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BREAKING: WAEC upgrades 2025 WASSCE results, English and Maths pass rate soars to 62.9%

The West African Examinations Council (WAEC)has revised the results of the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for School Candidates, significantly increasing the pass rate to 62.9%.

At a press briefing in Lagos on Friday evening, Dr. Amos Dangut, Head of WAEC’s National Office, addressed the media, saying:

“Gentlemen of the media, with deep sense of sorrow and regret, I, on behalf of the Registrar to Council, Management and Staff of the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), Nigeria, welcome you to this press briefing to announce the reviewed results of the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for School Candidates, 2025 in Nigeria.

“You will recall that on Monday, August 4, 2025, the Council, in Nigeria, announced the release of results of the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for School Candidates, 2025. In the course of the briefing, we told you that 1,969,313 candidates sat the examination and that 976,787 were males while 992,526 were females, representing 49.60% and 50.40%, respectively.

“From the analysis of statistics of candidates’ performance in the examination, we told you that out of the 1,969,313 candidates that sat the examination, 1,718,090 candidates, representing 87.24%, obtained credit and above in a minimum of any five (5) subjects (i.e. with or without English Language and/or Mathematics). And 754,545 candidates, representing 38.32%, obtained credits and above in a minimum of five (5) subjects, including English Language and Mathematics.

“However, during an internal post-examination review of the released results of the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for School Candidates (SC), 2025, some discrepancies were discovered in the grading of serialised papers. We had earlier informed you that the Council embarked on an innovation (paper serialisation) already deployed by a national examination body.

“The Council, being an accountable, transparent and credible organisation, further investigated all the serialised papers (Mathematics, English Language, Biology and Economics Objective Papers) and discovered that a serialised code file was wrongly used in the printing of English Language Objective Tests (Paper 3), which resulted in them being scored with the wrong keys. Nevertheless, the schools that sat WASSCE for School Candidates, 2025, using the computer-based mode were not affected by this error.

“Consequently, the observable decline in the performance of candidates earlier announced was partly traceable to this absurd situation. The Council sincerely apologises for this imbroglio and deeply regrets the emotional and mental dismay it might have caused the affected candidates and all stakeholders. We have been able to fix the anomaly, and candidates can now access their results on the portal (www.waecdirect.org). At this juncture, may I announce the accurate results obtained by candidates.

“1,239,884 candidates, representing 62.96%, obtained credits and above in a minimum of five (5) subjects, including English Language and Mathematics.

“Of this number, 582,065, representing 46.95%, were male candidates, while 657,819, representing 53.05%, were female candidates. A comparison of the percentage of candidates in this category in WASSCE for School 2024 and 2025 reveals that in this year’s (2025) WASSCE, there is 9.16% decrease in performance (that is, those who obtained credit and above in a minimum of five (5) subjects, including English Language and Mathematics, as 72.12% of the candidates did that last year).

“Gentlemen of the Media, as the reviewed results of the WASSCE for School Candidates, 2025, are being uploaded on the results website, candidates should, after checking the result online, apply for their digital certificate, which will be released forty-eight (48) hours thereafter. Candidates who have fulfilled their financial obligations to the Council can access their results on the Council’s results website, www.waecdirect.org, within the next twelve hours. Copies of the new result listing will be sent to schools shortly.

“Once again, the management of the West African Examinations Council pleads with all stakeholders to pardon us at this moment. This is very difficult for us to say, but we have to admit that it is very embarrassing. We acknowledge the emotional ordeal that candidates, parents, teachers, school administrators, Ministries of Education, the media and other well-meaning stakeholders must have had to deal with. This is a trying time for us at WAEC; we are doing everything we can to ensure that such dismal situation does not recur.”

The Council’s internal review found that the error occurred because a wrong serialised code file was used in printing the English Language Objective Tests (Paper 3), which caused incorrect scoring for paper-based candidates. Candidates who took the examination via computer-based testing were unaffected.

The revised results now show that 1,239,884 candidates, or 62.9%, obtained credit passes in at least five subjects including English and Mathematics—a significant improvement over the initial 38.32% reported.

Despite the increase, this year’s overall pass rate still represents a 9.16% decline compared to 2024, when 72.12% of candidates achieved the same standard.

WAEC has urged candidates to recheck their results online and to apply for their digital certificates, which will be available within 48 hours of result confirmation. The Council has also promised to send updated results to schools shortly.

The earlier results release sparked widespread concern, particularly among students who performed well in the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) but had poor English Language grades in the initial SSCE results.

WAEC management has apologized for the inconvenience and emotional distress caused, assuring stakeholders that steps are being taken to prevent such errors in the future.

