Professor Aruna B. Venkat
Designation: Chair, Academic Committee (Undergraduate)

The five-year B.A., LL.B. (Hons.) programme is NALSAR’s flagship programme and its first. It is designed for students who have completed 12 years of schooling and are seeking a rigorous, interdisciplinary legal education. The programme combines foundational learning in the humanities and social sciences with a strong core in law, preparing students for practice, policy, research, academia, and public service.
With a Choice-Based Credit System (CBCS) and a wide range of electives, seminars, and clinical courses, students can shape their academic journey around their interests while meeting the programme’s core requirements.
The programme is structured to build legal knowledge step by step while also developing critical thinking, writing, and research skills. In the first two years, students complete foundational courses in Economics, English, History, Political Science, and Sociology.Alongside these, students study all the law subjects required by the Bar Council of India, as well as NALSAR-specific mandatory courses, namely Law and Poverty and Law of Intellectual Property. The optional component includes electives, seminars, and clinical courses, allowing students to explore both doctrinal and applied areas of law. This basket courses includes but not limited to advance level courses in Constitution and Public Policy, Legal Theory, Commercial Laws, International laws, Law and Technology and social sciences.
This structure helps students build depth in a chosen area while retaining the flexibility of a broad legal education.
Professor Aruna B. Venkat
Designation: Chair, Academic Committee (Undergraduate)
Mohamed Ashik,
Designation: B.A., LL.B. (Hons.), Academic Year Year 4
Admission to the B.A., LL.B. (Hons.) programme is through the Common Law Admission Test (CLAT). Applicants must secure the required CLAT rank to be considered for admission.
The programme has a total intake of 132 seats, with 75% of seats for All India candidates and 25% for Resident Students of Telangana. The total intake includes seats for SC, ST, OBC/BC-NCL, EWS, female candidates, and persons with benchmark disabilities.
For candidates applying for admission through CLAT 2026, as notified by the Consortium of NLUs (https://consortiumofnlus.ac.in/clat-2026/ug-eligibility.html):
The number of seats available for foreign nationals in the B.A., LL.B. (Hons.) programme is 26. They are divided among the candidates as follows:
To be eligible to apply for admission:
For further information on admission of foreign nationals, please read the notification carefully:
Foreign-National-Admissions-Notification-and-Online-application-form-B.A-LL.B-Hons
Here are our answers to the most common questions that we have received from candidates about applying to the B.A., LL.B. (Hons.) programme at NALSAR. If you have any other questions, do not hesitate to write to admissions2026@nalsar.ac.in or call 040 23498105, 23498164, or 23498115.
NALSAR is a national law university established by Act 34 of 1998 to provide comprehensive legal education. It is recognised under Sections 2(f) and 12(B) of the University Grants Commission Act, 1956, accredited ‘A++’ by the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC), and has consistently been ranked third for the study of law by the National Institutional Ranking Framework.
NALSAR’s fully residential 50‑acre campus is at the ‘Justice City’ in Shamirpet, around 26 km from Hyderabad. It offers hostels, a dining hall, sports facilities, a well‑equipped library, Wi‑Fi classrooms, a moot court hall, an auditorium, a health centre, and counselling services, with 24‑hour power backup.
Students must earn 200 credits over five years through mandatory and optional courses, which includes all the BCI-mandated courses in law and foundational courses in the humanities and the social sciences.
Under CBCS, students design their coursework by choosing from a wide range of elective, seminar and clinical courses within a broad framework. There is a minimum credit requirement, but no upper credit cap, and CGPA is computed on the best 200 credits.
Electives and seminars span constitutional law and public policy, corporate laws, international law, law and technology, and the social sciences. Clinics include Legal Aid, Access to Justice from Prisons, Animal Law, Family Law, Land Rights, and other practice‑oriented offerings.
Eligibility is as prescribed in the Common Law Admission Test (CLAT) Notification; candidates must meet CLAT criteria and secure a suitable rank in order of merit. Detailed norms are available on the CLAT Consortium website and must be read with the NALSAR information brochure.
Yes, CLAT is mandatory for Indian nationals seeking admission against All India and Resident Student of Telangana seats. Foreign nationals are admitted through a separate process, and not through CLAT.
A Resident Student of Telangana is a candidate who either: (i) studied in Telangana for four consecutive years and appeared for 10+2 examination here, or (ii) resided in Telangana for at least four of the last seven years and appeared for the 10+2 examination from an educational institution in Telangana.
There are 132 seats available, with 99 seats (75%) for All India candidates and 33 seats (25%) for Resident Students of Telangana.
The 132 seats are divided as follows:
Each category is further split into All India (75%) and Telangana‑resident (25%) categories as per the official seat matrix.
