Is APAAR mandatory? The scheme is officially voluntary, and the APAAR ID is generated only with a parent's consent. A parent can refuse to sign the school consent form for a minor child. In December 2025, the Orissa High Court held that the consent form must carry a genuine option to refuse. One important caution: some board processes, such as CBSE Class IX and XI registration, now link APAAR to the registration record, so read the CBSE carve-out below before you refuse.
If you are short on time, jump to How to refuse APAAR in writing below and send the polite refusal note today.
APAAR stands for Automated Permanent Academic Account Registry. It is a student ID linked to the Academic Bank of Credits under the National Education Policy 2020, part of the “One Nation One Student ID” idea. It is generated using student data. The government describes it as voluntary, and for a minor it needs parental consent.
A school CAN:
A school CANNOT:
Important: APAAR being generated only on consent is not the same as it being optional for every process. The CBSE circular dated 15 September 2025 makes APAAR part of Class IX and XI registration, while still providing a REFUSED route that, in the current cycle, does not by itself block registration. So confirm your own board's position in writing before you decide. See how CBSE links APAAR to Class IX and XI registration.
A parent challenged the APAAR consent form in Rohit Anand Das v. State of Odisha, W.P.(C) No. 8285 of 2025, before the Orissa High Court at Cuttack. The parent acted on behalf of his KG-1 daughter. Justice Sashikanta Mishra decided the matter on 12 December 2025.
The complaint was simple. Officials called APAAR voluntary, yet the consent form gave no option to refuse consent at the initial stage, and was unclear about what happens if a parent says no.
The court agreed the form was problematic. It noted that a withdrawal-of-consent clause sitting at the end of the form “cannot be treated as giving an effective right”, because by then the student data would already have been shared.
The court allowed the petition. It directed the authorities to amend the model consent form within two months so that it includes an opt-out or refusal clause, making the voluntary nature genuinely visible in the form itself. You can read the full order on Indian Kanoon.
This ruling is about the consent form, not a ban. APAAR is not illegal. The point is that consent must be real, and refusing must be a genuine choice. Data protection law in India, including the Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023, also treats consent for a child's personal data as something that must be free and informed, not forced.
Example. Suppose Kashvi Pathak studies in Class 3 and the school sends home an APAAR consent form marked “compulsory”. Her parent writes one line: “I do not consent to an APAAR ID for my daughter, Kashvi Pathak. Please confirm her studies will not be affected.” The parent keeps a signed copy. If the school resists, the parent files an RTI asking for the rule that makes it mandatory.
No. The government describes APAAR as voluntary, and for a minor it needs parental consent. A school telling you it is compulsory is overstating the position. The Orissa High Court order in December 2025 reinforced that refusing must be a real option.
The APAAR scheme is officially voluntary and the ID needs your consent, so a school should not treat plain admission as conditional on it. But the position differs by process. For CBSE Class IX and XI, the 15 September 2025 circular links APAAR to the registration record and marks a refusing student REFUSED, while stating that refusal does not by itself block registration in the current cycle. So ask your school in writing exactly how a refusal affects your child's registration and board record, and keep the reply.
In Rohit Anand Das v. State of Odisha, the court found the consent form gave no option to refuse at the start, and that a withdrawal clause at the end was not an effective right because data would already have been shared. It directed the model form to be amended within two months to add an opt-out clause.
No. The order does not ban APAAR and does not call it illegal. It accepts that APAAR is voluntary and only fixes the consent form, so a parent can genuinely refuse. The scheme continues for those who consent.
Write a short signed note saying you do not consent to an APAAR ID for your child, and that you know the scheme is voluntary. Ask the school to acknowledge it in writing and confirm the child's studies will not be affected. Keep a copy.
You can ask to withdraw consent, but the Orissa High Court pointed out that a late withdrawal may not fully help, because the data may already have been shared. That is why refusing at the start, before signing, is the cleaner step.
Ask them in writing for the exact rule or circular that makes it mandatory. File an RTI with the education department for the same. A voluntary scheme has no such rule, so the reply itself supports your refusal and gives you a record to escalate.
In general terms, yes. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 treats consent for processing a child's personal data as something that must be free and informed. That principle sits behind the Orissa High Court's concern that the APAAR consent must be genuine, not forced.