The Escalating Crisis of Fake Universities in India
As the 2026 admission season kicks off, the University Grants Commission (UGC), India's apex higher education regulator, has intensified its efforts to protect students from fraudulent institutions. In February 2026, UGC published its latest list identifying 32 fake universities operating across 12 states, a sharp 60 percent rise from previous years. This crackdown comes at a critical time when millions of students are finalizing choices for undergraduate and postgraduate programs through exams like JEE Main, NEET UG, and CUET. Delhi alone hosts 12 of these rogue entities, underscoring the urban concentration of this menace.
These institutions masquerade as legitimate universities, offering degrees that hold no legal value under the UGC Act of 1956. Sections 2(f) and 3 of the Act stipulate that only UGC-recognized universities can confer valid degrees. Enrolling in a fake university means wasting years and lakhs of rupees on worthless credentials, leaving graduates unemployable and ineligible for further studies or government jobs.
Defining Fake Universities: A Clear Distinction
A fake university is one that lacks parliamentary approval or UGC recognition yet awards degrees, violating national education laws. Unlike legitimate state, central, or deemed universities established via acts of Parliament or state legislatures, these entities operate illegally, often from modest offices or rented spaces. They lure students with promises of quick degrees, flexible schedules, and low fees, exploiting the high demand for higher education in a country where over 4 crore students enroll annually.
The UGC identifies them through complaints, inspections, and intelligence from state education departments. Once flagged, degrees become invalid for employment, promotions, or competitive exams. For instance, a commerce graduate from such an institution cannot pursue CA or appear for UPSC, as verification portals reject their credentials instantly.
State-Wise Hotspots: Delhi Leads the Pack
The distribution reveals stark regional disparities. Delhi's 12 fake universities include notorious ones like Commercial University Ltd. in Daryaganj and United Nations University. Uttar Pradesh follows with four, such as Gandhi Hindi Vidyapith in Prayagraj and Bhartiya Shiksha Parishad in Lucknow. Other states like Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, and Maharashtra each report two, while Arunachal Pradesh, Haryana, Jharkhand, Puducherry, Rajasthan, and West Bengal have one apiece.

Here's a summarized table of key hotspots:
| State | Number | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Delhi | 12 | Commercial University Ltd., ADR-Centric Juridical University |
| Uttar Pradesh | 4 | Gandhi Hindi Vidyapith, Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose University |
| Andhra Pradesh | 2 | Christ New Testament Deemed University, Bible Open University |
| Karnataka | 2 | Global Human Peace University, Sarva Bharatiya Shiksha Peeth |
| Others | 12 | Scattered across 8 states |
Full details are available on the UGC's official fake universities list.
Drivers Behind the Proliferation
The surge stems from unmet demand: India has over 1,000 universities but still faces shortages in quality seats. Fake operators capitalize on this, targeting rural and low-income aspirants via aggressive marketing on social media and local ads. Lax state enforcement allows them to rebrand after crackdowns—some have evaded closure for decades. Economic incentives are huge; they charge hefty fees without infrastructure costs, pocketing profits.
Post-pandemic online education boom masked their operations, with many shifting to virtual 'campuses.' UGC data shows the count jumped from 21 in 2024 to 32 now, signaling systemic gaps.
Human and Economic Toll
Thousands of students suffer annually. A 2025 survey by education NGO Pratham estimated 50,000+ enrolled in fake setups yearly, losing ₹5,000-20,000 per semester. Graduates face rejection: banks deny loans citing invalid degrees, employers blacklist them, and PG admissions halt. One case involved 500 alumni from a Delhi fake uni petitioning for validation—denied.
Broader impacts erode trust in Indian higher education, inflating unemployment among youth (23% in 2025) as fake degree holders compete unfairly. Economy loses via unskilled workforce; a World Bank report pegs education fraud costs at ₹10,000 crore annually.
For deeper analysis, see The Hindu's expert breakdown.
Photo by Martijn Vonk on Unsplash
UGC's Multi-Pronged Crackdown
UGC's response includes public notices, state letters urging FIRs, and website portals for verification. Since 2014, 12 fakes closed via legal action. In 2026, intensified coordination with police led to raids in UP and Delhi, seizing fake certificates. UGC's Anti-Malpractice Cell monitors complaints via helpline and app.
Surveillance Ramp-Up for Admission Season
Ahead of May-June admissions, UGC launched real-time monitoring via its DEB portal and AI-driven anomaly detection on admission ads. Partnerships with Google and Meta flag suspicious promotions. States like Delhi deployed task forces; over 100 websites taken down since March. CBSE echoed warnings for class 12 passers.

This 'zero-tolerance' phase aims to prevent 2026 enrollments in fakes.
Case Studies: Real Stories of Deception
Take Priya from Lucknow: Enrolled in Bhartiya Shiksha Parishad thinking it legitimate; after three years, job applications rejected. She refought exams at a real uni. In Delhi, a batch of 200 from Commercial University protested; UGC clarified no equivalence.
In Kerala, IIUPM duped 300 with 'prophetic medicine' degrees—invalid for medical practice. These underscore urgency.
Verification Toolkit: Empowering Students
- Visit UGC University List; search name/state.
- Cross-check AICTE for technical courses.
- Use NAAC/ NIRF rankings.
- Avoid 'open university' claims without UGC-DEB approval.
- Report suspicions via UGC helpline 1800-112-556.
Step-by-step: Enter uni name on UGC site—if absent, red flag.
Stakeholder Views: Calls for Systemic Reform
Educationist Dr. Furqan Qamar notes, 'Listing alone insufficient; need fast-track courts.' AICTE chair urges digital IDs for degrees. Students' unions demand mandatory UGC stickers on ads. Government eyes NEP 2020's regulatory overhaul.
Photo by Ashish Kushwaha on Unsplash
Path Forward: Solutions for a Secure Future
Solutions include blockchain degrees, AI verification apps, stricter penalties (up to 10 years jail proposed), and awareness campaigns in 12 languages. Expand seats in genuine unis via NEP. International collaboration to block fake foreign tie-ups.
Outlook positive: With surveillance, 2026 may see first decline.
Practical Tips for 2026 Admissions
As CUET results drop, prioritize UGC-approved. Consult counselors, avoid spot admissions demanding cash. Explore genuine options like state unis, IITs. For jobs post-grad, valid degrees key—check UGC-DEB for distance.
Stay vigilant; your future depends on it.
