Teer is a traditional and archery based lottery game in the Meghalaya india. The results are mathematically calculated based on the numbers of arrows hitting the target number. Each game (Shillong, Khanapara, Juwai) has two rounds — First Round (FR) and Second Round (SR).
The formula helps predict the results or calculate the “common numbers” used by players.
Basic Teer Calculation Steps
- Count Arrows
Each round records the total number of arrows hitting the target. - Sum the Last Two Digits
Take the last two digits of the arrow count and sum them. Example:- Total arrows hit: 124
- Last two digits: 24
- Sum: 2 + 4 = 6
- Adjust for House/Ending Numbers
- House number: First digit of the sum
- Ending number: Last digit of the sum
- Sum = 6 → House = 0, Ending = 6
(Different clubs may have slightly different rules.)
- Final Result
Combine digits or use patterns to generate a two-digit Teer result.
Example Table
| Round | Total Arrows Hit | Last 2 Digits | Sum | House | Ending | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FR | 124 | 24 | 6 | 0 | 6 | 06 |
| SR | 158 | 58 | 13 | 1 | 3 | 13 |
How to Use the Teer Formula
Suppose yesterday’s results were:
- First Round (FR): AB
- Second Round (SR): XY
Write them down like this:
A B - X Y
Step 1: Basic Calculations
- A + Y and X – B → gives one number.
- Y – X and Y – B / Y + B / A → gives another number.
You can experiment with plus and minus combinations for all four digits (A, B, X, Y).
Step 2: Handling Numbers Above 9
- If your addition exceeds 9, only take the single-digit value.
- Example: 8 + 3 → 1 (carry over ignored)
- Example: 5 + 7 → 2
This ensures all results stay within two-digit Teer numbers.
Step 3: Keep Practicing
- There’s no perfect formula — it’s about observing patterns and experimenting with calculations.
- Players often combine these calculations with previous results to check for common numbers.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This Teer Formula is for informational purposes only. It does not guarantee winning numbers. Always play responsibly.
Notes About Teer Formula
- Each club may slightly vary the method, but the general principle is counting arrows and summing digits.
- Players use past results to predict common numbers — not guaranteed results.
- Night Teer or other variants may have different calculation methods.