Centre issues coaching guidelines, prohibits centres from using false claims like '100% selection'
Press Trust of India | November 13, 2024 | 06:45 PM IST | 2 mins read
The guidelines define 'coaching' to include academic support, education, guidance, study programmes, but exclude counselling, sports, and creative activities.
Discover your college admission chances with the JEE Main 2026 College Predictor. Explore NITs, IIITs, CFTIs and other institutes based on your percentile, rank, and details.
Try NowNEW DELHI: The Centre on Wednesday released new guidelines to regulate misleading advertisements by coaching institutes, prohibiting false claims like 100 per cent selection or 100 per cent job security. The final guidelines, drafted by the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA), come in the wake of several complaints on the National Consumer Helpline.
New: JEE Main 2026 Answer Key Out; Download Now
JEE Main 2026 Tools: Rank Predictor | College Predictor
JEE Main 2026: Session 2 Registration Link | Session 1 Official QP
The CCPA has issued 54 notices and imposed penalties of about Rs 54.60 lakh till date. "We have seen coaching centres deliberately concealing information from prospective students. Therefore, we have come out with the guidelines to provide guidance to people involved in the coaching industry," Consumer Affairs Secretary Nidhi Khare told reporters.
The government is not against the coaching centres but the quality of advertisements should not undermine the consumer rights, she said. Under the new guidelines, coaching centres are prohibited from making false claims regarding courses offered and duration; faculty credentials; fee structure and refund policies; selection rates and exam rankings; and guaranteed job security or salary increases.
The guidelines define 'coaching' to include academic support, education, guidance, study programmes and tuition, but exclude counselling, sports and creative activities. Coaching centres cannot use names, photographs or testimonials of successful candidates without written consent obtained after selection. They must display disclaimers prominently and disclose important information about courses.
Also read ‘Rules for Kota, Hyderabad’: Centres point to ‘loopholes’ in coaching regulation guidelines
"Many UPSC students clear prelims and mains on their own and take only interview guidance from coaching centres," Khare said, advising prospective students to verify what courses successful candidates were actually enrolled in. The guidelines, titled 'Prevention of Misleading Advertisement in Coaching Sector', cover all forms of advertising across academic support, education, guidance and tuition services.
However, they exclude counselling, sports and creative activities. Khare, who is also CCPA chief, said coaching centres should accurately represent the service, facilities, resources and infrastructure.
They should truthfully represent that the courses offered are duly recognised and have the approval of a competent authority such as AICTE, UCG, etc. The provisions are in addition to existing laws. Violations will attract penalties under the Consumer Protection Act, Khare added.
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
]100 MBBS students’ fate uncertain as HC reverses ruling on extra seats at Rajasthan private medical college
Rajasthan HC has reversed the increase in MBBS seats at Pacific Medical College Udaipur, in a case against NMC. The students, admitted through NEET UG counselling 2024, have paid over Rs 25 lakh in MBBS fees but face uncertainty
Musab Qazi | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- Maharashtra eases university teacher recruitment norms; academic weightage cut to 60% from 75%
- UP Budget 2026-27: Vocational education funds up 88%; 14 new medical colleges; school outlay highest
- 3 yrs after UGC guidelines, 80% central universities yet to appoint professors of practice, private ones lead
- NMC approves record 20,098 new MBBS, PG medical seats, 777 after initial rejection
- 2 years into paramedical courses, students find themselves in vocational training; 300 protest in North Bengal
- Vidya Pravesh: 4.2 crore students across 8.9 lakh schools covered, but numbers now falling consistently
- Over 7 lakh Kendriya Vidyalaya students assessed via education ministry’s TARA app, 1.46 lakh on career tool
- Caste on Campus: The shape of discrimination in universities and why many back UGC equity regulations
- Across Telangana’s new government medical colleges, 26 depts empty, 31 with single teachers: Doctors’ survey
- ‘No TET’: School teachers’ jobs at risk, hundreds in Delhi to rally against mandatory eligibility tests