DU Unveils PG Round 3 Minimum Allocation Scores for 2026-27 Session
DU Unveils PG Round 3 Minimum Allocation Scores for 2026-27 Session Delhi University released the postgraduate Round 3 minimum allocation scores on July 11, 2026, through the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS PG) portal at admission.uod.ac.in. The data covers programmes including LLB at Law Centre I with a minimum score of 192 and Law Centre II at 202, MCA at the Department of Computer Science with scores of 220 and 204, LLM (2 Years) at 218, MA Economics at the Department of Economics with 25
DU Unveils PG Round 3 Minimum Allocation Scores for 2026-27 Session
Delhi University released the postgraduate Round 3 minimum allocation scores on July 11, 2026, through the Common Seat Allocation System (CSAS PG) portal at admission.uod.ac.in. The data covers programmes including LLB at Law Centre I with a minimum score of 192 and Law Centre II at 202, MCA at the Department of Computer Science with scores of 220 and 204, LLM (2 Years) at 218, MA Economics at the Department of Economics with 251 and 233, MA Political Science at PGDAV College with 255, MA Applied Psychology at the Department of Psychology SDC with 245, MA Sociology at the Department of Sociology with 280, MCom at Moti Lal Nehru College with 146, MSc Computer Science at the Department of Computer Science with 207, MSc Physics at Kirori Mal College with 125, MSc Chemistry at Ramjas College with 125, MSc Zoology at Ramjas College with 159, MSc Microbiology at the Department of Microbiology SDC with 230, and BEd Mathematics at Maharshi Valmiki College of Education with 163. These thresholds reflect eligibility, merit, category, seat availability, and tie-breaking rules, with 1,765 seats allotted for 2-year courses in prior rounds and a seat acceptance deadline of July 11.
Programme Competitiveness Reflected in Score Variations
The Round 3 figures highlight sharp differences in demand across disciplines. MA Sociology at the Department of Sociology recorded the highest threshold at 280, followed closely by MA Political Science at PGDAV College (255) and MA Economics at the Department of Economics (251 and 233). In contrast, MSc Physics and MSc Chemistry at Kirori Mal College and Ramjas College respectively stood at 125, while MCom at Moti Lal Nehru College reached only 146. Law programmes showed moderate competition with LLB scores of 192 and 202, and LLM at 218. These numbers indicate that social sciences and select professional courses continue to attract stronger applicant pools than several pure science streams at DU.
Access, Equity and Category-Based Seat Dynamics
Allocation under CSAS PG incorporates category reservations, directly affecting equity outcomes in India's central university system. Lower thresholds in certain MSc programmes may open pathways for reserved-category candidates, yet high cut-offs in MA Sociology and MA Political Science risk limiting access for students from underrepresented regions or lower-income backgrounds. The system’s reliance on prior academic merit and entrance performance reinforces existing disparities, as students without access to quality undergraduate preparation struggle to meet scores such as 230 for MSc Microbiology or 245 for MA Applied Psychology. This pattern mirrors broader challenges in Indian higher education where premier institutions like DU concentrate opportunities among a narrow segment of applicants.
Enrolment Concerns and Fourth-Year UG Course Pressures
DU principals have raised alarms over low enrolment following the allotment of 1,765 seats in earlier rounds. Withdrawals, cancellations, upgrades and grievance resolutions can still alter final numbers, but persistent vacancies threaten programme viability. Simultaneously, institutions seek selective rollout of fourth-year undergraduate courses under the National Education Policy framework, which could reshape PG feeder pipelines. Reduced PG intake risks underutilising faculty and infrastructure at departments such as Computer Science and Microbiology, while also limiting research output critical to India’s knowledge economy goals.
Round 3 Trends Within National Higher Education Patterns
Compared with admission cycles at other central universities, DU’s Round 3 scores reveal sustained pressure on social science and professional programmes alongside softening demand in some sciences. National data show similar polarisation, with management, law and economics courses drawing higher applicant volumes than traditional MSc streams. The CSAS PG mechanism, by publishing precise minimum scores at admission.uod.ac.in, promotes transparency yet underscores the need for expanded capacity and bridge programmes to address regional imbalances. For Indian students, these thresholds signal that strategic preparation and category-aware counselling remain essential for securing seats at top institutions.
Strategic Implications for Students and Policy Makers
Applicants must monitor the portal for updates driven by seat withdrawals or upgrades, as scores such as 207 for MSc Computer Science or 163 for BEd Mathematics may shift before final confirmation. Policymakers face pressure to align PG expansion with undergraduate reforms and to strengthen support for students from diverse socio-economic backgrounds. The July 11 release thus serves as both a snapshot of current competitiveness and a prompt for systemic adjustments that could improve access across India’s higher education landscape.
— By Dr. Raj Patel, Staff WriterWhat's Your Reaction?
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