IIMs Waitlist Movement

Tentative IIM Waitlist Movement 2026: Official RTI Data for All 20 IIMs

Every waitlist figure in this blog is sourced from official RTI responses filed against IIMs. If you’re sitting on an IIM waitlist right now — General, EWS, NC-OBC, SC, or ST — this is the only data you should trust.

The IIM waitlist movement 2026 data is here — and it’s official. Based on RTI responses filed under the Right to Information Act, this blog compiles the complete category-wise waitlist movement figures and the minimum CAT percentiles at which candidates actually converted seats in the 2025–27 batch. Whether you’re on a waitlist at IIM Ahmedabad or IIM Sirmaur, these numbers tell you exactly where you stand.
IIM Indore: 465 general positions. IIM Sirmaur: 2,919. IIM Ahmedabad: 33. The numbers don’t lie — but most aspirants never look them up.

Every year, thousands of CAT aspirants sit on IIM waitlists making decisions based on WhatsApp forwards, coaching centre estimates, and “my senior said.” The result: some candidates give up waitlists that would have converted. Others hold onto positions with zero realistic chance, delaying better decisions by months.

The fix is simple: use official data. Under the Right to Information Act, IIMs are required to disclose admissions data when asked. This blog compiles RTI responses from 20 IIMs covering the 2025–27 batch — the total waitlist movement in each category, and the lowest CAT percentile at which a seat was actually converted. Read this once. Make your decision with clarity.


How IIM Waitlists Actually Work

Before the numbers, a quick primer — because most aspirants misunderstand how waitlist movement happens.

When IIMs release merit lists, they offer seats to candidates ranked by composite score within each category. Many of those candidates hold multiple IIM offers simultaneously. When they choose one institute and decline the others, those vacated seats open up — and the waitlist moves down one position per vacancy.

Movement happens in waves, not gradually:

  • Wave 1 (April): IIM ABC acceptance deadlines trigger movement at IIM Lucknow, Kozhikode, Indore, Mumbai and below
  • Wave 2 (May): LKIM decisions cascade movement to IIM Shillong, Trichy, Raipur and newer IIMs
  • Wave 3 (June): Final settlement round — newer IIMs see the bulk of their movement as candidates lock their final choice

💡 Why Historical Movement Is Your Best Predictor

Batch sizes, category quotas, and candidate behaviour are largely stable year to year. The movement seen in 2025–27 is the most reliable estimate available for 2026. It’s not a guarantee — but it’s far more reliable than anything else publicly available.


Old IIMs — Tentative IIM Waitlist Movement 2026

The table below shows the total positions the waitlist moved across all categories at the older, established IIMs during the 2025–27 admissions cycle. Data sourced from official RTI responses.

Table 1 — Tentative Waitlist Movement: Old IIMs (2025–27 Batch)

IIM General EWS NC-OBC SC ST PWD
Ahmedabad 33 4 18 11 16 9
Bangalore 61 16 28 38 7 10
Calcutta 117 14 92 79 47 NA
Lucknow 137 25 83 31 30 24
Kozhikode 193 21 84 58 35 7
Indore 465 68 273 178 87 32
Mumbai 287 40 158 103 66 5
Shillong 646 79 91 0 5
Raipur 565 0 0 135 46 NA
Trichy 403 45 115 121 81 NA

Source: Official RTI responses, 2025–27 batch. Figures = total waitlist positions moved from first merit list to final seat allocation. NA = data not disclosed by the institute.


Old IIMs — Minimum CAT Percentile at Which Seats Were Converted (2025–27)

This is the data most aspirants don’t know exists. The table shows the lowest CAT percentile at which a candidate actually received and accepted a seat at each IIM in the 2025–27 batch — not the published cutoff, but the real floor after all waitlist movement was complete.

Table 2 — Minimum CAT Percentile for Actual Seat Conversion: Old IIMs (2025–27 Batch)

IIM General EWS NC-OBC SC ST PWD
Ahmedabad 90.98 97.3 77.53 85.39 73.14 73.25
Bangalore 95.45 91.03 81.7 73.04 76.33 NA
Calcutta NA NA NA NA NA NA
Lucknow 91.02 90.13 86.2 67.8 60.3 NA
Kozhikode 91.03 82.26 75.2 67.8 55.17 56.52
Indore 92.43 92.14 81.26 64.71 49.25 63.68
Mumbai 97.04 90.55 92.07 80.94 68.62 NA
Shillong 98.45 98.36 83.71 69.67 65.18
Raipur NA NA NA NA NA NA
Trichy 95.01 81.63 81.04 66.16 51.04 72.68

Source: Official RTI responses, 2025–27 batch. NA = data not disclosed. These are minimum percentiles at which candidates converted seats — not the published cutoffs.



