Quick Facts
- NAAC is replacing its old grades and 7 criteria with a binary, outcome-based system.
- Institutions will be judged on 10 attributes across inputs, processes and outcomes, not 7 criteria.
- Colleges should align data and evidence now, as the new portal is yet to launch.
In This Article
The NAAC accreditation reforms replace the old grading scale and seven criteria with a binary model and ten outcome-based attributes for India’s colleges and universities.
The National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC), the body that rates higher education institutions (HEIs), approved these reforms on the advice of the Dr. K. Radhakrishnan Committee. The Ministry of Education (MoE) confirmed the two-phase rollout in an official PIB press release, moving accreditation from activities and compliance toward measurable outcomes.
Key Takeaways
- The reforms reward proven outcomes over paperwork, so colleges must now show real student results, not just activity records.
- Binary status (Accredited or Not Accredited) raises the stakes, as there is no comfortable middle grade to fall back on.
- Accurate, verifiable data now decides accreditation, because the new system cross-checks every college claim against government records.
CampusFeed Take
The bigger story here is not the binary label, it is the new focus on processes and outcomes rather than inputs and paperwork. Colleges that spent years polishing self-study narratives will find that approach no longer works, because the new platform cross-checks every claim against government databases. Smaller and rural colleges, long under-represented in accreditation, stand to gain the most if they fix data discipline early. CampusFeed expects the first real test once NAAC opens the binary portal, which remains unscheduled as of June 2026. Institutions that build clean, year-round data systems before that launch will move first. By Suraj Prajapati.
What do the NAAC accreditation reforms change?
The NAAC accreditation reforms move higher education assessment from seven broad criteria to ten focused attributes, grouped under inputs, processes and outcomes. The biggest visible change is the end of letter grades and the start of a simple Accredited or Not Accredited result.
| Feature | Old System | New System |
|---|---|---|
| Grading | Eight letter grades (A++ to C, plus D) | Binary: Accredited or Not Accredited |
| Assessment areas | 7 criteria | 10 attributes (inputs, processes, outcomes) |
| Core focus | Activities and compliance | Outcomes and impact |
| Verification | Physical peer-team visits | AI-supported digital checks |
| Data | Self-reported, cycle based | One Nation One Data, cross-verified |
| Levels | Single grade only | Optional MBGL Levels 1 to 5 |
NAAC groups the ten attributes under three layers. Inputs cover curriculum, faculty resources, infrastructure and financial management. Processes cover learning and teaching, extended curricular engagements and governance. Outcomes cover student outcomes, research and innovation outcomes, and sustainability. The shift is built on the Dr. K. Radhakrishnan Committee report, which the Ministry of Education accepted (see the official NAAC reforms press release).
About NAAC
The National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC) is an autonomous body set up in 1994 under the University Grants Commission (UGC). Based in Bengaluru, it assesses and accredits universities and colleges across India for quality in teaching, research, infrastructure and governance. Employers, students and funding agencies treat NAAC accreditation as a key trust signal. By early 2024, only a minority of Indian colleges and universities held valid accreditation.
How will binary accreditation and MBGL levels work?
Binary accreditation gives a college one of two results: Accredited or Not Accredited. This replaces the eight-grade scale (A++ to C) that NAAC used since 2007. Institutions close to the benchmark may be marked Awaiting Accreditation while they improve.
After clearing the basic binary stage, colleges can choose Maturity-Based Graded Levels (MBGL), an optional ladder from Level 1 (Basic) to Level 5 (Global Excellence). MBGL rewards institutions that show deeper systems, stronger research and mature governance over time.
The process also turns digital. Artificial intelligence (AI) tools and the One Nation One Data platform will cross-check every figure against records like the All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) and the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF). Physical peer-team visits, the norm for decades, will shrink for basic accreditation.
Who do the NAAC accreditation reforms apply to?
The Dr. K. Radhakrishnan Committee said India needs a “simple, trust-based, credible, objective and rationalized system” for accreditation, and recommended that every higher education institution join it.
In practice, the reforms apply to all HEIs, from large universities to small standalone colleges. The committee also recommended bringing the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) into the NAAC system, which earlier relied on their own internal reviews. Colleges in Cycle 2 and above will keep their current grade until the new framework fully launches, NAAC has said.
What this means for you
If you run a college or university
Start treating accreditation as a daily data habit, not a rushed exercise done only at renewal time. Build an Internal Quality Assurance Cell (IQAC) that keeps clean, dated evidence for every attribute, especially student outcomes and research. Align your numbers with your AISHE and NIRF records now, because the new system will flag any gaps automatically. Early movers will face fewer surprises when the binary portal opens.
Turn Your Achievements Into Stories That Students Actually Read
Feature admissions, placements, rankings, events, research initiatives, achievements, and institutional milestones before a highly engaged education-focused audience.
If you are a student
Check whether your college is accredited before you join, since the new binary result makes that status clearer than the old grades. Accreditation affects your degree’s recognition, scholarship eligibility and placement value. If your college is preparing for the new framework, expect more focus on measurable learning outcomes, internships and research, which usually benefits you directly.
If you are a parent
Ask each shortlisted college one simple question: is it accredited, and when does that accreditation expire. Under the new system, the answer is a clear yes or no, which makes comparison easier for you. Choose institutions that already track student outcomes and placements with real data, as these will adapt fastest to the reforms.
What Is Next
NAAC has not yet opened the binary portal, so colleges should use this window to get audit-ready. Key things to watch:
- The official launch date of the binary accreditation portal (still awaited as of June 2026)
- The final published manual with the full list of attribute metrics
- Clear transition rules for Cycle 1 and Cycle 2 institutions
Is your institution’s data ready for an AI-checked, outcome-first review?
Frequently Asked Questions
Last updated: June 11, 2026 at 11:30 PM IST
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and is based on publicly available information at the time of publishing. Exam dates, cutoffs, fees, deadlines, eligibility criteria, and scholarship details can change without notice. Always verify the latest information from the official portal of the relevant body (NAAC, UGC) before taking any action. CampusFeed and its authors are not responsible for decisions made based on this article. This is not legal, financial, or career advice. Please consult a qualified professional for individual guidance.
Written by Sagar. Published: June 11, 2026. Updated: June 11, 2026. Have a tip or correction? Write to us at editorial@campusfeed.in.