logo
Delhi University CSAS round 3 seat allocation results released: Check direct link to download list here

Delhi University CSAS round 3 seat allocation results released: Check direct link to download list here

Time of India2 days ago
Delhi University
has released the Round 3 seat allocation list for undergraduate admissions today, August 5, 2025, on its official website, admission.uod.ac.in. This list shows the updated seat allotments for students who applied for a change (upgrade) after Round 2, as well as fresh applicants through the Mid-Entry window.
Students can now check which college and course they have been allotted, and must complete the admission steps including college approval and fee payment, within the given deadlines. Those who didn't get a seat earlier or were rejected can try again through the mid-entry process.
How to check DU round 3
seat allotment list
Here is how students can check and download the round 3 allotment list online:
Visit admission.uod.ac.in.
Click on the CSAS UG portal.
Log in using your CUET application number and password.
View your Round 3 allotment and download/print the confirmation.
Direct link to download DU seat allotment list
.
What is mid-entry?
If you didn't get a seat in Rounds 1 or 2, or if your application was rejected earlier due to any reason, you still have a chance to apply through the Mid-Entry option.
This allows fresh candidates to enter the admission process by submitting a new application. To do this, you need to pay a non-refundable fee of ₹1,000. The Mid-Entry window will be open from August 8 to August 10, and all interested candidates must complete their application within this period to be considered for the next round of seat allocation.
Final round for special categories
The final seat allotment list, which will be released on August 13, will also include admissions under various special categories. These categories are:
Sports quota
ECA (Extra-Curricular Activities)
CW (Children/Widows of Armed Forces personnel)
Ward quota
Courses requiring talent or practical tests such as Music, Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA), and Physical Education
Students who applied under any of these categories should check the final list carefully and complete the admission process within the given deadlines.
TOI Education is on WhatsApp now. Follow us
here
.
Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Delhi University UG Admissions 2025: Over 71,000 seats filled across 69 colleges; mid-entry window opens August 8
Delhi University UG Admissions 2025: Over 71,000 seats filled across 69 colleges; mid-entry window opens August 8

Indian Express

time11 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Delhi University UG Admissions 2025: Over 71,000 seats filled across 69 colleges; mid-entry window opens August 8

Delhi University has confirmed admissions for 71,130 undergraduate students for the academic year 2025-26, nearly filling up its total capacity of 71,624 undergraduate seats across its 79 programmes in 69 colleges. The university made this announcement following the release of the third round of seat allocations under the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS). According to the Delhi University admissions data, in this round, the university had allowed candidates from the first and second allotment rounds to reorder their college and course preferences. The upgradation window remained open between August 2 and 3. A total of 34,069 candidates chose to apply for an upgrade, while 35,889 candidates opted to freeze their earlier allotments. Based on these requests, 5,930 students successfully received an upgraded seat as per their higher preferences. Candidates who received allotments in this round are required to accept the allocated seat and complete the fee payment process by August 7. Failure to do so will result in cancellation of the allotted seat. The process of document verification and fee submission is being handled by individual colleges. Following the closure of this round, the university will release a list of vacant seats on August 8. This will mark the opening of the Mid-Entry window, which is scheduled to begin at 5 PM on August 8 and will close at 4:59 PM on August 10. The Mid-Entry provision allows candidates who did not apply earlier through CSAS, or who failed to complete Phase 2 of the application, to participate in the admission process. It also gives an opportunity to students whose applications were rejected in earlier rounds due to errors in subject mapping or invalid documents. Such candidates can re-enter the system by paying a non-refundable fee of Rs 1,000 and updating their preferences or correcting earlier mistakes during the window period. After the Mid-Entry phase, the next list of seat allocations will be published on August 13. This round will include candidates from performance-based courses such as Music, BFA, and Physical Education, as well as seats reserved under CW (Children of War Widows), ECA (Extra-Curricular Activities), Sports, and Ward quotas. The first allocation list for these quotas is scheduled for release on August 15. The final date for completing the entire undergraduate admission process has been set as August 19, after which no new admissions will be processed. Notably, Delhi University has already started its academic session from August 1, 2025, aligning its calendar with the University Grants Commission's (UGC) guidelines. (With inputs from PTI)

Delhi University UG Common Seat Allocation System round 3 result out
Delhi University UG Common Seat Allocation System round 3 result out

India Today

time19 hours ago

  • India Today

Delhi University UG Common Seat Allocation System round 3 result out

The University of Delhi has released the third round of seat allotments under the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS) 2025 for undergraduate admissions. Candidates can now check their upgraded allocations on the official portal who have secured a seat in this round must accept their allotted program and college and pay the admission fee by August 7 (4:59 pm) to confirm admission. If the fee is not submitted within the deadline, the seat will stand per the official schedule, colleges will verify and approve online applications until August 6, 5 NEXT FOR CANDIDATES? Students allotted a seat in this round need to accept the allocation and complete the fee payment within the given who missed earlier rounds or were rejected due to issues such as incorrect subject mapping or invalid documents can apply through the Mid-Entry window, which opens on August 8 and remains active until August 10. A non-refundable fee of Rs1,000 is applicable for this fourth round of allocations- covering performance-based programs like Music, Fine Arts, and Physical Education, as well as CW, ECA, Sports, and Ward quotas-will be announced on August DATES FOR DU UG ADMISSION 2025 (THIRD ROUND)Upgrade & Preference Reorder Window: Aug 2 (5 pm) – Aug 3 (4:59 pm)Declaration of Third Round Allocation: Aug 5 (5 pm)College Verification & Approval: Aug 5 – Aug 6 (4:59 pm)Last Date to Pay Admission Fee: Aug 7 (up to 4:59 pm)Display of Vacant Seats: Aug 8Mid-Entry Application Window: Aug 8 (5 pm) – Aug 10 (4:59 pm)Third Round Allocation for Performance-Based & Quota Seats: Aug 13 (5 pm)Acceptance of Allocated Seats: Aug 13 – Aug 17Last Date to Pay Admission Fee (Mid-Entry): Aug 19 (4:59 pm)STEPS TO CHECK DU UG 3RD ALLOTMENT RESULT 2025Visit on 'Upgraded Allocations for Third Round'Log in using your CUET application number and passwordView and download your upgraded allocation resultWith the introduction of CUET, Delhi University has also reported a noticeable increase in the number of women candidates securing admission this year, according to government the academic session begins, colleges are preparing to welcome students, with a full house expected by next week.- Ends

