A college telling you “fees once paid are non-refundable” is not stating the law. Under the UGC Fee Refund Policy 2024-25 and AICTE Clause 6.45, if you cancel an admission or migrate, the institution must refund your fees on a fixed sliding scale and may keep only Rs 1,000 as a processing charge. This guide gives you the exact UGC and AICTE refund slabs, then the written-demand and consumer-forum route to recover what is yours.
Quick answer: “Non-refundable” clauses cannot override UGC and AICTE rules. UGC pays 100% if you withdraw 15 days or more before the notified last date of admission, then 90/80/50/0% on a sliding scale; the college may deduct only Rs 1,000. Caution money is always refunded in full. If the college refuses, send a written demand, then file a consumer complaint.
Your fee-refund right is a statutory entitlement under the University Grants Commission (UGC) Fee Refund Policy for universities and the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) Approval Process Handbook for technical and management courses. It overrides any “no refund” line in the prospectus, fee receipt, or admission form you signed.
Two regulators set the refund rules. Which one covers you depends on your course.
The UGC Fee Refund Policy 2024-25 (D.O. No. F.2-71/2022 CPP-II, dated 12 June 2024, decided at the Commission's 580th meeting) works in two parts:
| Notice of withdrawal received | Refund of fees |
|---|---|
| 15 days or more before the notified last date | 100% |
| Less than 15 days before the notified last date | 90% |
| 15 days or less after the notified last date | 80% |
| 30 days or less, but more than 15 days after | 50% |
| More than 30 days after the notified last date | 0% |
Caution money and security deposit are refunded in full in every case, because they are not part of the chargeable fee. The HEI must refund within fifteen days of your written application. Taking original certificates into custody is “strictly prohibited.”
UGC has said this policy stays in force for subsequent sessions until it issues a revised one, so the slab above is your working rule for 2026.
For AICTE-approved institutions, Clause 6.45 of the Approval Process Handbook 2024-27 sets three situations:
In all three, original certificates must be returned. Note: AICTE deducts a flat Rs 1,000 before the course starts (it does not run the UGC percentage slab), so know which regulator governs your course before you calculate.
You are covered when you:
A “non-refundable” or “fee forfeited” clause in the prospectus does not defeat any of these. Regulator policy overrides the contract, and a one-sided forfeiture is also an “unfair contract” under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.
Exam-form fees: the UGC and AICTE slabs cover admission and tuition fees, not exam fees, so there is no fixed percentage for an unsat exam. But if you paid an exam fee for a paper you could not sit (the slot was cancelled, you were wrongly barred, or you withdrew), keeping that money is itself a “deficiency in service” and goes down the same consumer-forum route below.
For the consumer-forum route, keep ready:
Pecuniary jurisdiction (which forum): District Consumer Commission for a claim up to Rs 50 lakh, State Commission above Rs 50 lakh to Rs 2 crore, National Commission above Rs 2 crore, measured by the value of consideration paid, so almost every fee dispute is a District Commission matter.
Limitation: file within two years of the deficiency (the refusal or unpaid refund).
Fee: filing is free for claims up to Rs 5 lakh at the District Commission; modest court fees apply above that.
Relief to claim: the refund amount, interest from the date it fell due, and compensation for harassment and litigation cost. Do not ask only for the refund; claim interest and costs too.
Kashvi Pathak, Patna - Rs 78,000 recovered in 47 days. Kashvi paid Rs 85,000 to a deemed university but got a state-quota MBBS-adjacent seat 11 days before the notified last date of admission. She withdrew and asked for a refund; the office said “fees are non-refundable as per the prospectus.”
She emailed and speed-posted a one-page demand quoting the UGC 100% slab and the Rs 1,000 cap, giving 15 days. On day 16 she called 1915 and filed on e-jagriti.gov.in at her District Commission, claiming refund + interest + Rs 10,000 cost. The university refunded Rs 78,000 (Rs 85,000 minus Rs 1,000 cap, after adjusting a small genuine charge) before the first hearing. Total out-of-pocket: a speed-post and an affidavit.
To: The Registrar / Principal, [Institution name] Subject: Refund of fees on cancellation of admission - [Your name], [Course], [Roll/Application no.] Sir/Madam, I cancelled my admission to [course] on [date], paid vide receipt no. [no.] dated [date] for Rs [amount]. The formally notified last date of admission was [date]. Under the UGC Fee Refund Policy 2024-25 [or AICTE Approval Process Handbook 2024-27, Clause 6.45], the institution may retain only Rs 1,000 as processing fee and must refund the balance of Rs [amount], with caution money/security deposit refunded in full. A "non-refundable" clause cannot override this policy. I request refund of Rs [amount] to [bank account] within 15 days of this letter, failing which I will approach the National Consumer Helpline (1915) and file a consumer complaint claiming the refund with interest and costs. [Name, signature, contact, date] Enclosed: fee receipt, cancellation application, admission letter.
No. Caution money and security deposit are not part of the chargeable fee, so UGC says they “shall be refunded in full.” For hostel rent, AICTE allows only a proportionate deduction for the period you actually stayed, not the whole year.
Yes. Both UGC and AICTE cap the processing deduction at not more than Rs 1,000. A college charging a larger “admission processing” or “prospectus” forfeiture beyond this is acting against the policy, and you can challenge it.
That is barred. UGC says taking certificates into institutional custody “under any circumstance or pretext is strictly prohibited,” and AICTE requires originals to be returned. Demand them in writing, copy the affiliating university and the regulator, and add this as a ground in your consumer complaint. To force a held migration certificate or marksheet back, see the certificate-return guide linked under Next steps.
The UGC and AICTE refund framework applies to recognised institutions regardless of the quota label. Management and NRI seats often carry steeper fees, but the sliding-scale refund and the Rs 1,000 cap still bind the institution; a higher fee does not buy a “no refund” right.
Silence is treated as refusal. Keep the speed-post receipt as proof of service, wait out the 15-day window, and proceed to NCH (1915) and then a consumer complaint. The forum can order the refund with interest plus compensation for the delay.
A District Commission complaint is meant to be decided in a few months, and many fee-refund cases settle before the first hearing once the institution sees a formal filing. The NCH (1915) conciliation is quicker but advisory. Either way, file within the two-year limitation.
Sources: UGC Fee Refund Policy 2024-25 (ugc.gov.in); UGC October 2018 Notification on Refund of Fees and Non-Retention of Original Certificates; AICTE Approval Process Handbook 2024-27, Clause 6.45 (aicte-india.org); Consumer Protection (Jurisdiction) Rules, 2021; National Consumer Helpline, consumerhelpline.gov.in; e-Jagriti, e-jagriti.gov.in.