AP POLYCET Seat Allotment 2026: Check Release Time and Website
AP POLYCET seat allotment 2026 for round 1 releases today. Know the expected time, official website link, login steps, and what to do next.
AC Team

If you gave the AP POLYCET exam this year, today is a big day for you. The Department of Higher Education, Andhra Pradesh, is releasing the AP POLYCET seat allotment 2026 for round 1 on July 7. This result decides which college and branch you get. So keep your phone charged and your nerves calm, because the wait is almost over.
Let's break down everything you need to know about the release time, the website, and the steps to check your result without any last minute panic.
When Will the AP POLYCET Seat Allotment Come Out?
The official schedule confirms that round 1 seat allotment will be released today, July 7. Based on the notification, the result is expected to go live by 6 PM. Timings for government portals can shift a bit, so keep refreshing the page instead of assuming the exact minute.
Think of it like waiting for exam results in school. Everyone refreshes the page a hundred times, and then it loads right when you go to grab water.
Where to Check AP POLYCET Seat Allotment 2026
The result will be available only in online mode. There is no offline or SMS option this time, so bookmark this link now: polycet.ap.gov.in/DefaultPage.aspx
This is the only official website for the AP POLYCET seat allotment. Avoid random third party links that promise early results. Stick to the official portal to stay safe from wrong information.
How to Check Your AP POLYCET Seat Allotment Result
Once the result is live, follow these simple steps:
- Go to polycet.ap.gov.in/DefaultPage.aspx
- Look for the candidate login link on the homepage
- Enter your hall ticket number, password, and date of birth
- Click submit to log in to your dashboard
- Check your allotted college and branch details
- Download and save a copy for future reference
Keep your hall ticket and login details handy before the result goes live. Searching for your password at the last minute rarely goes well.
How Does AP POLYCET Decide Your Seat?
The seat allotment is not random. It depends on four things:
- Your merit rank in the AP POLYCET exam
- The choices you filled during counselling
- Seat availability in each college and branch
- Your category under the reservation policy
So if you filled your choices carefully during counselling, your chances of getting a preferred college improve. If you rushed through it, well, we live and learn.
What to Do After Checking Your Result
Once you see your allotted seat, do not just close the tab and relax. There are a few next steps that most students forget:
- Download and print your allotment order
- Check the reporting date for your college
- Keep your original documents ready for verification
- Pay the admission fee within the given deadline
Missing the reporting date can cost you the seat, so mark your calendar the moment you see the allotment.
Documents to Keep Ready
Even though the allotment is online, the admission process usually needs physical documents. Keep these ready in advance:
- AP POLYCET hall ticket
- 10th marksheet and certificate
- Transfer certificate
- Caste certificate, if applicable
- Income certificate, if applicable
- Passport size photographs
Having these sorted early saves you a lot of running around later.
What If You Are Not Happy With Your Allotment?
Not everyone gets their first choice in round 1. If your allotted seat does not match your expectations, do not lose hope. There are usually more rounds of counselling after this. You can wait for the next round or explore other options based on updated seat availability.
Many students who did not get their preferred branch in round 1 ended up getting it in round 2 or 3. So this is not the end of the road, just a small speed bump.
Stay Updated
Since the process moves fast, keep checking the official website regularly for updates on further rounds, reporting schedules, and fee payment deadlines. Set a reminder for the reporting date once you check your allotment result, since colleges rarely extend deadlines for late reporters.



