Chapter-wise PDF notes for JEE Main, NEET UG, CBSE Class 10 & 12, RBSE, and state board exams. Built for revision speed — no bloat, no fluff, just what the exam actually tests.
Most notes reproduce what the textbook already says at full length. These are different — every set is built around what the exam actually asks, how many marks each concept carries, and what a student needs at 11pm the night before.
Every note set is mapped against the official syllabus — NTA pattern for JEE and NEET, and the current CBSE and RBSE curricula. Nothing irrelevant makes it in.
Formulas, definitions, and key facts are front-loaded so you can scan the critical points in minutes. Explanations follow for the concepts that need them.
No account, no email, no paywalls. Open the note page and hit download. Works on mobile and desktop — save to your device for offline use during commutes or study sessions.
All notes are shared for educational purposes only. Always cross-reference with official textbooks and your school or coaching faculty for complete accuracy.
Each subject is broken into individual chapters so you can study a single concept without wading through a 200-page file. Targeted revision becomes a practical habit, not a plan.
When NTA revises the JEE or NEET syllabus, or CBSE updates its pattern, notes are reviewed and updated to reflect those changes before the next exam season.
Notes are formatted for readability on small screens. Clear headings, adequate font sizing, and lean layouts make studying from your phone practical — not a last resort.
Different exams demand different things from study notes. Here is what to look for and how to use the notes on this platform for each type.
JEE notes need to do two things well: compress derivations into their most testable form, and present formulas in the context of the problem types they appear in. A student revising Electrostatics at 10pm the night before a mock test does not need a derivation of Gauss's Law from first principles — they need the four or five results that come from it, the conditions under which each applies, and a note on the common traps in JEE MCQs on that topic. That is what JEE notes on ExamSupport are structured to deliver.
NEET Biology is the subject where good notes matter most. The syllabus is vast, many topics are genuinely NCERT-verbatim in the exam, and the names, classifications, and diagrams that appear in questions demand accurate memorisation — not general understanding. NEET notes on ExamSupport present Biology chapter-by-chapter with NCERT-aligned definitions, diagram labels, and a list of the facts most commonly tested in previous years. Physics and Chemistry notes follow the same revision-first structure as the JEE notes.
CBSE board notes are different from competitive exam notes in one critical way: marks in board exams are awarded for specific steps and specific phrasing, not just correct answers. Notes for CBSE on ExamSupport are built around the official marking scheme — they flag which derivations are frequently asked for full marks, which definitions are quoted verbatim in mark schemes, and how much depth is expected for 1, 2, 3, and 5-mark questions. This makes them more useful than general notes during the final revision weeks.
RBSE students often find it harder to locate high-quality notes than their CBSE counterparts — most ed-tech platforms focus on CBSE and treat state boards as secondary. ExamSupport treats RBSE as a first-class exam. Notes are aligned with the Rajasthan board syllabus specifically, cover subjects in both Hindi and English where available, and reflect the question style of the RBSE board papers rather than reusing CBSE material with a different label on it.
The single most common mistake students make with downloaded notes is reading them passively, the same way they read a textbook. Notes are a revision tool, not a learning tool. Here is the difference in practice.
Notes are not a replacement for first learning. Read the chapter in your textbook or watch a lecture. Build an initial understanding before you open the notes for that chapter.
After studying the chapter, open the notes and test yourself. Cover each formula and try to recall it before reading it. If you cannot, that is your gap — not a general weakness, but a specific, fixable one.
Print the notes or annotate them in a PDF app. For every formula or definition, write one concrete example from a problem you have already solved. Your own annotations make the notes significantly more effective than a clean copy.
The first pass takes 20 minutes. The second, a week later, takes 10. The third, a week after that, takes 5. Spaced repetition on the same set of notes produces retention that a single careful read never achieves.
After revising a chapter using notes, solve 10–15 past paper questions from that chapter. This completes the loop: notes tell you what to know, past papers tell you how the exam uses it.
In the last seven days before an exam, stop studying new material. Your notes are everything at this stage. Cycle through each chapter's notes daily, spending no more than 10 minutes per chapter.
