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DU UG Admissions 2025: Key dates, simulated ranks, first seat allocation explained; Everything you need to know

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Delhi University will publish the Common Simulated Ranks on candidates’ dashboards at 5 PM today. These ranks are purely provisional, built on preferences submitted by 14 July. They’re a guide, not a promise. The university is clear: these ranks are not “a guarantee, assurance, or basis for a legitimate expectation of allocation to any programme, college, department, or centre”.

If you’re not happy with where you land in this trial run, you get another shot. From today until 11:59 PM on 16 July, you can update, reorder, add or delete your choices. Just remember: only the preferences you save actually count.

Numbers that break records
Let’s talk scale. Delhi University has smashed its own record books this year. Over 3.05 lakh students signed up. Out of these, 2,39,890 actually submitted their choices through the Common Seat Allocation System ( CSAS), which opened once CUET results dropped on 17 June.

There are 71,642 seats up for grabs, spread across 79 programmes and 69 colleges. The total number of unique college-course preferences? A staggering 1,68,36,462. The average student has listed 83 different combinations. One especially determined applicant listed 1,414 out of a possible 1,549.


Who’s applying and what they want
The gender split shows 53.06% female applicants (1,27,284) and 46.93% male (1,12,603). Three students identified as transgender. The Orphan Quota attracted 512 applications, while 7,243 students applied under the Single Girl Child Quota.

In terms of sheer popularity, BCom (Hons) leads with 19,90,966 preferences. It’s followed by BCom (15,26,403), BA (Hons) English (12,23,388) and BA (Hons) Political Science (9,96,868). BA (Hons) History rounds out the top five at 7,72,029.

When it comes to BA combinations, History + Political Science tops the list with 7,60,233, then Economics + Political Science (3,88,407) and English + Economics (3,49,367).

Colleges everyone wants
Certain colleges remain perennial favourites. Shri Ram College of Commerce sits at the top with 38,795 first-preference votes. Hindu College follows with 31,901, then Hansraj College (15,902), St. Stephen’s College (12,413) and Miranda House (11,403).

No surprises that commerce programmes dominate here too. For first-preference picks: BCom (Hons) again leads with 48,336. BA (Hons) Political Science gets 15,295, BSc (Hons) Zoology 12,722, BTech (Mathematics and Humanities) 10,584, and BCom gets 8,939.

Humanities still king
Humanities pull in the most students: 58.89% of all preferences are for humanities-based courses. Commerce claims 20.89% and science sits close behind at 20.22%. This mirrors trends from the last few years, especially since CUET came into play.

What happens next
So what’s next? The first CSAS allocation list drops at 5 PM on 19 July. Candidates who get a seat can accept it between 19 and 21 July. Colleges will verify documents and approve applications until 22 July. The last day to pay fees for this round is 23 July.

Got your eye on a second chance? Vacant seats will appear on dashboards on 24 July. You’ll have until 25 July to reshuffle your choices again. The second CSAS allocation list comes out on 28 July. Accept your seat by 30 July, colleges approve until 31 July, and fee payment wraps up by 1 August.

ECA, sports and performance-based quotas
Those banking on Extra-Curricular Activities or Sports quotas need to mark their calendars. ECA trials start 18 July. Sports trials likely begin on 25 July. Check your college or department website for the exact schedule. These admissions start from the third round onwards.

Since CUET became the norm, certain trends haven’t budged. BCom and BCom (Hons) still top the charts. Colleges like SRCC, Hindu and Hansraj hold their magnetic pull. Simulated ranks and editing windows keep the process flexible, but the sheer scale has ballooned. In 2025, the volume of combinations and preferences is the highest ever.

One last thing: check your dashboard, email and DU’s website regularly. Nothing worse than missing an update because you weren’t paying attention. The next few days could decide where you’ll spend the next three years of your life.
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