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“We’re sorry” – WAEC apologizes, urges students to recheck 2025 results after alleged glitch

The West African Examinations Council (WAEC)has publicly apologized to candidates following a technical glitch that caused errors in some of the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) results.

In a statement released on Wednesday, WAEC admitted that a system error led to some students receiving incomplete or incorrect results shortly after the results were published online.

The glitch reportedly lasted several hours before WAEC’s technical team identified and fixed it.

During that period, social media was flooded with complaints from students who reported missing subjects or results that didn’t reflect their expectations.

WAEC has since assured the public that the error did not affect the integrity of the exams. No results were lost, downgraded, or deliberately withheld due to the glitch.

Students are now encouraged to log back into the WAEC result portal and recheck their 2025 WASSCE results.

WAEC’s Full Statement:

REVIEW OF RESULTS OF THE WASSCE FOR SCHOOL CANDIDATES, 2025

“The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) sincerely regrets to inform the general public of technical issues discovered during the internal review of the recently released results of the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for School Candidates, (SC) 2025.

As part of our efforts to curb examination malpractice, the Council embarked on an innovation (paper serialization) already deployed by a national examination body. It is also worth noting that this is in line with best practices in assessment. The paper serialization was carried out in Mathematics, English Language, Biology and Economics. However, an internal post-result release procedure revealed some technical bugs in the results.

The Council, being a responsive body that is sensitive to fairness and professionalism, has decided to urgently review and correct the technical glitches that led to the situation. As a result, access to the WASSCE (SC) 2025 results has been temporarily denied on the result checker portal.

We extend our deep and sincere apologies to all affected candidates and the general public.

We appreciate their patience and understanding as we work diligently to resolve this matter with transparency and urgency within the next twenty-four (24) hours. On this note, candidates who have previously checked their results are advised to re-check after 24 hours from now.

WAEC remains committed to upholding excellence, fairness and transparency in all our assessment processes.

Thank you for always counting on our integrity and reposing confidence in us to render quality service to the Nigerian child.”

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WAEC result portal crashes amid outrage

The West African Examinations Council (WAEC)result-checking portal suddenly crashed on Wednesday evening, just days after it announced the worst West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) results in a decade.

The portal failure, which WAEC attributed to “technical issues,” further escalated public frustration.

In a post via its official X (formerly Twitter) account, @waecnigeria, the examination body said efforts were underway to restore access within 24 hours.

“WAEC hereby informs the general public that the result checker portal @waecdirect.org is temporarily shut down due to technical issues.However, the Council is working assiduously to ensure that candidates are able to access their results in the next 24 hours,” the statement read.

The announcement did little to calm tempers, as thousands of candidates and parents continue to raise questions over the credibility of the 2025 results especially the mass failure in English Language.

WAEC had earlier revealed that just 38.32% of the nearly two million candidates obtained credit passes in five subjects including English and Mathematics, a major drop from previous years.

Many candidates took to social media to share their grievances, claiming the English Language exam was marred by disorganization and poor logistics.

Several reported writing the paper late into the night at some centres due to delays, with no access to electricity and shortened exam durations.

“We started writing at 8 pm under torchlights. They gave us just an hour to complete a paper meant to last over two hours,” user @_samad1 posted.

Another user, @sikimark said: “The English exam was a disaster. If JAMB can make corrections, why can’t WAEC? This is a national embarrassment.”

A tweet user @JayTrezy wrote: “WAEC is playing with the lives of young Nigerians. If most of those English papers are rechecked, heads will roll.”

“My daughter had multiple A1s and B2s, yet somehow got D7 in English. It doesn’t add up,” a parent, @Johnway11145073, tweeted.

Another user, @DEYHOT_official, pleaded: “WAEC, please look into the English results. This is crushing the dreams of hardworking students and parents.”

Some are now pushing for an independent investigation or intervention from higher authorities.

A user, @e_okwori, urged tagging the presidency and the Ministry of Education to involve external oversight in reviewing the process.

“We reject this result. WAEC must do the needful or prepare for protests,” @pastorbtdaniels said.

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2025 WAEC: Result of girl goes viral amid mass failure

A young Nigerian girl, Emmanuella Chidiebube, has gone viral on social media after her 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) result surfaced online.

Emmanuella, a student of Chris International School, became the center of attention after a Facebook user, Gadafi Idreez, shared her photo alongside her outstanding result, sparking admiration and praise from netizens.

According to the shared post, Emmanuella had A1 in seven subjects: Biology, Physics, Chemistry, Agricultural Science, Civic Education, Marketing, and Economics. She also scored B3 in Mathematics and C4 in English Language

Her remarkable result surfaced amid the poor overall performance in this year’s examination, as WAEC recently announced that over 60% of candidates failed to have credit passes in core subjects like Mathematics and English.