New IIMs — Tentative IIM Waitlist Movement 2026

Newer IIMs often surprise candidates. IIM Sirmaur moved 2,919 general positions. IIM Kashipur moved 1,728. These figures reflect the reality of newer IIMs: a large proportion of candidates hold offers here as safety nets while waiting on older IIM decisions.

Table 3 — Tentative Waitlist Movement: New IIMs (2025–27 Batch)

IIM General EWS NC-OBC SC ST PWD
Udaipur 332 58 176 236 30 28
Rohtak 337 41 183 90 64 0
Bodhgaya 219 72 84 49 13 NA
Sirmaur 2919 353 1076 656 238 60
Sambalpur 728 182 445 238 100 50
Visakhapatnam 943 178 679 454 273 126
Amritsar 640 75 120 180 54 0
Nagpur 389 37 65 63 28 3
Kashipur 1728 27 107 302 157 186
Jammu 307 42 195 120 48 0

Source: Official RTI responses, 2025–27 batch. NA = data not disclosed. Figures = total waitlist positions moved from first merit list to final seat allocation.


New IIMs — Minimum CAT Percentile at Which Seats Were Converted (2025–27)

Some newer IIMs have surprisingly high general category floors — Rohtak at 97, Udaipur at 95.26, Kashipur at 95.09. These reflect growing brand equity. IIM Visakhapatnam (82.03) and IIM Sambalpur (85.01) remain accessible for candidates in the 80–90 percentile range.

Table 4 — Minimum CAT Percentile for Actual Seat Conversion: New IIMs (2025–27 Batch)

IIM General EWS NC-OBC SC ST PWD
Udaipur 95.26 86.43 81.2 70.76 43.09 70.63
Rohtak 97 93.04 83.19 63.61 50 11
Bodhgaya NA NA NA NA NA NA
Sirmaur 95 81.02 81.02 66.06 42.15 43.29
Sambalpur 85.01 80 75.01 55.08 42.48 41.1
Visakhapatnam 82.03 73.22 72.99 50.42 40.09 41.34
Amritsar 88.37 88.12 79.63 60.94 41.38 NA
Nagpur 94 77.01 77 60.02 40.18 40.01
Kashipur 95.09 81.48 81.04 66.43 42.59 43.29
Jammu 90.06 78.36 78.44 63.16 39.05 49.91

Source: Official RTI responses, 2025–27 batch. NA = data not disclosed by the institute in RTI response.


IIM-Wise Analysis: What the Numbers Mean for You

IIM Ahmedabad — The Tightest Waitlist in India

Only 33 general positions moved at IIM Ahmedabad — by far the most competitive waitlist. If you’re beyond rank 30–35 in general category, the realistic probability of conversion is very low. The minimum conversion percentile of 90.98 (not 99+) reflects IIMA’s composite scoring where strong PI performance can pull up lower-percentile candidates. But the pool competing for those 33 spots is exceptional. Have a Plan B in place.

IIM Bangalore — More Forgiving Than Its Reputation

At 61 general and 38 SC positions, IIMB’s waitlist is more active than most candidates expect. Its minimum conversion percentile of 95.45 general is notably lower than IIM Shillong (98.45) and IIM Mumbai (97.04), reflecting IIMB’s holistic evaluation where WAT-PI performance and diversity factors significantly influence final composite ranking.

IIM Calcutta — Large Movement, Silent on Percentiles

With 117 general positions of movement, IIM Calcutta’s waitlist is meaningfully active for an IIM of its stature. IIM Calcutta returned NA across all minimum percentile categories in their RTI response — a disclosure choice, not an absence of data. If you’re within 100 ranks on the general waitlist here, holding through May is a reasonable strategy.

IIM Lucknow — Best Waitlist-to-Conversion Ratio Among Old IIMs

137 general positions of movement with a minimum conversion percentile of 91.02 makes Lucknow one of the most accessible waitlists among established IIMs. The 83 NC-OBC and 31 SC movements confirm strong cross-category churn. If you’re within the top 100–130 on any category waitlist at Lucknow, hold.

IIM Indore — The Most Active Old-IIM Waitlist

IIM Indore’s waitlist moved a staggering 465 general positions — by far the most among established IIMs. Indore’s large batch size and its position as a frequent safety hold for IIM ABC aspirants creates massive churn through May. A minimum conversion percentile of 92.43 shows the floor is meaningful, but candidates well down the waitlist should hold through at least May before deciding.

IIM Shillong — The High-Percentile Paradox

Shillong shows the highest minimum general percentile in the entire dataset at 98.45, yet the waitlist moved 646 positions. This reflects a narrow candidate profile: very high scorers who overwhelmingly choose higher IIMs, creating rapid churn at the top. The ST movement of 0 is a notable outlier — suggesting very limited ST candidate interest in Shillong specifically.

