CBSE tightens procedure for corrections in demographic details of Class 10, 12 students
Vaishnavi Shukla | September 3, 2025 | 04:51 PM IST | 1 min read
CBSE Board Exams 2026: All schools should ensure accurate details are obtained from parents before exam registration and submission of the list of candidates (LOC) to the board.
The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has issued strict guidelines for schools to ensure demographic details of students appearing in the CBSE Class 10, 12 exams in 2026 are accurate. All schools should follow the CBSE instructions during exam registration and submission of the list of candidates (LOC).
All schools must make sure to obtain confirmation from parents about the correctness of demographic details. Before sending a request to CBSE for correction, all certificates from previous schools should be sent in the given format.
The board provides 20 opportunities to schools and parents to provide the correct demographic details of the students appearing for CBSE Class 10, 12 exams 2026 . However, in case incomplete requests are received, CBSE will immediately reject the requests.
“To ensure that requests sent to CBSE are processed in the minimum possible time, schools are directed to provide complete certified records,” the official CBSE notice reads.
Also read CBSE partners with Narcotics Control Bureau to curb drug menace in schools
Irregularities highlighted by CBSE
The list of common lapses faced by CBSE regarding demographic details of students is as follows.
- Schools send incomplete requests to correct demographic details.
- Missing supporting records from all previous schools of students.
- Unclear documents are sent with the requests.
- Several cuttings from the documents.
- Lack of response from schools regarding documents
According to the CBSE notice, despite giving multiple reminders, as soon as the result is declared, the board gets a large number of requests for corrections in the demographic details of students. This causes a delay in the processing of the requests.
Furthermore, CBSE also experiences students sending requests directly to the board or through legal notice. Therefore, CBSE has instructed all school principals and heads to ensure compliance with the guidelines issued to avoid delay in processing.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]‘Some don’t even have Aadhaar’: CBSE’s APAAR ID mandate sends students scrambling before board exams
Parents question data security, schools operate on ‘guesswork’ as CBSE makes APAAR ID must for board exams; students from govt schools, low-income groups race to complete Aadhaar process
K. Nitika Shivani | 1 min readFeatured News
]- Protests ‘natural part’ of campus life: HC quashes Ambedkar University Delhi’s order expelling student
- What changes with the National Dental Commission? Shrinking state role, NExT exam, BDS fee regulation
- Central institutions fill over 30,000 posts; SC, ST, OBC ones more slowly: Education ministry data
- IIFT Kolkata: Placements close with no jobs for over 34%; students allege bias in process
- Medical Colleges: NMC mandates more beds in select PG courses, fewer faculty for private institutes
- Revamp Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan, serve breakfast under PM POSHAN, regulate foreign university campuses: Panel
- ‘What is our life?’: Transgender Bill 2026 ‘returns us to the 1880s,’ says Kerala’s first trans lawyer
- ‘Thought it was my fault’: How students are being harassed, followed and silenced – on the way to school
- Fix PMKVY, hold PM-SETU until foolproof; set up national skill board to rationalise schemes: Panel
- Degrees Without Jobs: 40% of graduates in India can’t find work, fewer get salaried employment, finds report