Nursery Admissions in Delhi NCR 2025-26

Form Dates | Admission Criteria | Results | Fee Details | List of All Schools

Of teetotaller parents and roomy houses/Fee Structure/Total no of seats vs applications(complete analysis) Also see Abha Sehgal Principal Sanskriti/ Amity Principal

“Nobody from Delhi is actually from Delhi” — is an oft-quoted fact that defines the pulse of the city. However, this does not apply to a good school education with almost all the best institutions in the capital making “alumni” and “sibling” the main criteria for admission under the 100–point system prescribed by the Directorate of Education.

“We get about 3,500 applications for the 100 seats in our nursery classes,” admits Amity School, Saket, principal Rekha Rana Dey. Her school is one of the 1,300 private schools in the capital. “We have just three criteria — neighbourhood, sibling and alumni,” says Sanskrit School principal Abha Sehgal. “We try to be as fair as possible. Neighbourhood, staff’s children, sibling and alumni are some of our requirements,” Ms. Dey adds.

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The “chosen ones” in many schools are sometimes decided by lots. While the policy makes clear that the criteria should be rational, reasonable and just, leaving no room for economic profiling of parents, there are many ways of brazenly flouting the rules, says Sumit Vohra, founder of admissionsnurserycom. Many of his applications under the Right to Information Act reveal admission criteria such as “How many rooms does the child’s house have” and “Is the parent a teetotaller.”

There is no guideline fixing an upper fee limit. Fees in the top schools can go up as far as 12,000 a month for a nursery student, and increase further as the student moves up classes. “There are approximately around one lakh seats available in private schools, which barely meet the requirements of about four lakh applicants,” Mr. Vohra says

here are far many more students than there are seats in 'prominent' schools. The cost of education in private schools is soaring, and admissions criteria remain mostly opaque. The Right to Education Act must deliver in this milieu

Capital Scene

A survey by AdmisionsNursery.com of five big private schools in Delhi shows that they charge between Rs. 15,000 and Rs. 48,000 per quarter, often including meals and transport with tuition. They also charge a one time admission/registration fee of between Rs. 25,000 and Rs. 50,000. On an average such schools get 4,000 applications for about 100 seats. Government schools in Central Delhi charge about Rs.1,500 a month and the others about Rs.1,290. Government pays private schools for each student under EWS category.

Bilingual circulars, outdoor picnics and special classes for the economically weaker section students — these are the steps taken by several schools in New Delhi in keeping with the spirit of the Right to Education Act, which came into force on April 1, 2010, to address the issues of dropouts, out-of-school children, educational quality and teacher training.

After the Supreme Court confirmed the constitutional validity of 25 per cent quota for the economically weaker sections some time ago, private unaided schools in the city are legally bound to reserve seats for poor children. However, there is still much to be done for the Right to Education Act to serve its purpose.

“There is always a way to get around this rule. I have seen parents who have luxury cars, admitting their children under this quota,” says Sumit Vohra of admissionsnursery.com.

Sometimes the schools are complicit and sometimes clueless. The costs and the fear of the “brand” going down because of their accessibility to the poor led some schools to project lesser availability and to resort to other clever tricks.

Demand and supply

For a fairly decent school, the seats available are heavily disproportionate to the number of applications received; yet no school is allowed to limit its application forms.

The fee for a student in the general category is almost 50 times more than the government’s payment of Rs. 1,290 for a weaker section student.

Transparency is almost always maintained in big and famous schools as one wrong move could land them in trouble.

“We go the extra length for these students while meeting the basic criteria such as provision of uniforms and meals; we have special parent meetings, make admission information available in both English and Hindi and organise special tuition for those students who cannot cope [with the workload] because of strenuous circumstances at home,” says Abha Sehgal, principal of Sanskrit School.

The Amity School, Saket, has also such special provisions and claims to try hard to help the weaker section kids “fit in” and feel like regular students.

Activists, however, say mid-level and lesser known schools on the periphery of the city are the most likely to escape detection if this provision is not met.

100-point system

This past January, there was an usual rush for nursery admissions with a litany of complaints, but one stood out: the process based on the “100-point system,” where a school could choose its students based on “sibling and alumni…”

The issue awaits a ruling from the Delhi High Court, where the process has been challenged as a violation of the Act.

The guidelines laid down by the Directorate of Education for the point system says: “Schools are free to identify any category based on policy/principles that are fair, just and reasonable within the ambit of the Act.”

It further says: “The categorisation of applicants can include sibling, transfer case, single parent and alumni.”

Allegations are also rife that though the guidelines prevent the screening of a parent’s economic or educational background to stop discrimination, many schools find ingenious methods for extracting such information.

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i have applied for 7 schools in mayur vihar phase 3 area. But there no chance in any school list ,even we have 50points in bharti public school. They have 62 seats for general catergory and they take all girl childs as girl have extra 20points. This hopeless, where we go now?

Wait till 28 feb , Do u  have any chance

A good analysis done by Mr.Vohra in great seat chase. Private Schools always try to keep their brand value high to keep the fee structure in high side. So they create their own guidelines which suits their needs to protect the same brand value. As Mr.Vohra said demand and supply problem is another major issue for a handful of seats they receive thousands of applications. Parents are the losers who have spend lot of money in getting applications and prospectus and make out their documents copies since due to uncertainty they are pushed in compulsion to apply in more than 15 schools and few have applied 30 to 38 schools even but yet with no seat in hand.  It's a open secret that seats on on sale in many schools and commercial dealings under the table going on in full swing for name to appear in 1st list. I think if all complainants join hands we can take some class of action. DOE on the other hand not taking any further actions. 

We were called by Ryan International School for verification of documents on Friday. And on reaching there, we were shocked to see how shamelessly the seats are being sold. We were told very clearly that if we pay 60K in cash right away our child's name will appear in the first list that will be posted at 4PM. When we asked the person asking for the money what was the criteria that was being used, he had no clear answer. As we didn't pay, our child's name was not in the list. And, in the evening we met a few parents who scored in sibling criteria and they told us that even they paid 55k to get their name in the list. I don't see how point system has regularized admissions. It has only given the parents tough time of running around to fill admission forms, wait for lists, get stressed and finally pay for the seat. If we have to buy the seat in the end then why do all the drama of buying forms, getting proofs attested and then verifying them. Let's just do an open house on the seats and close the same.

@ Mukta

File a complaint with DOE first.

I checked the DOE website but coudn't find any link to do that. Can you please help me with that?

Thanks Lathaaji. I have filed a complaint in DOE.

We have applied in 18 schools but not able to get any seat. Schools are having there own criteria of admission & it is different from one to another. APJ school is the nearest one to us but it is not having any distance points. They have there own criteria of recognised awardee And when result is displayed you can see only your child detail. others who got selected you can not see what was the base for there selection. As per school staff only 50+ points are getting admission.It means you should be Alumni+sibling+transferable job, if your child is not physically challanged. i do'nt know how all the selected cases can fall in this category for 180 seats in shaikh sarai & 90 seats in saket.

Any update for PIL. ..Shd we expect verdict today???

When is Hansraj Model School, Punjabi Bagh taking out its list? Can anybody pls advice...now even the school management is not attending the calls.

 

 

Almost 90% schools are out with their result and no hope tough I aplied in 15 schools. Can sombody assist where our kids will study or will they stay at home only.

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