NAAC Unveils AI-Powered Accreditation Model to Cover 90% of Indian Colleges by 2030

NAAC revamps accreditation in August 2025 with an AI‑driven, document‑only system and optional five‑level graded model, targeting over 90% institutional coverage by 2030. Stakeholder feedback ensures transparency and accountability.

NAAC’s new AI‑based accreditation 2025: The National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC) is set to revolutionize higher education quality assurance by launching an AI-driven accreditation system in August 2025. Moving away from its traditional peer‑visit model, NAAC will leverage an online database and random stakeholder verification to assess institutions more efficiently and transparently.

Under the new framework, institutions will receive either “Accredited” or “Not Accredited” statuses at a basic level, with an optional maturity‑based graded accreditation (Levels 1–5) for those aiming higher. The overhaul targets accrediting over 90% of universities and colleges within five years, up from the current 40% university and 18% college coverage.

AspectInformation
RolloutAugust 2025
Basic Accreditation• Document‑based evaluation only (no field visits)
• Universities: 55 parameters
• Autonomous colleges: 50 parameters
• Affiliated colleges: 40 parameters
Graded Accreditation (Levels 1–5)• Progressive parameter sets (80–100+ as level increases)
• Hybrid assessment (online + on‑site) for Levels 3–5
Verification Mechanism• AI generates questions post‑document submission
• ~100 randomly selected stakeholders provide feedback
• Credibility score (0–1) adjusted per responses
TargetAccredit >90% of HEIs by 2030
Penalty for Misconduct• Score deduction on discrepancies
• Up to 3‑year bar for confirmed falsification
Foreign CampusesEligible for accreditation under the new framework
Governing PanelHigh‑level committee chaired by Dr. K. Radhakrishnan, in line with NEP 2020
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AI-Driven Accreditation Framework

NAAC Chairman Professor Anil Sahasrabudhe explained that the new model “eliminates physical visits for basic accreditation” and relies entirely on document verification via an AI‑powered portal. Institutions begin with a default credibility score of 0.5, which adjusts based on stakeholder feedback.

Stakeholder-Based Verification Process

Once documents are uploaded, the system automatically generates queries for around 100 randomly selected experts—including retired VCs, faculty, industry leaders, and NGO representatives. Their input yields a credibility score (0–1). “If an institution submits false documents, its score will drop — and confirmed misconduct could bar it from accreditation for up to three years,” Professor Sahasrabudhe stated.

Maturity-Based Graded Accreditation

After securing basic accreditation, HEIs can opt into a five‑level graded system reflecting institutional maturity. Each successive level demands more parameters and a hybrid assessment of online and limited on‑site verification, ensuring rigorous advancement standards.

The reforms, based on a committee led by former ISRO chief Dr. K Radhakrishnan, aim to boost participation: “We target over 90% of higher education institutions… to come forward and get accredited,” said the NAAC chairman, aligning with the National Education Policy 2020.

Institutions holding previous NAAC grades (A, A+, A++) may apply under the new system, choosing between basic or direct graded accreditation.

Encourage your institution to prepare documentation early and monitor the NAAC portal for the August 2025 launch.

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