For someone who scored 112.75 out of 119 and clinched All India Rank (AIR) 1 in CLAT 2026, Geetali Gupta’s preparation strategy might surprise many aspirants who readily take the route of burning the midnight oil. The 17-year-old from Rajasthan’s Sri Ganganagar never believed in fixed study hours. Instead, she followed a simple philosophy: set tasks for the day, complete them, and call it done, even in the days leading up to the exam.
When Geetali walked out of the CLAT 2026 examination centre, her first instinct was not confidence but doubt. Like many others around her, she thought the paper had been “very tough.” It was only later, while analysing her responses, that the noise receded. “I realised okay, I found it easy, but it was the opinions which made me think that it was a bit tough,” she recalled.
Adding that hearing the rank was a pleasant surprise, she said, “It’s really an overwhelming experience to be AIR 1.” She added, “No one really expects themselves to be the topper when they start their journey or when they start preparing for an exam.”
Currently pursuing Class 12 in the Humanities stream — with subjects including Political Science, History, Geography, Economics, and English — Geetali’s academic choices reflect her long-standing interest in Civics in Class 10, as well as a broader engagement with the social sciences.
When asked what drew her to law, she said, “I really like debating, Political Science, and Civics, which is why I chose law.” Political Science remains her favourite subject — a natural fit for someone drawn to the nuances of governance and legal frameworks.
But there’s an unexpected twist to her academic profile. Despite choosing humanities over the science stream that her engineer brother pursued, Geetali harbours a deep fascination for mathematics. “I specifically like maths. Not the other subjects which come in the PCM or PCMB. Just maths,” she clarifies.
This affinity translated directly into her CLAT performance, where quantitative techniques emerged as her strongest section. “As I am good at maths, I usually get a good score in quant except for the really hard sets.”
Interestingly, her predecessor, CLAT topper Saksham Gautam from the 2025 session of the national-level law entrance exam, shared the same mathematical inclination.
Geetali’s CLAT journey began in Class 11, though she admits it wasn’t intense initially. “It was more like I was discovering how to go about CLAT on the very foundation level,” she recalls. The serious preparation kicked in only after the previous CLAT session concluded, in the latter stages of Class 11, before going into Class 12.
With nearly one lakh candidates vying for a seat at a National Law University (NLU), and the period of examination coming close to that of Class 12 term-end, or Board exams – students often find that curricular examination preparation with CLAT coaching is at times overwhelming.
As keeping a balance between the two becomes crucial, Geetali credits both her school and Toprankers, her coaching institute, for being cooperative. She adds, “Whenever I couldn’t really attend a class of Legal Edge, then I would get the recorded session of it. So, it wasn’t really a problem.”
Emphasising that self-study is a key element in preparation, she said, “I just knew how to prioritise and what to prioritise at that time.” adding further that, while coaching played a crucial role.
General Knowledge proved to be her Achilles’ heel. “It’s a really vast section and it’s completely unexpected,” she said. Within the logical reasoning section, critical reasoning posed difficulties during preparation, though she lucked out on exam day when the paper focused more on analytical reasoning.
Her approach to mock tests was equally distinctive. While she remained relaxed during the tests themselves, the real work began afterward. “The seriousness came up when I had to analyze the mock,” she says, crediting Legal Edge’s doubt-clearing sessions for helping her understand where she went wrong and why.
In an age where digital detox is often prescribed but rarely followed, Geetali took a measured approach to social media. She deactivated her Instagram account mid-year but didn’t impose a complete ban. “I would often use someone else’s Instagram account,” she admits.
Her advice for aspirants struggling with social media addiction is pragmatic: “Don’t abruptly deactivate your account or delete your account. Switch to smaller time limits at first and then switch to maybe a weekly or monthly setup where you open it only once in a week. And then maybe you can deactivate your account.”
Asked about the three things that stood out during her preparation, Geetali’s answers show a mix of mental health and sustainable preparation: “First, not feeling guilty about whatever score or rank I get. Instead, focusing on what went wrong and what went right.”
“Second, consistency balanced with self-compassion—being regular with tasks but allowing herself to relax to avoid burnout.” And, “Third, leaning on mentors during overwhelming moments. They have been through it. They mentor so many students each year. They know what to say, what not to say, at what exact moment.”
For aspirants starting their CLAT journey, Geetali’s advice is simple: familiarise yourself with previous years’ papers, particularly English and legal reasoning sections. “They form kind of the basics of the exam. If you’re okay with the English that the CLAT paper offers you and with the legal reasoning they want you to solve, then eventually it gets easier.”
Like any topper, NLU Bangalore is Geetali’s top choice as “it has a really good reputation and reputation which works the best in the law field,” she said adding: “If you don’t have a good reputation, you don’t have any standing. You don’t have people coming to you for advice and that’s what we want people to come to us for advice.”
Her long-term vision includes corporate law, drawn to exploring how the private sector functions. But she hasn’t ruled out government service entirely. “Maybe the judiciary or maybe the JAG exam for the military,” she said, referring to the Judge Advocate General examination for military legal services.
As one of the few female AIR 1s in recent CLAT history, she is cautious about framing success purely in terms of gender. “I’d say it’s definitely a game of effort but it’s also a game of luck,” she said.
Geetali dismisses the notion that law remains male-dominated as “another myth,” though she acknowledges the profession’s demanding nature, long working hours and minimal work-life balance.