The tentative exam dates for the MH CET Law 2025 have been made public by the CET Cell Maharashtra at cetcell.mahacet.org. The tentative dates for the MH CET Law 2025 test for three-year LLB are March 20 and 21, 2025. However, April 4, 2025 is the tentative date of the 5-year LLB test.
In accordance with modifications to the MH CET Law 2025 registration schedule for 3-year and 5-year LLB programs, the exam dates may change.
It is anticipated that registration for the MH CET Law 2025 3-year and 5-year LLB programs will open on the official CET Cell website, cetcell.mahacet.org, in January 2025.
Tentative Exam date:
Tentative Exam Dates for 3-year LLB: March 20 and 21, 2025
Tentative Exam Date for 5-year LLB: April 4, 2025
MH CET Law 2025 (3-year LLB) exam pattern:
Total Number of Questions: 150
Total Marks: 150
Exam Duration: 2 hours (120 minutes)
The three-year LLB MH CET Law 2025 test is divided into five sections: There are 40 questions in the Legal Aptitude and Legal Reasoning portion, each worth one mark, for a total of 40 points. There are 30 questions in the General Knowledge and Current Affairs part, each giving one mark, for a total of 30 marks. Each of the 40 questions in the Logical and Analytical Reasoning section is worth one mark, for a total of 40 marks. There are 30 questions in the English part, each scoring one mark, for a total of 30 marks. Lastly, there are ten questions in the Basic Mathematics part, each worth one mark, for a total of 10 marks. As a result, the exam will have 150 questions and 150 points overall.
Key Skills Tested: Legal knowledge, current affairs, reasoning ability, English language proficiency, and basic mathematics.
MH CET Law 2025 (5-year LLB) exam pattern:
Total Number of Questions: 150
Total Marks: 150
Exam Duration: Typically 2 hours (120 minutes)
There are four parts to the MH CET Law 2025 (5-year LLB) exam. There are 30 questions in the Legal Aptitude and Legal Reasoning part, each scoring one mark, for a total of 30 marks. There are 40 questions in the General Knowledge and Current Affairs part, each worth one mark, for a total of 40 points. There are thirty questions in the Logical and Analytical Reasoning part, each giving one mark, for a total of 30 marks. There are 50 questions in the English part, each worth one mark, for a total of 50 marks. There are 150 questions total in the exam, which adds up to 150 points.
Key Skills Tested: Legal aptitude, current affairs awareness, logical reasoning, analytical reasoning, and English language proficiency.
Marking scheme:
The candidate will receive one mark for each right answer.
No marks will be subtracted for incorrect attempts because there is no penalty for incorrect responses.
For questions that remain unanswered, candidates will not receive any grades—neither good nor negative.
Candidates are encouraged to attempt every question under this approach because they won't be penalised for providing an inaccurate response.
For further information, candidates are advised to visit the official website.