Beginner's Guide

Teer House Number vs Ending Number: A Beginner's Complete Guide

Published Last Updated: 5 May 2026 9 min read Sports Desk Reviewed by Editorial Desk

If you have spent any time around Teer charts, counter chalkboards, or community discussion groups in Meghalaya, you have almost certainly come across two terms that are used interchangeably by newcomers but mean very different things to regular enthusiasts: the Teer house number and the Teer ending number. They look similar, they come from the same FR and SR result, and they sit side by side in nearly every chart you will see, yet they are not the same thing.

This beginner's guide explains exactly what each one is, how they are derived from a declared result, how players observe them, and why understanding the difference matters whether you are just curious about Teer or you simply want to read a chart correctly.

The Short Answer

Every Teer result is a two-digit number between 00 and 99. The house number is the first digit of that result. The ending number is the last digit. That is the entire definition. Everything else, charts, frequency lists, "house ending" tables, is built on this simple split.

4|7
House (4)Ending (7)

Example: a declared result of 47 gives a house number of 4 and an ending number of 7.

What is a Teer House Number?

The house number, sometimes written as "House" on charts, is the tens digit of the declared two-digit result. If today's Shillong Teer FR is announced as 83, the house number is 8. If the result is 05, the house number is 0. If the result is 99, the house number is 9. Because the result is always two digits (single-digit results are written with a leading zero, like 03 or 09), the house number is always a value between 0 and 9.

Culturally, the term "house" comes from the way enthusiasts have grouped numbers for decades. Each "house" represents a band of ten, house 4 covers all results from 40 through 49, house 7 covers 70 through 79, and so on. Some long-time players still talk in this older language, saying things like "today's house was four." That simply means the FR or SR result fell somewhere between 40 and 49.

What is a Teer Ending Number?

The ending number is the last digit of the declared result, the units digit. For a result of 83, the ending is 3. For 05, the ending is 5. For 99, the ending is 9. Like the house number, it is always between 0 and 9.

The ending number gets a lot of attention on Teer charts because it is the simplest possible summary of a result. Two results can sit in completely different houses (say, 27 and 87) but share the same ending (7). Some enthusiasts who maintain handwritten records track endings independently of houses, observing which units digit has appeared most often over a week or month. This is purely an observational habit, past endings do not influence what archers will shoot tomorrow.

How House and Ending Numbers Are Derived from FR and SR

Every Teer day produces two results per counter: a First Round (FR) and a Second Round (SR). Each is a two-digit number between 00 and 99 calculated from the last two digits of the total arrows that hit the target during that round. From those two numbers, four single-digit values are extracted:

RoundResultHouseEnding
FR4747
SR8282
FR0303
SR5050

This is what people refer to when they talk about the "FR SR house ending" of a given day. It is a way of breaking each round's result into smaller observable parts. There is nothing magical about the split, it is simply two single digits sitting beside each other.

Teer Number Types: A Quick Map

House and ending numbers are part of a broader vocabulary that Teer enthusiasts use. To keep things tidy, here is how they fit alongside the other common Teer number types:

Each of these is observational. None of them is a guaranteed prediction, and none of them has any influence over how arrows actually fall at the counter.

How Players Use House and Ending Numbers

Among regular Teer enthusiasts, house and ending numbers are most often used as a way to read history, not to forecast the future. Some common things players do with them:

It is important to be clear-eyed about what these observations actually mean. A digit appearing five times in a week is not evidence that it will appear tomorrow, and a digit being absent for two weeks is not evidence that it is "due." Each Teer round is an independent archery session; the result depends on how arrows behave on the day. Some players believe certain patterns carry meaning, but no chart, formula, or trick can change the underlying randomness of where arrows land.

House and Ending in Different Teer Games

The house-and-ending structure is identical across every regulated Teer counter in Meghalaya, only the timing and the source counter change.

Shillong Teer

Shillong Teer declares its FR around 3:45 PM IST and its SR around 4:45 PM IST, Monday through Saturday. House and ending values are read directly from those two declared numbers. Because Shillong is the most-followed counter, its house ending charts are the ones most enthusiasts look at first.

Khanapara Teer

Khanapara Teer (Assam side) declares results slightly later in the afternoon than Shillong, with its own FR and SR rounds. The house and ending numbers are extracted in exactly the same way. Many enthusiasts who track multiple counters keep separate Khanapara charts because the daily numbers do not correlate with Shillong's.

Juwai Teer

Juwai Teer (also spelled Jowai), based in West Jaintia Hills, has its own counter and declaration time. The house and ending split works identically, first digit and last digit of each two-digit FR/SR result. Some long-time players look at Juwai charts independently because the underlying archery teams and clubs are different.

Because each counter runs its own archers and its own daily count, there is no built-in correlation between, say, Shillong's house and Juwai's house on the same day. They are separate sources of data with the same structure.

Important Things Players Should Know

Before you put too much stock in any house or ending chart, it helps to internalise a few realities about Teer numbers:

Important: Teer common numbers, house numbers, and ending numbers are not guaranteed predictions. They are patterns observed by enthusiasts based on historical data. Always follow your local legal framework, stay within the regulated archery sport context where Teer is permitted, and treat all references as informational only. This article is for educational and cultural information only.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Teer house number and ending number?

The house number is the first digit of the two-digit declared result; the ending number is the last digit. For a result of 47, the house is 4 and the ending is 7. They are simply two single-digit views of the same FR or SR result, each tracked separately on Teer charts.

Are house number and ending number predictions of tomorrow's result?

No. They describe results that have already happened. Each new Teer round is decided by archers shooting at a target, and past house or ending digits cannot change how arrows fall in the next round. Treat any chart as historical data, not a forecast.

Why do people track house and ending numbers if they are not predictions?

Some players track them out of long-standing tradition, others out of curiosity about long-term frequency. It is similar to how cricket fans keep batting averages, a way of summarising history. Whether someone reads meaning into those summaries is a personal and cultural choice.

Do Shillong, Khanapara, and Juwai share the same house and ending pattern?

They share the same structure, first digit is house, last digit is ending, but each counter has its own archers and its own daily numbers. There is no built-in correlation between counters; a digit trending in Shillong has no mechanical impact on Khanapara or Juwai.

Can the same ending number repeat for several days in a row?

Yes. Repetitions are common because each FR and SR is independent. With only ten possible endings, it is normal to see the same digit appear two or three days in a row. A streak does not signal that the digit is more or less likely to appear next, past results do not control future archery rounds.

Conclusion

Teer house numbers and ending numbers are two of the simplest ideas in the Teer vocabulary, but they are also among the most misunderstood. The house is the first digit of the declared result; the ending is the last. Both are observational, both are easy to track, and neither is a forecast. Once you understand that, you can read any chart with confidence, and you can also evaluate any "guaranteed number" claim for what it really is.

If you are new to Teer, the best next step is simply to start watching the daily FR and SR numbers as they are declared at the official counters and to see, over time, how often each house digit and each ending digit shows up.

See Today's Live FR & SR Results

Latest declared First Round and Second Round numbers for Shillong, Khanapara, Juwai, and Night Teer, published as they are announced at the counters.

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