While celebrating her, Gadafi Idreez wrote:

“WAEC 2025 Result. This is Emmanuella Chidiebube from Chris International School. She distinguished herself by scoring 7 straight As in WAEC Examination. This is inspiring. May God bless her. Congratulations. Moral lesson: Girls Era.”

As mass failure trends online, Emmanuella’s result has triggered massive reactions from netizens.

Netizens Reactions…

De Borah said: “Congratulations gurl I tap from ur blessings.”

Thaddeus said: “Omo na just her luck if you see people result this year you go feel like say make you cry.”

Muhammed Salisu Fache said: “My son scored something similar to this.. Alhamdulillah.”

Halmat Hassan said: “Did she attempt all the questions herself? I know what I am saying as a WAEC supervisor.”

Uche Franksaid commented: “Future Nurse Congratulations dear I’m sincerely proud of you i pray guide and protect you.”

Munir Sadiq said: “Congratulations on your outstanding achievement, Emmanuella!” Ibrahim Nasiru

Okatahi said: “They should take that A1 in Marketing to be replace with English language. So she can qualify for the National scholarship scheme to travel abroad to further her education.”

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2025 WASSCE: “Only 38.32% passed English and Maths” – WAEC

The West African Examinations Council (WAEC)has announced a sharp decline in performance for the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE), with just 38.32% of candidates obtaining credits in five subjects, including English Language and Mathematics.

Out of 1,969,313 candidates who sat for the exam, only 754,545 achieved the minimum benchmark. This is a 33.8% drop compared to the 72.12% success rate recorded in 2024.

The alarming statistics were revealed by Dr. Amos Dangut, WAEC’s Head of National Office, during a press briefing on Monday.

He also confirmed that the results of 192,089 candidates (9.75%) have been withheld due to various cases of examination malpractice, including unauthorised use of mobile phones and organised cheating in some schools.

“All cases are being investigated and reports will be presented to the appropriate Committee of the Council for consideration and final decisions, Dr. Dangut said. “Affected candidates will be communicated through their various schools; and Candidates can now call for redress of their malpractice cases if they so wish.”

Breakdown of 2025 WASSCE Results:

Total candidates who sat: 1,969,313

Credits in 5 subjects including English & Maths: 754,545 (38.32%)

Male candidates among successful: 347,192 (46.01%)

Female candidates among successful: 407,353 (53.99%)

Candidates from Nigeria, Benin Republic, Côte d’Ivoire, and Equatorial Guinea—where the Nigerian curriculum is used—participated in the exam.

A total of 1,973,365 students from 23,554 schools registered, with 1,969,313 eventually sitting for the exam.

WAEC reiterated its zero-tolerance stance on exam malpractice.

“The Council will continue to sanction all cases of examination malpractice. Schools, supervisors, teachers, and candidates perpetrating this evil are not helping the educational system. WAEC is calling for all hands to be on deck to sanitise the system.”

How to Access Results

Candidates can check their results by visiting www.waecdirect.org using the PIN and Serial Number from their Smart Identity Card issued during the exam.

WAEC says results will be accessible within 12 hours, and digital certificates will be available 48 hours after.

However, results for candidates sponsored by states that are indebted to WAEC have been withheld until payments are made.

WAEC Special Needs Participation

Dr. Dangut also highlighted increased participation by candidates with special needs. A total of 12,178 students registered under this category, including: 112 visually challenged, 615 hearing impaired and 52 physically or mentally challenged.

He described their participation as a “significant milestone” in WAEC’s commitment to inclusive education.

”A significant highlight of the examination is the participation of candidates with special needs. A total of 12,178 candidates with varying degrees of special needs registered for the examination. This includes: Visually Challenged, 112 candidates who are blind or have visual impairments; Hearing Impaired: 615 candidates who are deaf or hard of hearing; and Spastic cum Mentally Challenged: 52 candidates with physical and intellectual disabilities,he said.

Hard copies of certificates for fully processed results will reportedly be available within the next 90 days.

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BREAKING: WAEC releases 2025 WASSCE results

The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has officially released the results of the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for school candidates.

This announcement was made on Monday, August 4, 2025, via the council’s official handle on X (formerly Twitter).

According to WAEC, all candidates who took part in the 2025 exam can now check their results online.

“The West African Examinations Council is pleased to inform candidates who sat WASSCE for School Candidates, 2025 that the result has officially been released today, Monday, August 4, 2025,” the statement read.

WAEC also urged candidates to log on to its result-checking portal at www.waecdirect.org to view their scores.