Official link first

Use the official IPEMIS portal for roll-based result checking.

The official roll-result link is ipemis.dpe.gov.bd/scholarship-results. If the portal temporarily says that no scholarship-result data is available, wait and try again after the DPE system is updated, or use the official district-wise PDF notice from dpe.gov.bd.

01 // Overview

What is the Primary Scholarship Result?

The Primary Scholarship Examination is a competitive scholarship exam for Class 5 students in Bangladesh. It is not a normal pass-fail board result. It is a merit-based scholarship list. If a student’s roll number appears in the DPE result, the student has received either Talent Pool scholarship or General Grade scholarship. If the roll number does not appear, the student has not failed Class 5; they simply were not selected for scholarship.

According to public result guides for the 2026 cycle, the exam was held in April 2026 and the result was scheduled around July 12, 2026. DPE-related result pages mention a total scholarship target of 82,500 students, divided between 33,000 Talent Pool winners and 49,500 General Grade winners. For final confirmation, always check the official Directorate of Primary Education notice and the official IPEMIS result page.

Class 5Primary scholarship exam
DPEDirectorate of Primary Education
IPEMISOfficial roll-result portal
16222SMS number often listed in guides

02 // Online method

How to check Primary Scholarship Result online

  1. Open the official portal: ipemis.dpe.gov.bd/scholarship-results.
  2. Select the scholarship examination year shown on the page.
  3. Enter the roll number exactly as printed on the admit card.
  4. Press the search/check button.
  5. Confirm the student name, school name, roll number, and scholarship type.

If the portal is slow, avoid refreshing every second. Result-day traffic is heavy. Wait a few minutes, try from another browser, or check the district PDF from DPE. If you see a message saying no scholarship data is available, it usually means the public data has not been activated on that screen yet.

What should appear on the result screen?

A valid result screen or official PDF entry should identify the student clearly. Look for the student name, roll number, school name, upazila/thana, district, and scholarship category. Do not celebrate only from a screenshot shared on Facebook or Messenger. Match the roll number against the admit card and confirm the district/upazila. Many students have similar names, so the roll number is the most important identifier.

If the online portal shows a result but the PDF does not, or the PDF shows a name but the roll search does not load, do not panic. Result-day systems often update in batches. Save a screenshot, download the PDF if available, and ask the school office or head teacher to verify the official list.

03 // SMS helper

Check DPE scholarship result by SMS

SMS result checking is useful when the website is slow or internet access is limited. Public result guides commonly mention sending a message to 16222. Because SMS formats can change by official notice, confirm the final format from DPE before sending. The helper below builds a common format preview only.

Live SMS preview Build the exact message before opening your SMS app.
16222
Message preview
DPE 654321 2025
Open SMS app

Send to: 16222. Normal SMS charge may apply.

04 // PDF method

Download district-wise Primary Scholarship Result PDF

DPE also publishes district-wise scholarship-result PDF files. This is often the most reliable method when the roll search portal is overloaded. The PDF list normally groups results by district and upazila. On desktop, open the PDF and press Ctrl + F. On mobile, use the browser’s “Find in page” option.

District PDF finder
Open official DPE PDF page

Choose your division and district, then open the official DPE result notice page.

05 // Scholarship types

Talent Pool vs General Grade scholarship

There are two main categories. Talent Pool is the higher-merit category and is usually awarded to the top scorers. General Grade scholarship uses quota distribution, often by upazila and school type. Both categories are valuable because the scholarship follows the student into secondary school for three years, generally Class 6 through Class 8.

Talent Pool

Commonly listed as 33,000 winners, with a higher monthly stipend and merit-first selection.

General Grade

Commonly listed as 49,500 winners, distributed through quota rules and upazila-level allocation.

Monthly amount

Public guides list ৳300/month for Talent Pool and ৳225/month for General Grade, plus annual grant.

Duration

Scholarship support generally runs for three years, from Class 6 to Class 8, subject to rules.

What parents should do after the result

Once a student is selected, contact the school before submitting any document anywhere else. The school usually explains the next steps: which guardian information is required, whether a bank or post office account is needed, and when stipend processing begins. Keep the admit card, birth certificate, guardian NID, school ID, and result screenshot/PDF copy ready. Do not give original documents to unofficial agents.

The scholarship is meant to support the student’s continued education in Class 6, 7, and 8. Attendance and enrollment status matter. If the student changes school, moves district, or has a name-spelling mismatch between school records and official documents, report it early through the school. Small data mistakes are easier to fix before stipend disbursement begins.

06 // Safety

Avoid fake result links and scholarship scams

Result season attracts fake pages, copied logos, and suspicious “result check” forms. A real DPE result check should not ask for payment, password, Facebook login, OTP, bKash PIN, Nagad PIN, or full guardian bank credentials. The official roll-based link is on the IPEMIS domain, and official PDF notices are on the DPE domain. If a page asks for sensitive financial information just to show a result, close it.

Also be careful with SMS. Send only to the official number listed in DPE guidance, and confirm the exact format before sending. Some unofficial pages publish old SMS formats from previous years. A wrong SMS may simply fail, but repeated attempts can waste mobile balance. When in doubt, use the official web portal or district PDF first, then ask the school for confirmation.

07 // Troubleshooting

Roll number not found? Do this first

  1. Confirm that the official result has actually been published and activated online.
  2. Check the roll number digit by digit from the admit card.
  3. Try the district-wise PDF and search inside the correct district/upazila file.
  4. Ask the school head teacher to verify the result list if the portal is overloaded.
  5. Remember: no result does not mean exam failure; it means the roll was not selected for scholarship.

08 // FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is the official link for Primary Scholarship Result 2026?

The official roll-result portal is https://ipemis.dpe.gov.bd/scholarship-results. District-wise PDF notices are published through DPE pages on dpe.gov.bd.

Which year should I select?

Select the scholarship examination year shown on the official page. Some result pages may label the 2026 publication as the scholarship examination cycle for 2025. Follow the option displayed by DPE/IPEMIS.

Can I check the result without roll number?

For the online roll search, roll number is required. Without it, use the district PDF list and search by student name, school name, district, upazila, or other identifying details.

Is this page an official DPE website?

No. This is an independent guide that points you to official DPE/IPEMIS links and explains the process. Always treat the official portal and DPE notices as final.

Sources // official and reference links

Result sources and useful links

  1. Official IPEMIS Scholarship Result portal
  2. Directorate of Primary Education — Primary Scholarship result notice/PDF page
  3. DPE Result guide — how to check Primary Scholarship Result online

Written and fact-checked by

Kawshik Ahmed Ornob

Cybersecurity specialist, AI and NLP researcher, and full-stack engineer writing practical public-service technology guides.