Lahore Board Matric Result 2016 Gazette [Official]
Unfortunately, BISE Lahore’s official website (www.biselahore.com) typically hosts gazettes for only the last 3–5 years. Older gazettes like the 2016 version may be moved to an archive or removed. However, several reliable methods exist to obtain the PDF.
2nd Position: Hafiza Hadia Munir – Marks: 1087/1100
3rd Position: Ayesha Shahid – Marks: 1085/1100
(Note: In 2016, the overall pass percentage was recorded at approximately 68.33% across the Lahore Division.)
As of 2025, it may have been archived. Use the “Archive” or “Old Results” section. If not found, contact the board directly. Lahore Board Matric Result 2016 Gazette
Every private and government school affiliated with Lahore Board received a printed copy of the gazette in 2016. Schools often keep these in their administrative office. You can request the administrative staff to photocopy or scan the specific page containing your roll number.
The 2016 Gazette was organized into distinct sections to facilitate data retrieval for schools, colleges, and government departments: Unfortunately, BISE Lahore’s official website (www
Roll Number-Wise Results: Sequential listing of all roll numbers (from 100001 to ~450,000) with marks obtained in each subject (English, Urdu, Mathematics, Islamiat/Ethics, Pakistan Studies, and electives).
Grade Gazette (Separate Section): Equivalency of marks to grades (A+, A, B, C, D, E) based on the revised grading scheme.
To understand the legend of the 2016 Gazette, you have to remember the chaos of that summer. At 10:00 AM sharp, the BISE Lahore website faced a digital DDoS attack—not from hackers, but from panicked teenagers. The site melted. For three hours, "504 Gateway Timeout" became the most hated phrase in Punjab.
Desperate, students discovered the backdoor: the Gazette. 2nd Position: Hafiza Hadia Munir – Marks: 1087/1100
It was a clunky, 150MB PDF file shared via Google Drive links that spread like wildfire on WhatsApp. It had no search function. To find your result, you had to scroll—page by agonizing page—through scanned tables of 40 names each, praying your eyes didn’t glaze over.