Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Direct answer: no college or university in India may retain your original certificates, and none may hold them hostage over a fee dispute. The UGC's October 2018 notification on fee refunds bars institutions from keeping originals such as mark sheets and school leaving certificates at admission, and caps what can be deducted when you withdraw. AICTE applies the same bar to technical colleges. Demand your documents back in writing with a seven day deadline, and if the college stalls, file on the UGC e-Samadhan portal at samadhaan.ugc.ac.in. The certificate question and the fee question are separate claims. Never let the college merge them.
When you withdraw and the college turns hostile, you are usually fighting on two fronts at once:
| When you withdrew | Refund of fees paid |
|---|---|
| 15 days or more before the notified last admission date | 100 percent, minus a processing deduction of not more than Rs 5,000 |
| Less than 15 days before that date | 90 percent |
| Up to 15 days after that date | 80 percent |
| 16 to 30 days after that date | 50 percent |
| More than 30 days after that date | No refund of tuition, but security and caution deposits must still be returned in full |
UGC reissues refund instructions almost every admission cycle, so quote the notice for your admission year. The slabs apply to universities and colleges under UGC, including deemed universities; AICTE's norms for technical institutions mirror them.
Sneha joined a private BBA college in Bengaluru, depositing her Class 12 mark sheet, transfer certificate, and migration certificate, and paying Rs 1,60,000 for the year. She got a better seat elsewhere and withdrew ten days after the college's notified last admission date. The college's lawful position: refund 80 percent, Rs 1,28,000, and return every original immediately. The college's actual position: “pay the full year's fee of the vacated seat, then collect your documents.” That demand has no basis. The vacated seat argument fails because admission lists were still open, and the documents were never lawful security in the first place.
To: The Principal / Registrar, [College name, address] Date: [DD/MM/YYYY] Subject: Unconditional return of original certificates and refund on withdrawal, Admission No. [number] 1. I withdrew from [course] by my application dated [date], acknowledged by your office. 2. At admission I deposited these originals: [list each document with issuing board and roll number]. 3. The UGC notification of October 2018 on refund of fees and non-retention of certificates bars the institution from retaining originals and from linking their return to any fee demand. I require all originals back within 7 working days. 4. Separately, my withdrawal falls in the [slab] category of the UGC refund schedule, entitling me to [percent] of Rs [amount] paid. I claim Rs [amount], to [account details]. 5. Failing compliance, I will file on the UGC e-Samadhan portal, approach the university ombudsperson and the District Consumer Commission, and seek urgent orders from the High Court if my onward admission is jeopardised. [Name, address, mobile, email]
Send by email and registered post. The postal proof matters if the matter reaches a forum.
RTI fits in narrowly. A government or aided college is a public authority, so you can demand the file noting that justifies holding your documents, which usually does not exist. Against a private unaided college, RTI the affiliating public university instead, about the directions it issued and the action taken on your complaint. The filing route is in how to file RTI online, and silence can be appealed under Section 19.
While the dispute runs, pull digital copies of your mark sheets from DigiLocker so applications elsewhere are not blocked. A digital copy does not replace the original everywhere, but many counselling processes accept it provisionally.
The neighbouring problems each have a separate guide: college closure, transfer and degree protection when the institution itself folds, coaching refunds for cancelled or merged batches, and hostel deposit recovery for residential students. The full education set is on the practical guides hub.
It cannot use your certificates as enforcement. Even if the college believes the bond gives it a money claim, its remedy is to pursue that claim separately. UGC's position is that document return cannot be conditioned on any payment. Most such bonds also fail as unfair terms when tested.
The portal forwards your grievance to the institution with a response window, and UGC publishes target timelines on the portal itself. Straightforward certificate retention complaints often resolve in weeks because institutions fear escalation to UGC's defaulter lists. Keep your complaint number and follow up on the portal, not by phone.
You can apply to the issuing board or university for certified duplicates, and DigiLocker copies cover many uses. But duplicates cost time and money, and some employers and foreign evaluators insist on originals. Pursue the return even after obtaining duplicates.
Yes. The 2018 notification covers institutions under the UGC framework, including deemed to be universities, and UGC has repeated this in subsequent yearly notices. Private universities created by state Acts are also expected to follow the state and UGC norms; their regulators accept complaints on the same basis.
Demand a written statement that the documents are lost, then use it. The college becomes responsible for the cost of duplicates and for compensation, and a written admission of loss is strong evidence before the consumer commission. If the college refuses to put it in writing, say in your complaint that the refusal itself was recorded.
Usually it is treated as a civil and regulatory matter, and the routes above are faster. Where a college demands money it knows it has no right to as a condition for your property, you may consider a police complaint, but take advice first and keep the consumer and UGC tracks running regardless.
Download the certificate retention and withdrawal refund checklist (PDF).