NISM Series XV Exam 2026: Complete Guide to New Pattern, Syllabus, Case Studies and How to Clear It on Your First Attempt

{{DATE}}

Table of Contents

  • What Is the NISM Series XV Exam?
  • What Changed in January 2026? Old vs New Pattern
  • Eligibility: Who Can Appear After SEBI's 2025 Amendment?
  • Full Syllabus and Weightage Breakdown (2026)
  • The Case Study Revolution: 20 Marks You Cannot Ignore
  • Technical Analysis: From Peripheral to Central
  • Theory, Numericals and Time Management Strategy
  • Study Materials and Mock Tests: What Actually Works
  • Your Path to SEBI Registration After Clearing NISM XV
  • FAQ: Everything You Need to Know
If you are preparing for the NISM Series XV Research Analyst Certification Examination in 2026, you are walking into a fundamentally different exam than what existed even 12 months ago.

The January 2026 workbook update was not a cosmetic revision. It was a ground-up restructuring of how NISM tests your readiness to become a SEBI Registered Research Analyst.

This guide, authored by Prof. Sheetal Kunder (SEBI Reg. No. INH000013800), breaks down exactly what changed, what it means for your preparation, and how to clear NISM XV on your first attempt, even if you are balancing a full-time job. The only structured program updated for the January 2026 workbook, with chapter-wise videos, mock tests, and case study practice.

What Is the NISM Series XV Exam?

The NISM Series XV, Research Analyst Certification Examination is a mandatory certification mandated by SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India) under the SEBI (Research Analysts) Regulations, 2014. Every individual who wishes to become a SEBI-registered research analyst, or any associated person working at a registered RA firm, must hold a valid NISM XV certificate.

In simple terms, no NISM XV certification means no legal authorisation to publish equity research reports or stock recommendations in India. Key Exam Logistics

ParameterDetails
Exam NameNISM Series XV, Research Analyst Certification
Conducted ByNational Institute of Securities Markets (NISM)
ModeOnline (Computer-Based Test)
Total Questions100 MCQs
Total Marks100
Passing Score60 marks (60%)
Negative MarkingNone
Duration2 hours (120 minutes)
Certificate Validity3 years
Renewal ExamNISM Series XV-B
No negative marking means every question is worth attempting. That is a crucial tactical point we will return to.

What Changed in January 2026? Old vs New Pattern.

This is the section most candidates, and frankly most coaching platforms, are getting wrong. The 2026 update is not just "more chapters." It is a philosophical shift from rote memorisation to applied analysis. Here is a direct comparison:

FeatureOld Pattern (Pre-2026)New Pattern (Jan 2026)
Number of Chapters1315
Technical Analysis Weightage~10 marks15 marks
Case StudiesLimited, lower marks5 case studies x 4 marks = 20 marks
Question TypeMostly definition-basedScenario-based, applied analysis
Theory vs Numerical SplitTheory-heavy~35% Theory / ~35% Numericals / ~30% Case Studies
Primary FocusRecallApplication and Critical Thinking
Study Material AvailableWidely availableCritically outdated on most platforms
My Take: Most YouTube videos and free PDFs circulating online are based on the old 13-chapter pattern. Using them for the 2026 exam is like using a 2019 road map to navigate a city that has been redesigned. You will get lost.

For a deeper look at the regulatory changes that triggered this update, read our post on the Eligibility:

Who Can Appear After SEBI's 2025 Amendment?

SEBI's 2025 amendment significantly broadened who can appear for the NISM XV exam. If you were unsure whether you qualify, here is the updated picture:

Eligibility CriteriaOld RuleNew Rule (Post-SEBI 2025 Amendment)
Minimum EducationGraduating with a relevant finance background is often preferredAny graduate from a recognised university
Work ExperiencePreferred for RA registrationNot mandatory to sit for the NISM XV exam
Age Requirement21 years21 years
Who Must Clear ItResearch Analysts seeking registrationAll associated persons and individual RAs
The key takeaway: SEBI has made NISM XV a universal entry requirement for anyone in the research analyst ecosystem, which is exactly why the exam has been made more rigorous.

