as an anomaly rather than a rule. The CUET PG paper difficulty fluctuates wildly. To guarantee a seat at CLC, your mock test strategies should still target a **safe score of 220+**, minimizing negative marks and prioritizing accuracy over raw attempt numbers.
Blog
Decoding the DU LLB 2026 Cutoff: Centre-Wise Analysis & The Battle for CLC