Guide

Teer Timing Guide: When Each Counter Declares Its Result

📅 18 April 2026 ⏱ 6 min read ✍️ InstantTeerResults.in

If you follow Teer results, knowing the exact declaration window matters. Checking the site too early wastes time — checking too late means the number has been public for a while and you're behind your friends on the group chat. This guide lays out the full daily schedule across all four counters: Shillong, Khanapara, Juwai, and Night Teer. By the end you will know when to look, roughly how long each round takes, and what to do if a result is running a few minutes late.

⏰ The Full Daily Timing Table

Here is the complete schedule at a glance. All times are in IST (Indian Standard Time) and are approximate — small variations of a few minutes are normal on any given day.

CounterFirst Round (FR)Second Round (SR)Days
🎯 Juwai Teer~3:00 PM~3:30 PMMon–Sat
📍 Khanapara Teer~3:40 PM~4:10 PMMon–Sat
🏹 Shillong Teer~3:45 PM~4:45 PMMon–Sat
🌙 Night Teer~8:00 PM~8:30 PMMon–Sat

🕒 A Visual Timeline of a Working Day

If you want to understand when to expect each number through the course of an afternoon and evening, here is the order of events on a typical Monday-to-Saturday day:

3:00 PM IST
Juwai Teer FR — the first Teer number of the day drops. Jaintia Hills counter declares first.
3:30 PM IST
Juwai Teer SR — Juwai wraps up early. Its day is done while Shillong is just warming up.
3:40 PM IST
Khanapara Teer FR — KP declares. Often followed closely by Shillong.
3:45 PM IST
Shillong Teer FR — the most-followed Teer result of the day. Polo Ground declaration.
4:10 PM IST
Khanapara Teer SR — second round wraps quickly (30 min gap).
4:45 PM IST
Shillong Teer SR — last daytime result of the day. Polo Ground session ends.
8:00 PM IST
Night Teer FR — evening archery event begins declaring.
8:30 PM IST
Night Teer SR — final Teer result of the day.

📅 Weekly Schedule: Monday to Saturday Only

All four Teer counters run on the same weekly schedule:

Mon–Sat
Working days
Sunday
No sessions
6 days
Per week
8 rounds
Per working day

Sunday is a rest day across the board. No counter operates — no archery sessions, no results declared. If you visit a Teer result page on a Sunday you'll see a "Closed" indicator rather than a number. The same goes for certain Meghalaya state public holidays, when sessions may also be cancelled.

🕓 Why the Timings Differ Across Counters

A common question: why don't all four Teer counters just declare at the same time? The short answer is that each counter is run by a separate organising body in a separate location, and each has settled into its own traditional timing over years of operation.

Juwai's early slot

Juwai is the earliest, with FR around 3:00 PM and SR around 3:30 PM. This reflects Jaintia Hills archery tradition — the session has historically started earlier in the day, and the counter has maintained that practice. It gives Juwai the distinction of always being the first daytime Teer result each day.

Khanapara and Shillong: late afternoon

Khanapara (3:40 / 4:10) and Shillong (3:45 / 4:45) run back-to-back in the late afternoon. Their close timing reflects similar logistical patterns at each counter. Shillong has the widest gap between FR and SR (a full hour), while Khanapara's is shorter (30 minutes).

Night Teer: evening slot

Night Teer was introduced as a separate evening event. Its 8:00 PM / 8:30 PM timing addresses a specific community gap — people who work during the day and couldn't follow daytime Teer now have an evening counter that fits their schedule. It's run by a different organising body from the three daytime counters.

⏳ What Happens When a Result Is Delayed

Small delays are normal. The times listed are approximate — the actual declaration can be 5 to 15 minutes later than the scheduled slot on a given day. Common reasons:

When this happens on our site, the result page shows a "Waiting..." or "Expected any minute" indicator instead of a specific time. The page auto-refreshes, so you don't need to keep reloading — the number will appear when the official declaration arrives.

💡 If delays are frequent: the easiest fix is to join our Telegram channel. You get the number pushed to your phone the moment it's confirmed, with zero manual checking.

🎯 Planning Your Day Around Teer Timings

If you follow multiple counters, here's a simple rhythm:

  1. 3:00 PM: check for Juwai FR. Then wait for SR 30 minutes later.
  2. 3:30 PM: Juwai SR drops. Juwai is now done for the day.
  3. 3:40 – 3:45 PM: the "big window" — Khanapara FR and Shillong FR land within 5 minutes of each other.
  4. 4:10 PM: Khanapara SR.
  5. 4:45 PM: Shillong SR. Daytime Teer is done for the day.
  6. 8:00 – 8:30 PM: Night Teer FR and SR.

If you only follow one counter, you only need to remember its specific time. The Shillong Teer Result, Khanapara Teer Result, Juwai Teer Result, and Night Teer Result pages each show their counter's specific declaration time prominently.

🎯 Summary

Teer timings in Meghalaya follow a consistent weekly pattern — Monday through Saturday, with the daytime counters (Juwai, Khanapara, Shillong) declaring in a tight afternoon window, and Night Teer picking up several hours later in the evening. Sunday is universally a no-session day across all four counters.

Bookmark the counter page you follow, enable push notifications, or join the Telegram channel — and you'll never miss a declaration again.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What time does each Teer counter declare its result?

Juwai declares earliest: FR around 3:00 PM, SR around 3:30 PM. Khanapara declares next: FR around 3:40 PM, SR around 4:10 PM. Shillong declares after: FR around 3:45 PM, SR around 4:45 PM. Night Teer runs in the evening: FR around 8:00 PM, SR around 8:30 PM. All timings are IST and approximate — small daily variations are normal.

Do Teer counters run on Sundays?

No. All four Teer counters (Shillong, Khanapara, Juwai, Night Teer) operate Monday through Saturday. There are no sessions and no results on Sundays. Sessions may also be cancelled on Meghalaya state public holidays.

Why are Teer timings different across counters?

Each counter is run by a separate organising body in a separate location, and each has its own traditional schedule. Juwai's earlier timing (3:00 PM FR) reflects Jaintia Hills practice; Shillong and Khanapara settled into slightly later slots to accommodate Polo Ground and Khanapara ground logistics respectively. Night Teer was introduced as a separate evening event for people who work during the day.

What happens if a Teer result is delayed?

Small delays of 5–15 minutes are normal and happen occasionally due to the pace of the archery session or the time taken to count arrows. When this happens, the result page simply shows "Waiting" or "Coming soon" until the official number is declared. Check back in a few minutes or rely on our push notification / Telegram alerts to know the moment the result drops.

Do all four counters run at once?

The three daytime counters (Juwai, Khanapara, Shillong) run close in time but not simultaneously — each declares within its own window in the afternoon. Night Teer runs hours later in the evening. So on a typical working day you will see results come in at roughly 3:00 PM, 3:30 PM, 3:40 PM, 3:45 PM, 4:10 PM, 4:45 PM, 8:00 PM, and 8:30 PM.

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