Full Syllabus and Weightage Breakdown (2026)

The 2026 syllabus spans 15 chapters across the updated NISM workbook. Here is how the marks are distributed:

ChapterTopicApproximate Marks
Chapter 1Introduction to Securities Markets3 to 4
Chapter 2Overview of Indian Capital Markets3 to 4
Chapter 3Regulatory Framework (SEBI, NISM)4 to 5
Chapter 4Financial Statement Analysis5 to 6
Chapter 5Ratio Analysis5 to 6
Chapter 6Valuation Concepts5 to 6
Chapter 7Technical Analysis15
Chapter 8Economic Analysis (incl. Case Studies)6 to 8
Chapter 9Industry Analysis4 to 5
Chapter 10Company Analysis (incl. Case Studies)6 to 8
Chapter 11Derivatives: Futures and Options5 to 6
Chapter 12Commodities and Currency4 to 5
Chapter 13Research Report Writing3 to 4
Chapter 14Ethics and Code of Conduct4 to 5
Chapter 15Case Studies (Integrated)20
Syllabus Weightage Chart
ALT Text: "NISM Series XV 2026 syllabus weightage chart showing chapter-wise marks distribution"

Caption: Fig. 1. NISM XV 2026 Marks Distribution across 15 chapters. Technical Analysis and Case Studies together account for 35% of the exam.

Want to strengthen your Ratio Analysis numerals before the exam?

Our dedicated post on walks you through the most commonly tested formulas with solved examples. Practice case studies with PSKA's updated question bank.Specifically designed for the January 2026 pattern, including all 5 case study types.

The Case Study Revolution: 20 Marks You Cannot Ignore.

If there is one section that separates candidates who pass on the first attempt from those who do not, it is the Case Studies. Under the new 2026 pattern, there are 5 distinct case studies, each carrying 4 marks, totalling 20 marks, a full fifth of your exam score. What makes them hard:

  • They are not standalone questions. They are deeply integrated into Chapter 8 (Economic Analysis) and Chapter 10 (Company Analysis).
  • Each case presents a scenario, such as a company's financial data or a market condition, and asks you to conclude using multiple concepts simultaneously.
  • They require reading speed and analytical accuracy, a combination most candidates do not train for.
Why you cannot skip them:
  • With a 60% passing threshold, entering the case study section with zero preparation means you have already conceded 20% of the exam. At that point, you need to score perfectly on everything else, which is unrealistic.
My Take: I have seen candidates with strong theory knowledge fail because they treated case studies as bonus questions. In 2026, they are foundational questions. Plan your preparation around them, not after them. How to prepare for case studies specifically:
  • Read each case at least twice before attempting the questions.
  • Identify the data points being tested, such as a ratio, valuation metric, or macro indicator.
  • Map each question back to a specific chapter concept.
  • Practice under timed conditions, as each 4-mark case should take no more than 6 to 7 minutes.
Technical Analysis: From Peripheral to Central. In the old exam, Technical Analysis was a supplementary topic that well-prepared candidates could afford to skim. That era is over. What is new in Technical Analysis (2026):
  • Weightage jumped from approximately 10 marks to a firm 15 marks.
  • Questions are no longer "identify this candlestick pattern." They are scenario-based: "A stock moved from Rs. 800 to Rs. 1,000 over 20 trading sessions with declining volume. What does this signal?"
  • You must understand how to apply chart patterns and indicators from an exam perspective, not just recognise them visually.
  • Trend identification, covering uptrend, downtrend, and sideways movement, is now tested through practical price movement scenarios.
My Take: Technical Analysis is now a score booster, not a burden. Unlike theory questions that require nuanced recall, technical questions have clear right answers once you understand the logic. Nail this chapter, and you have secured 15 marks with practice. Theory, Numericals and Time Management Strategy Sandip Hujare, one of the first candidates to clear the new January 2026 pattern, shares a preparation framework that has proven to work.The 35-35-30 Split
ComponentApproximate WeightageDifficultyPriority
Theory~35 marksMediumFoundation
Numericals~35 marksMedium to HighScore Booster
Case Studies~20 to 30 marksHighCannot Skip
Key insight on numericals:
Many candidates with non-finance backgrounds try to avoid the numerical section. This is a critical mistake. Sandip's advice: even a basic understanding of the formulas in Ratio Analysis, Valuation, and Derivatives can secure you a significant portion of these marks. Leaving them entirely blank is not an option when you need 60 to pass. The 45-Minute Time Management Hack. Here is the tactical approach that helped Sandip clear the exam on his first attempt:
  • Minutes 0 to 45: Solve all theory-based MCQs first. These are your fastest marks.
  • Minutes 45 to 90: Move to numerals. Set a maximum of 2 minutes per question.
  • Minutes 90 to 120: Dedicate the final 30 minutes exclusively to case studies. Read each case twice. Do not rush.
The logic: front-loading theory clears mental overhead and ensures you do not run out of time on the questions you are most confident about. Case studies demand a clear, unhurried mind, which is exactly what this sequence preserves. Study Materials and Mock Tests: What Actually Works. One of the most common complaints from 2026 candidates: there is almost nothing updated online. Most YouTube channels, free PDF sites, and even several coaching platforms are still running content based on the 13-chapter-old pattern. If you are using those resources, you are preparing for an exam that no longer exists. What you actually need for the 2026 pattern:
  • Chapter-wise video lectures mapped to the new 15-chapter workbook.
  • Updated PDFs and one-liners for Technical Analysis, Derivatives, and Commodities.
  • Mock tests that include all 5 case study types in the correct format.
  • Numerical practice sets for Ratio Analysis, Valuation, and Greeks.
  • A mentor who has read the January 2026 workbook in full.
Sandip Hujare credits his first-attempt success specifically to following PSKA's structured mock test program, particularly the case study simulation tests that mirror the actual exam format. Your Path to SEBI Registration After Clearing NISM XV. Clearing the NISM XV certification is the first and most critical step toward becoming a SEBI Registered Research Analyst. Here is what the path looks like:
  1. Clear NISM Series XV. Receive certification valid for 3 years.
  2. Apply for SEBI RA Registration. Submit an application with NISM certificate, educational qualifications, and compliance documents.
  3. Maintain Registration. Renew NISM XV via the NISM Series XV-B renewal exam before your certificate expires.
  4. Stay Compliant. Follow SEBI's Research Analyst regulations on disclosure, conflict of interest, and reporting standards.
My Take: The 2026 exam pattern is harder, and deliberately so. SEBI wants a higher bar to ensure that only candidates with genuine analytical competence enter the regulated space. That is actually good news for those who clear it. Your certification means more. Talk to Prof. Sheetal Kunder directly. Get your NISM XV preparation questions answered by a SEBI-registered research analyst with 18 years of experience.