IIM Sirmaur — The Most Active Waitlist in India

A general waitlist movement of 2,919 positions is extraordinary. Sirmaur functions as a safety hold for thousands of candidates targeting older IIMs. The cascading effect of decisions at IIM ABC and LKIM pushes massive movement here through June. If you’re on Sirmaur’s waitlist at any reasonable rank, patient waiting is almost always worthwhile.

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Should You Wait, or Move On?

This is the question every waitlisted candidate faces. Here is the honest framework:

  • Wait if your waitlist rank is within or close to the historical movement range for your category at that IIM
  • Wait if you have no confirmed offer from an institute you’d genuinely prefer over the waitlisted IIM
  • Move on if your rank significantly exceeds the movement range — e.g., rank 900 at IIM Ahmedabad general has no realistic path
  • Move on if you have a strong confirmed offer and the emotional cost of waiting is affecting other decisions
  • Either way, if conversion looks unlikely, start CAT 2026 preparation now — the minimum percentile data above shows exactly what score gets you in without the waitlist anxiety next year

⚠ The Hidden Cost of Waiting

Candidates who spend April–June entirely in waitlist-watch mode often neglect CAT 2026 preparation or career decisions. If realistic conversion probability is low, protecting your energy and starting preparation early is the better investment. Every week of May is a week of CAT 2026 prep you either use or lose.



FAQs — IIM Waitlist Movement 2026

Q1. What is the IIM waitlist and how does it move?

The IIM waitlist is a ranked list of candidates who were shortlisted but not given a direct seat offer in the first merit list. Movement happens when candidates who received offers decline them to accept seats at other institutes, freeing up positions for waitlisted candidates in rank order within each category.

Q2. When does IIM waitlist movement happen in 2026?

Movement happens in three main waves: April (after IIM ABC acceptance deadlines), May (after IIM Lucknow, Kozhikode, Indore, Mumbai decisions), and June (final round where newer IIMs see the most movement). Most significant movement occurs between April 15 and June 15, 2026.

Q3. Is the RTI data in this blog reliable?

Yes. RTI (Right to Information) responses are official disclosures by IIMs under the RTI Act, 2005. All figures in this blog are sourced from RTI responses filed for the 2025–27 admissions cycle — the most accurate publicly available data on IIM waitlist movement.

Q4. Why does IIM Sirmaur show 2,919 general positions of waitlist movement?

Newer IIMs like Sirmaur, Kashipur, and Sambalpur have large numbers of candidates holding their offers as backup options while waiting for older IIM decisions. When those candidates eventually choose older IIMs, their vacated seats cascade rapidly down the newer IIM waitlist, creating very large total movement figures over the entire admission cycle.

Q5. Why are some minimum percentile figures marked NA?

NA means the institute chose not to disclose this information in their RTI response. IIM Calcutta, IIM Raipur, and IIM Bodhgaya notably returned NA across all percentile categories. This is a disclosure choice — not an absence of underlying data.

Q6. My waitlist rank is higher than the movement shown. Should I still hold?

The movement figures are from the 2025–27 batch and serve as estimates, not guarantees. Each year varies. If you’re within 1.5x the historical movement, holding through May is reasonable. If you’re at 3x or more, the probability is low and you should focus energy on your confirmed offer or CAT 2026 preparation.

Q7. Does category matter for waitlist movement?

Significantly. NC-OBC and SC categories typically see more movement at older IIMs. ST movement is generally lower at most IIMs — and was zero at IIM Shillong in 2025–27. Always check your specific category’s movement figure, not the general category number.

Q8. I didn’t get an IIM seat this year. How do I use this data for CAT 2026?

The minimum percentile tables show the actual floor at each IIM — not the published cutoff. Use these as realistic CAT 2026 targets. If you scored 88 percentile and want IIM Lucknow (minimum 91.02 general), you know exactly how much you need to improve. Our May to IIMs batch starting 4th May 2026 is designed for exactly this situation.

Q9. How many IIMs are covered in this blog?

This blog covers 20 IIMs — 10 older/established IIMs and 10 newer IIMs — based on RTI responses for the 2025–27 admissions cycle. IIM Guwahati (22nd IIM) is not included as it is conducting its first-ever PGP admissions in 2026 with no historical waitlist data available.

Q10. Where can I start CAT 2026 preparation?

Quantifiers CAT Academy offers free study material, free mock tests, and structured courses. The May to IIMs B2A batch starts 4th May 2026 with live + recorded classes, 1:1 mentorship, 1000+ sectionals, and full CAT + OMETs + GDPI coverage. Explore all courses here.

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