BBS Result
· Jun 8, 2026 · 1 views · Super Admin

BSc Result 2081/2082: Check TU Bachelor of Science Result Online (Complete Guide)

A complete guide to checking your TU Bachelor of Science (BSc) result online by symbol number, understanding your marks, fixing errors, and the next steps after the result.

The Bachelor of Science (BSc) result is published online by Tribhuvan University's Office of the Controller of Examinations under the Faculty of Science and Technology. Whether you are checking a single year or your final result, knowing exactly how to find it, read it and act on it makes the whole process far less stressful. This complete guide explains how to check your BSc result by symbol number, understand your marks, fix a result that looks wrong, and plan your next steps after the result.

Table of Contents
  1. Where the BSc result is published
  2. How to check your BSc result step by step
  3. BSc subjects and structure
  4. Why practicals matter in your BSc result
  5. How to read your BSc marks
  6. If your result looks wrong or you failed a paper
  7. What to do after the BSc result
  8. Common mistakes to avoid
  9. Frequently Asked Questions

Where the BSc result is published

BSc results are released by TU's Office of the Controller of Examinations on tuexam.edu.np under the Faculty of Science and Technology. On busy result days, trusted education portals and news sites republish the same official notice quickly, which helps when the main server is overloaded. Your campus also receives the result ledger. Treat the official portal and your campus as the final authority, and use mirrors only for speed. For a full portal walkthrough, see our guide on checking TU results online.

How to check your BSc result step by step

  1. Open tuexam.edu.np or a trusted mirror.
  2. Find the Faculty of Science and Technology result notice for Bachelor of Science (annual / 4-year).
  3. Enter your symbol number exactly as printed, plus registration number or date of birth if asked.
  4. Submit and save your result status.
  5. Collect your official marksheet from your campus once it is distributed.

If you have lost your symbol number, our symbol number guide explains how to recover it.

BSc subjects and structure

BSc combines theory and laboratory work, and your papers depend on your major — Physics, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology, Microbiology, Mathematics, Statistics, Computer Science and others. Practical and lab marks usually count toward your result, so a strong BSc result reflects both written and practical performance. If only theory marks appear, wait for the complete notice or confirm with your department. Always check which of your papers carry practical components.

Why practicals matter in your BSc result

In most BSc subjects, laboratory and practical marks are combined with theory to form your final result. This means consistent lab work through the year directly affects your grade — you cannot rely on theory alone. If you ever fail only the practical component, you typically re-sit that component in the next attempt, so check your department's specific rules. Treat your practicals as seriously as your theory papers throughout the year.

How to read your BSc marks

Depending on your batch, BSc results appear as marks and percentage or as letter grades and GPA. In the traditional system the pass mark is usually 35% per subject, with First Division commonly at 60% and above. In the grade system, each subject earns a grade point and your GPA is the credit-weighted average. Check your marksheet legend or confirm with your campus so you read your standing correctly — our grading system guide explains both systems in detail.

If your result looks wrong or you failed a paper

If a mark looks wrong, you can apply for re-totaling within the official deadline. If you failed a paper, you can clear it through the chance/back exam and still progress — read our recovery plan. A single setback is not the end of the road, and acting within the deadlines keeps your options open.

What to do after the BSc result

After you pass, request your transcript and attend convocation to receive your degree certificate. If you are moving to another university you may also need a migration certificate. Planning these steps early keeps you ready for jobs or further study, so you can act the moment an opportunity appears.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Mistyping the symbol number or opening the wrong notice.
  • Treating the online pass/fail status as your final marksheet.
  • Missing the short re-totaling deadline.
  • Refreshing repeatedly when the server is busy instead of trying off-peak hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I check my TU BSc result?

On tuexam.edu.np under the Faculty of Science and Technology notice for your BSc subject, using your symbol number.

Do practical marks count in the BSc result?

Yes. In most BSc subjects, laboratory/practical marks are combined with theory marks to form your final result.

What is the pass mark in BSc?

Generally you must pass both theory and practical components; the traditional pass mark is 35%. Grade-based batches use the grading scheme.

What if I failed only the practical exam?

You typically re-sit the failed component in the next attempt. Check your department's specific rules.

Can I apply for re-totaling in BSc?

Yes, within the official deadline if you believe a theory mark is wrong. Practical marks follow separate departmental rules.

Is the online BSc result official?

It is reliable for a quick pass/fail check; your signed marksheet with theory and practical marks from the campus is the final document.

How long is the BSc programme at TU?

BSc is commonly a four-year programme under the Faculty of Science and Technology. Confirm the exact structure for your subject with your campus.

Can I check my BSc result on mobile?

Yes. Open tuexam.edu.np in your phone browser, select the notice for your BSc subject, and enter your symbol number.

What can I do after BSc?

BSc graduates pursue careers in research, laboratories, education, health and technical fields, or continue to an MSc or related Master's in their subject.