JEE · NEET · CBSE · RBSE
Physics notes that work contain three things: the derivation pathway in condensed form (2–3 lines per major result), the final formula with every variable defined, and the boundary conditions where the formula breaks down. A note that only gives you F = ma without telling you when it fails (relativistic speeds, non-inertial frames) is half a note. The best Physics revision happens when you can look at a formula and immediately name two exam contexts where it appears.
JEE · NEET · CBSE · RBSE
Chemistry divides into three very different note-taking problems. Physical Chemistry is formula-heavy and requires the same treatment as Physics. Organic Chemistry is reaction-heavy — notes should be reaction maps, not prose, with mechanisms condensed to the essential electron-pushing steps. Inorganic Chemistry is fact-heavy, and the only useful note format is a tight table: compound, property, exam-testable fact. Mixing these formats produces notes that work against you.
NEET · CBSE · RBSE
Biology for NEET is a memorisation problem, not a comprehension problem. Almost every question has a direct answer in the NCERT text — sometimes a verbatim sentence. Good Biology notes extract the NCERT lines most likely to appear, present classification tables in a scannable format, and flag every diagram that has appeared in past NEET papers (labelling questions are consistent year on year). A Biology note that reads like an essay will not help you. A Biology note that reads like a dense table of facts will.
The highest-performing students use notes and previous year papers together as a cycle, not as separate activities. Notes build the knowledge base; past papers reveal how the examiner uses that knowledge to set traps, distribute marks, and phrase questions.
A reliable routine: revise a chapter using notes → solve 15 past-paper questions from that chapter → identify gaps → return to notes to patch them. One cycle of this per chapter, repeated across the full syllabus, is more effective than any single approach used in isolation.
Repeat for each chapter. Adjust pacing to your exam date.
Yes. Every note on ExamSupport is free. No account, email confirmation, or payment is needed at any point. Click the note, hit download, done.
Yes. Notes are reviewed at the start of each academic year against the official syllabus documents — NTA guidelines for JEE and NEET, and the current CBSE and RBSE curricula.
Yes. The site is fully mobile-optimised. PDFs save directly to your phone's storage and can be read offline in any PDF viewer — no internet connection needed while studying.
Where official RBSE content is available in Hindi, notes reflect that. Some RBSE notes are available in both Hindi and English. The language is indicated on each note's detail page.
Notes are revision tools, not primary learning tools. Study your textbook or attend lectures first, then use these notes to consolidate and revise. Using notes as your only source is not recommended, especially for NEET Biology where NCERT verbatim accuracy matters.
Physics, Chemistry, and Mathematics notes are available for JEE Main. JEE Advanced notes for specific high-difficulty topics are being added progressively.
Most notes found via Google are either too long (textbook reproductions) or too shallow (bullet lists without context). ExamSupport notes are structured specifically around exam marking schemes — they tell you what to know and how much depth the exam expects.
Yes. Use the contact page to request specific chapters. We prioritise requests for topics that multiple students ask for in a short period.
ExamSupport provides free, chapter-wise study notes in PDF format for students preparing for JEE Main, JEE Advanced, NEET UG, CBSE Class 10, CBSE Class 12, RBSE Class 10, RBSE Class 12, and a range of state board and competitive examinations across India. All notes are available for immediate download without registration or payment.
Notes on ExamSupport are written to function as revision tools, not as primary learning material. Each set is structured around the official exam syllabus — the current NTA pattern for JEE and NEET, and the updated board curricula for CBSE and RBSE. Formulas, key definitions, and exam-critical facts are prioritised over extended prose explanations, making the notes suitable for rapid revision in the weeks and days before an examination.
Subject coverage includes Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics, and Biology for competitive exams, and Science, Mathematics, Social Science, English, and Hindi for board exams. Notes are organised by exam type, then by subject, then by chapter, so you can locate exactly what you need without navigating a cluttered interface.
All notes are reviewed and updated at the start of each academic year to reflect syllabus changes. New chapters are added continuously based on student requests and exam priority. Bookmark this page and check back regularly for new additions.
All materials on ExamSupport are shared strictly for personal educational use. Always cross-reference with official textbooks and your school or coaching faculty for complete and authoritative information.