The Class 12 Chemistry exam is described as moderate to easy by multiple educators and students. The paper focused on conceptual understanding and NCERT-based learning, making it fair for well-prepared candidates.
According to Shalini Gupta, subject-matter expert at Lancers Army Schools, the paper was accessible for students who studied the syllabus thoroughly.
“The paper was overall moderate to easy. Most questions were directly based on the prescribed syllabus,” she said.
She noted that organic chemistry, electrochemistry and chemical kinetics carried significant weightage. Numerical problems were manageable and followed familiar patterns.
Theoretical questions required analytical thinking but remained within syllabus boundaries.
Time management was another positive factor. Gupta added that the paper was student-friendly and did not demand excessive brainstorming. Students with consistent preparation could attempt questions comfortably.
STUDENT REACTIONS
Feedback from students also reflected a positive response.
Bhavesh from VidyaGyan School said: “Easy paper, MCQs were straightforward. Conversion level was easy and overall paper was moderate to easy.”
His comments suggest that organic conversions and theory questions were manageable.
Nitish, also from VidyaGyan School, shared similar views: “Easy, nothing was new, no surprises. Subjective was short, MCQs were easy everything based on NCERT.”
This reinforces the idea that NCERT preparation played a crucial role in scoring well.
TEACHER ANALYSIS
Somya Hooda from the Chemistry Department at Silverline Prestige School described the paper as a balanced mix of competency-based and moderate questions. She said direct questions were straightforward and sample paper aligned.
“The MCQs and competency-based questions were of average difficulty, ensuring a balanced assessment,” she noted. Students completed the paper on time and expressed satisfaction with the difficulty level.
Another perspective came from educators who observed that Section A MCQs were slightly tricky and required careful reading. However, the paper remained NCERT-based and concept-driven.
EXPERT INSIGHT
Shanam Kandhari, Director at Genesis Global School, highlighted that the paper was NCERT-focused as expected. She pointed out that some MCQs required deeper understanding.
“The five-mark question of organic chemistry came from the alcohol-phenol chapter instead of carbonyl chapter. Most two and three-mark questions were not direct. Physical chemistry was comparatively easier, while inorganic chemistry remained concept-based,” she explained.
Kandhari concluded that the paper was balanced and moderate in difficulty. Conceptual clarity and thorough NCERT preparation were key to performing well.
FINAL TAKEAWAY
Across opinions, the chemistry paper was described as fair and student-friendly. It tested understanding rather than memorisation and offered scoring opportunities for prepared students.
Numerical problems and theoretical questions remained within expected difficulty levels.
Teachers and students agree that NCERT-based learning and regular practice would help candidates succeed in such exams. Overall, the paper maintained balance and accessibility.



