Before anything else, understand that "teer result" is not a single thing. There are four separate archery events happening on different grounds, under different associations, and at slightly different times. They are:
When someone asks "how do I check teer result," they usually mean one of these four. Knowing which counter you want to follow is the first step.
Teer results are not random, each counter announces at fixed times every day (Monday to Saturday). Here is the complete schedule:
| Counter | First Round (FR) | Second Round (SR) | Off Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shillong Teer | 3:45 PM IST | 4:45 PM IST | Sunday |
| Khanapara Teer | 3:45 PM IST | 4:45 PM IST | Sunday |
| Juwai Teer | 2:30 PM IST | 3:30 PM IST | Sunday |
| Night Teer | 8:00 PM IST | 8:30 PM IST | Sunday |
These times are when results are typically announced, not when the archery happens. The shooting itself finishes roughly 15–20 minutes before, officials need time to physically count every arrow that hit the target. Once the official count is done, the result number goes out and websites update within a few minutes.
Minor delays of 5–10 minutes happen occasionally, usually during heavy rain or large crowds at the ground. If the result is not up by 4:00 PM for Shillong FR, it simply means the counting is still ongoing, refresh in a few minutes rather than assuming something is wrong.
Every teer counter runs two separate archery rounds each day. The first is called FR (First Round) and the second is called SR (Second Round). Each round produces its own two-digit result number.
How the number is formed: archers shoot a set number of arrows at a cylindrical target called a teer. After shooting ends, officials count the total arrows that hit the target. The last two digits of that count become the result. So if 347 arrows hit, the result is 47. If 800 hit, the result is 00.
FR and SR are completely independent, there is no mathematical connection between them. Each round uses its own archer group and its own count. A person following Shillong Teer will see two numbers published each afternoon: one around 3:45 PM and another around 4:45 PM.
There are a few ways to do this, depending on whether you want it on your phone, in a browser, or automatically pushed to you.
Go to instantteerresults.in/shillong-teer-result for Shillong, instantteerresults.in/khanapara-teer-result for Khanapara, instantteerresults.in/juwai-teer-result for Juwai, or instantteerresults.in/night-teer-result for Night Teer.
The page always shows the current date's result. Confirm it matches today's date before reading the number, this avoids the common mistake of reading yesterday's result.
You will see two boxes, one for FR and one for SR. Each shows a two-digit number (00 to 99). If one box shows a dash or "-", it means that round has not been declared yet for today.
Load the page a few minutes after the scheduled announcement time. For Shillong FR that means after 3:45 PM IST. The site updates automatically as soon as results are published, no manual refresh required if you keep the page open, but tapping refresh once is the fastest confirmation.
Scroll down past the current result to find a table of historical results. This shows FR and SR numbers going back several months. Each row is one date.
If you do not want to keep checking a website, the easiest alternative is joining the official Telegram channel. Every time a result is declared, for any of the four counters, a message goes out automatically to subscribers. You get the number on your phone the moment it is available, without opening a browser at all.
This is especially useful for Night Teer, since the 8:00 PM timing often falls in the middle of something else and it is easy to forget to check.
Once you have a result number, you will often see it broken down into two parts: House and Ending. These are not separate numbers, they are just different ways of reading the same two-digit result.
The Ending is the last digit only (units place). So if the result is 47, the ending is 7. If the result is 30, the ending is 0.
The House refers to the first digit (tens place). For 47, the house is 4. For 30, the house is 3.
Teer enthusiasts maintain historical logs of house and ending numbers because they are interested in how frequently specific digits appear over time. The charts you see on teer websites, long tables of historical numbers, are essentially frequency records of these digits across past dates.
Sometimes people are not looking for today's result, they want to cross-check a past date, or they want to see the result from last week, or they need a month-by-month archive for record keeping.
This site maintains a full historical database for all four counters. You can find:
These records are sourced from official announcements only. No numbers are filled in speculatively or estimated, if a counter declared no result on a public holiday, that date shows as blank.
The most common reason: it is before the announcement time. Check the schedule above. The site updates as fast as physically possible after officials announce numbers, but the shooting has to finish first and the arrows have to be counted. There is no shortcut to getting the number earlier than when it is officially declared at the ground.
Look at the date displayed alongside the result. If it says today's date, the result has updated. Teer results often repeat, the same number can appear on consecutive days purely by the nature of how arrow counts work. This is not a display error.
On most national public holidays. Republic Day, Independence Day, Diwali, teer events do not take place and no result is declared. The associations also suspend events on locally significant days in Meghalaya. When in doubt, the absence of a result on a given date is itself the information: the event did not happen that day.
The official declared result is the same regardless of which site you read it on, the number comes from the physical count at the ground, not from the websites. However, some sites occasionally have data entry delays or errors. Cross-checking two reliable sources is a reasonable habit if the number matters to you.
The result pages on this site are fully optimised for mobile, the layout adjusts automatically to any screen size. On a phone, the FR and SR numbers appear as large, easy-to-read tiles at the top of the page. Scrolling down reveals the historical table. There is no separate mobile app required.
If you want a shortcut on Android, you can add the website to your home screen through Chrome: tap the three-dot menu, select "Add to Home Screen," and give it a name. On iOS in Safari, tap the Share icon and choose "Add to Home Screen." The site will behave like an app shortcut without taking up storage space.
New followers of teer sometimes wonder why Shillong and Khanapara results differ from each other even though they are announced at the same time. The two counters are completely separate operations. Different archers, different grounds, different associations, the counts are independent, so the results are independent. The shared timing (3:45 PM and 4:45 PM) is a coincidence of convention, not a sign that the counters are connected.
Juwai runs an hour earlier because it is in a different district (West Jaintia Hills) and the association there sets its own schedule. Night Teer is a separate evening event entirely, not an extension of any daytime counter.
That covers everything you need for checking teer results reliably and quickly. Bookmark the counter pages you follow most often, consider the Telegram channel for automatic updates, and keep the timing schedule in mind, the result will always be there within a few minutes of those announced times.
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Join Telegram ChannelDisclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. InstantTeerResults.in publishes archery event data as a public information service. We do not promote, facilitate, or encourage gambling of any kind. Teer is a traditional archery sport regulated by the Government of Meghalaya. Please follow all local laws.