ICAI Declares CA Intermediate May 2026 Results with Pass Percentages and Toppers
The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) announced the CA Intermediate May 2026 results on June 24. Candidates can check their scorecards online at caresults.icai.org using their registration and roll numbers. The pass percentages were 10.25% for Group I, 16.11% for Group II, and 8.47% for both groups combined. Shardul Shekhar Vichare from Dombivali topped the exam with 531 out of 600 marks (88.5%). Successful candidates can proceed to the next CA course stage, while others may apply for re-evaluation.
First-hand measurement across 15 sources
We measured how 15 outlets covered this story. Coverage leans balanced overall (Left 0%, Centre 100%, Right 0%). Overall sentiment is neutral (63/100). Lens Score 25/100 — low public interest.
Outlets analysed (first-hand measurement by TBN's Bias Engine):
- ndtv— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- thehindu— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- indiatoday— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- indiatoday— balanced framing, positive sentiment
- thetelegraph— balanced framing, neutral sentiment
- indianexpress— balanced framing, neutral sentiment
- ndtv— balanced framing, neutral sentiment
- thefinancialexpress— balanced framing, positive sentiment
AI Analysis
The article group primarily presents factual information from official ICAI sources without political framing. Coverage focuses on exam results, pass rates, and top performers, reflecting educational and institutional perspectives. There is no evident political bias, as the content centers on academic outcomes and procedural details.
The overall tone across the articles is neutral to positive, emphasizing achievement and progression for successful candidates. While pass percentages indicate a challenging exam, the coverage highlights top scorers and official congratulations, maintaining an encouraging and informative sentiment without sensationalism.
How 15 sources covered this story
Each source's own headline, political lean, and sentiment — so you can see framing differences at a glance.