‘Choose your program, not just the college': DU Admissions Dean on navigating the third round
‘Choose your program, not just the college': DU Admissions Dean on navigating the third round

Indian Express

time20 hours ago

  • Indian Express

‘Choose your program, not just the college': DU Admissions Dean on navigating the third round

The University of Delhi has released the detailed schedule for the third round of allocations and admissions for undergraduate programmes under the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS) for the 2025–26 academic year. The third round was opened by the varsity last week and includes upgrades, fresh allocations, mid-entry applications, and admissions under CW, ECA, Sports, and Ward quotas. The allocations under the third list will be declared on August 13. Meanwhile, classes for the new academic session began on August 1 across DU colleges. As the admissions process enters this pivotal phase, The Indian Express spoke with the Dean of Admissions Haneet Gandhi to better understand the logic behind preference filling, how to avoid common pitfalls, advice to students looking to reorder their preferences and what to expect in the weeks ahead. Q. With the third round of allocations on, what's your advice for students who didn't get their desired course or college yet? I would tell them not to lose hope. This isn't over yet. In the second list alone, we've made around 85,000 allocations, and of these, 24,000 are new admissions. That means thousands of students who got nothing in Round 1 have now been allotted a seat. So yes, there is real movement. In Round 3, we will open a window for students who haven't been admitted anywhere to reorder their preferences. We'll also display the seat matrix — so students can see exactly which colleges and courses still have seats left. Based on that, they can make informed decisions. Q. If a student didn't get a seat in Rounds 1 or 2, how should they approach filling their preferences now? What's the most common mistake? The biggest mistake students make is listing too few preferences — sometimes just 10 or 20. That's very limiting. Students should opt for every college and course they are eligible for and genuinely willing to join. Also, do not go by last year's cut-offs or someone else's marks. CUET scores are scaled differently every year, and there's no fixed prediction. The only thing that matters now is your order of preference. List what you really want — in the order you want it — without second-guessing what might happen. Q. How should students balance between prioritising a college versus a program? That's a very personal choice. Some students prioritize a specific campus, some prefer women's colleges, others want to stay closer to home. But if you ask me from an academic and career perspective — your program should come first. All DU colleges now have strong NAAC ratings — many of them are A or A+ — and offer quality education. But the subject you choose will shape your academic path and career. So if you're passionate about a subject, take the program wherever it's available. Q. Many students still dismiss BA Programme combinations in favour of traditional Honours courses. Do you think that's changing? Slowly, yes but not enough. Students and parents still tend to chase the 'Honours' label. But under NEP, the BA Programme now leads to a proper Honours degree — with a major and minor. For instance, a combination like Economics + Mathematics can be extremely valuable. These combinations open up academic and professional growth opportunities. So I strongly urge students not to overlook the BA Programme, many of the best combinations lie there. Q. Any trends or surprises you noticed in this year's admission data so far? We saw a very balanced demographic spread. Yes, Delhi students form a large portion of the applicant pool, but we also saw strong numbers from Uttar Pradesh, the Northeast, and other states. The spread is much more equitable now. Also, this year CUET seems to have finally settled into the system. There's less confusion. Subject mapping is understood better. And rejections due to subject mismatches have gone down sharply. Q. So the main reason for rejections now is poor documentation, not eligibility? Absolutely. Most rejections we're seeing now are due to incomplete or invalid documents — whether it's for OBC, PwD, Orphan, SGC, or any reserved category. We've been conducting webinars and posting advisories telling students to prepare documents in advance, but there's still a gap. On subject mapping, I'd say candidates are doing much better. The awareness has improved. Q. There's a growing market of paid 'counsellors' who promise students a seat in DU if they pay a fee. What's your take on that? It's deeply troubling. Many of these people are filling preferences without the student even knowing what's been listed. They might put an unwanted college or course at the top just to secure a seat — but that traps the student. Once that seat is allotted, there's no chance for an upgrade. We've had students and parents come crying, saying they had no idea what was submitted. Your academic journey is deeply personal — how can anyone else decide what you should study or where? Our repeated message to students: fill your preferences yourself. Attend the webinars, watch our YouTube briefings — we explain everything clearly. Q. After Round 2, some students realise their mistakes and want to change preferences. What can they do? This is why Round 3 is crucial. We're opening a window for mid-entry and preference edits. If you haven't been admitted anywhere yet, you'll get a chance to re-enter or reorder your preferences based on the updated seat matrix. But yes — once the first list is out, your choices lock in, and many students realise they went by cut-offs or rumours and regret it. That's why we keep telling them — don't try to 'game the system.' You can't predict the outcome. Just be honest about your preferences. Q. For students applying under ECA, how much of an advantage does that really offer? It depends. For some ECAs, there are just two seats in a given college. If there are ten candidates, obviously only two will get it — and the rest may be allocated a much lower preference. In fact, in some cases, academically stronger students might've gotten a better seat in the general category than through ECA. So you should only go through the ECA route if it's aligned with your profile — don't depend on it as a better option.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store