JAMB cut-off marks change due to competition, school capacity, stakeholder decisions, and public pressure. Smart students should focus on scoring higher and planning wisely.
Source: EduJobs Africa
In 2018, Aliyu Isah from Minna messaged me after scoring 198 in JAMB. He was surprised from his voice note. He said, “Musa, last year this score could enter my course. Why did they change it now?” That pain is common across Nigeria. Every year, students study hard, write UTME, then suddenly hear new cut-off marks and fresh confusion.
The truth is this: many students think JAMB just wakes up and changes cut-off marks for fun. That is not how it works. JAMB cut-off marks move because Nigeria’s admission system itself is unstable.
It Is Not Only JAMB Making the Decision
One thing most people do not know is that JAMB usually meets with universities, polytechnics, colleges of education, and other stakeholders before announcing minimum admission benchmarks.
That means JAMB is not acting alone. Schools also push for numbers that suit their realities. A federal university flooded with applicants may prefer higher scores. A lesser-known institution trying to fill spaces may support lower benchmarks.
So when people shout, “JAMB changed it again,” the real story is bigger than JAMB.
Too Many Candidates, Too Few Spaces
Every year, millions register for UTME, but available admission spaces are far smaller. That imbalance creates pressure.
If too many candidates score high in a year, schools can raise standards because competition is fierce. If performance drops nationwide, lower benchmarks may appear so institutions can still admit students.
This is why one score can look strong in one year and weak in another.
Politics and Public Pressure Also Matter
Let me be brutally honest. Education in Nigeria does not live in a vacuum.
When parents complain loudly, when lawmakers react, or when unemployment fears rise, admission policies can face pressure. Nobody says this openly, but public sentiment sometimes influences how flexible or strict the system becomes.
What Nobody Tells You
The biggest mistake students make is worshipping cut-off marks.
A cut-off mark is only the gate, not admission itself. Post-UTME, O’Level grades, catchment rules, quota systems, and course competition still matter. I have seen students with 250 miss Medicine, while another with lower scores gained admission into a less competitive course.
Focus on total strategy, not headline numbers.
What Smart Students Should Do Now
- Score as high as possible instead of targeting “just enough.”
- Check the official JAMB portal and your chosen school website regularly.
- Have backup courses and backup institutions.
- Prepare for Post-UTME early.
- Use realistic expectations, especially for competitive courses.
- Search for lesser competitive universities who accepts lower cut-off mark
Final Word
If JAMB keeps changing its cut-off marks, it is because the whole admission system keeps reacting to demand, space, politics, and performance trends.
Do not build your future on guessing numbers. Build it on preparation. The student who prepares deeply fears no cut-off mark.