Journalism of Courage
Advertisement
Premium

DU Admissions 2023: Special spot admission round out; registration from Sept 18

DU Admissions 2023: As per the official schedule,  the university will display the vacant seats on September 18 (5 pm).

Delhi University UG admission special spot roundAfter the announcement of the special spot admission round , the admitted candidates will not be allowed to withdraw their admissions. (Representative image. File)
Listen to this article Your browser does not support the audio element.

DU Admissions 2023: The Delhi University has announced a special spot admission round for undergraduate admissions for the academic year 2023-24 for certain shortlisted programmes/ colleges.

As per the official schedule, the Delhi University will display the vacant seats on September 18 (5 pm).

Candidates who had applied for CSAS-2023 and are not admitted to any DU college on the date of declaration of the special spot admission round can participate in this special spot admission round. However, after the announcement of the special spot admission round , the admitted candidates will not be allowed to withdraw their admissions.

To be considered in the special spot admission round, the candidate will have to opt for ‘Special Spot Admission’ through his/her dashboard. Aspirants will be able to choose all programmes in as many colleges as he/she wishes to, subject to the availability of seats.

Allocations will be done based on the following criteria:

– Availability of seats

– Program- Specific merit

– Order of preference of college (Program + College)

– Category

As per the official schedule by Delhi University, candidates will have time from September 18 till 20 to apply for special spot admission round. After this the declaration of special spot allocation will be done on September 21 (10 am), and candidates will have time till September 22 to accept.

From the homepage
Tags:
  • delhi university DU admissions
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
EXPRESS PREMIUMWhy India shouldn't be worried by Saudi-Pak deal
X