{{AUTHOR}}
SEBI® Research Analyst. Registration No. INH000013800 M.Com, M.Phil, B.Ed, PGDFM, Teaching Diploma (in Accounting & Finance) from Cambridge International Examination, UK. Various NISM Certification Holders. Ex-BSE Institute Faculty. 18 years of extensive experience in Accounting & Finance. Faculty Development Programs and Management Development Programs at the PAN India level to create awareness about the emerging trends in the Indian Capital Market, and counsel hundreds of students in career choices in the finance area

FAQs

Q1: What is the NISM Series XV exam?

It is a mandatory SEBI certification for anyone who wants to become a registered Research Analyst in India. No certificate means no legal authorization to publish stock recommendations.

Q2: How many chapters are in the 2026 syllabus?

The January 2026 update expanded the syllabus to 15 chapters, up from the earlier 13-chapter structure.

Q3: What is the passing score for NISM XV?

You need to score 60 out of 100 marks. There is no negative marking, so attempt every question.

Q4: How many case studies are there and how many marks do they carry?

There are 5 case studies, each worth 4 marks, totalling 20 marks. You cannot afford to skip them.

Q5: What is the weightage of Technical Analysis in the 2026 exam?

Technical Analysis now carries 15 marks. Questions are scenario-based and test practical application, not just pattern identification.

Q6: Who is eligible to appear for NISM XV after SEBI's 2025 amendment?

Any graduate from a recognized university is eligible. Work experience is not mandatory to sit for the exam.

Q7: Can I use a calculator in the NISM XV exam?

Yes. An on-screen calculator is available during the computer-based test. Practice with it during mock tests so you are comfortable on exam day.

Q8: How long is the NISM XV certificate valid?

The certificate is valid for 3 years. After that, you must clear the NISM Series XV-B renewal exam to continue your SEBI registration.