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Punjab News Updated Jun 3, 2026

Punjab Caps School Fee Hikes at 5% in Tough New Law

Punjab government caps annual school fee increases at 5% to curb arbitrary hikes. The law mandates refunds for excess fees collected in the past three years. Strict penalties, including cancellation of school recognition, are prescribed for violations. CM Bhagwant Mann calls it the toughest law against arbitrary fee hikes in the country.

Punjab caps annual school fee hike at 5 per cent

Chandigarh, June 3

In a step aimed at ending arbitrary fee hikes by private schools, the Punjab government on Wednesday announced a regulatory framework that caps annual fee increases at five per cent, mandates refunds of excess fees collected from parents wherever schools breached the annual limit in the past three years and prescribed stringent penalties that can ultimately lead to cancellation of a school's recognition.

The proposed legislation that Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann declared as the country's toughest law against arbitrary fee hikes by private schools would be introduced in the upcoming Assembly session and would apply to all private schools across the state.

Significantly, the five per cent ceiling will cover not only tuition fees but all mandatory charges and funds collected by schools, closing avenues that institutions have often used to burden parents with additional costs.

Stating that the unchecked fee hikes were enabled by amendments introduced by the previous Congress Government in 2019, CM Mann said the new law would restore accountability in the education sector, protect parents from exploitation, and permanently end the harassment of children and families over school fees.

CM Mann said the fee structure of private unaided schools is currently governed by the Punjab Regulation of Fee of Unaided Educational Institutions Act, 2016, which was amended in 2019. However, he said the successive governments failed to implement the law effectively, allowing schools to impose excessive fee hikes on parents.

The Chief Minister said the government has decided to put a cap of five per cent on annual fee hikes so that no school can increase fees beyond this limit. "We will bring an Ordinance in this regard. Schools that have increased fees by more than 15 per cent during the past three years will face strict action. The original 2016 Act clearly stipulated that fee hikes should not exceed eight per cent of the previous year's fee, but this provision was diluted through amendments introduced by the previous government."

The Chief Minister said the 2019 amendment allowed schools to increase fees beyond the prescribed limit through a disclosure mechanism, which required schools to publicly display proposed fee hikes on notice boards, school websites, and the website of the Department of School Education before admissions commenced.

"Though the law mandated transparency regarding fee increases, these provisions were rarely implemented in practice. As a result, parents continued to face unjustified and excessive fee burdens," he added.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sneha F

I'm a parent of two kids in private school in Ludhiana. The arbitrary fee hikes were becoming unbearable. 😓 One year they charged a "development fee" that was more than the tuition! This law seems to close those loopholes. But will it be implemented strictly? That's the real question.

Raghav A

Good move by CM Mann. 👏 But I'm a bit skeptical. Private schools always find ways to bypass regulations. They might introduce "optional" activities or trips that become mandatory. The government needs to monitor this closely. Also, schools need to run - teachers' salaries and maintenance costs are real.

Deepak U

I work at a private school in Jalandhar. Our school hasn't increased fees in 3 years because we are already struggling with low enrollments. Many schools are mismanaged but some are genuinely trying to provide good education with rising costs. This blanket cap might hurt smaller schools that are already operating on thin margins.

Kavitha C

As a parent who paid Rs 50,000 as "admission fee" that was never refundable, I welcome this! 😤 Schools were treating parents like ATMs. The refund mechanism for excess fees collected in past 3 years is a strong deterrent. If implemented honestly, this could set a national precedent.

Nitin Z

I'm a teacher in a private school. Our salaries are already delayed sometimes because schools struggle with cash flow. This cap might lead to cost-cutting that affects teachers' pay and ultimately student learning. There needs to be a balance - maybe an independent committee to review genuine needs for fee hikes above 5%.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

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