There is a 30% horizontal reservation for female candidates, amounting to 39 seats within the B.A., LL.B. (Hons.) programme. Additionally, 5% seats (6 seats) are horizontally reserved for Persons with Benchmark Disabilities across categories.
Yes. If a candidate from any reserved category qualifies for admission under the Unreserved category as per merit, they are counted against Unreserved seats, not their reserved quota.
Vacant reserved seats are converted in a specified sequence. For example, from All India SC and ST categories to All India Unreserved, with similar flows for OBC‑NCL, EWS, and Telangana sub‑categories. The detailed conversion chart is available in the Information Brochure.
Yes, 26 seats are earmarked for foreign nationals: 5 for SAARC countries, 11 for non‑SAARC countries, and 10 for ICCR/Government of India nominees.
No, foreign nationals are admitted directly; they are not required to appear for CLAT. NALSAR issues a separate admission notification for this category on its website.
Yes. Vacant seats within the foreign nationals category are converted among SAARC, Non‑SAARC and ICCR/GoI sub‑categories as per the order specified in the Information Brochure.
Log in to your CLAT account and choose ‘Freeze’, ‘Float’ or ‘Exit’ for the NALSAR allotment in the relevant counselling round. If you select ‘Freeze’ or ‘Float’, you must complete document upload and fee payment within the specified deadlines.
Upload all required documents and undertakings through your CLAT candidate login, following the CLAT counselling schedule. NALSAR relies on these uploads (and permitted email submissions) for verification and confirmation of provisional admission.
You must upload SSC/10th and 12th marks statements/pass certificates (or undertakings, if pending), Conduct, Transfer and Migration Certificates (or undertakings), relevant category certificates, and the CLAT 2026 Admit Card. Telangana‑resident candidates must additionally upload the required study and residence certificates.
Yes. You must submit the Undertaking Form 1 and, where applicable, Forms 2/3/4/5/6/7 in the prescribed formats. These may be uploaded on the CLAT portal and also emailed to admissions2026@nalsar.ac.in.
NALSAR will inform you of discrepancies and ask you to upload corrected or additional documents on the CLAT portal or send them by email immediately. Provisional admission is confirmed only after satisfactory submission; non‑submission may result in rejection of admission with recorded reasons.
If your documents do not substantiate eligibility for the allotted reservation category, NALSAR will reject the admission under that category with reasons. According to the CLAT Consortium’s instructions, you may still be considered in subsequent counselling rounds, as per CLAT rules.
Dates for original document verification, final admission formalities, orientation and commencement of classes will be notified separately in due course. Candidates should regularly check the NALSAR website and their registered email.
OBC‑NCL candidates must produce an OBC‑NCL certificate dated on or after April 1, 2026, as per the latest Government of India guidelines. Telangana BC‑NCL candidates must have BC‑A/B/C/D/E certificates, plus a NCL certificate dated on or after April 1, 2026; failing which, provisional admission is automatically cancelled.
All India EWS candidates must submit an EWS certificate issued on or after April 1, 2026, in line with the latest GoI guidelines, failing which admission will be cancelled. Telangana EWS candidates must provide an EWS certificate issued by the Government of Telangana on or after April 1, 2026, with similar consequences for non‑submission.
SC candidates must submit Government of Telangana certificates group‑wise as per Section 3 of the Telangana Scheduled Castes (Rationalisation of Reservations) Act, 2025. ST candidates must submit relevant certificates issued by the Government of Telangana in accordance with the latest guidelines.
You must submit a 12th‑standard study certificate from an institution in Telangana and a four‑year residence certificate (in the preceding seven years) from the Tahsildar/MRO or study certificates from school and junior college in Telangana. These documents are mandatory for candidates allotted seats under the Resident Student of Telangana category.
PwD candidates must submit a Disability Certificate issued by a competent District/State Medical Board within the last five years. Only those with 40% or more disability are considered, and acceptance of a certificate by another CLAT university does not automatically ensure acceptance at NALSAR.
The fee payable in the first year is as follows:
The total amount payable to NALSAR is INR 2,67,000 for General candidates, INR 2,71,000 for SC/ST candidates, and INR 2,77,000 for OBC‑NCL/BC‑NCL/EWS/PwD candidates.
The required amount must reach NALSAR by 5 pm on April 24, 2026, for the confirmation of admission. An online payment link will be made available on the University website in the first week of April.
If you do not pay the fee by April 24, 2026, it will be assumed that you are not interested in joining NALSAR. NALSAR will accordingly reject your admission on the CLAT Consortium portal.
Mess charges are paid annually in advance, approximately INR 40,000 per year, reflected as Mess Advance in the first‑year fee structure. Refundable deposits (hostel, mess, library) total INR 20,000 (INR 14,000 for SC/ST) and are returned as per University rules.
No, the tuition fee increases by INR 5,000 per annum for each subsequent academic year of the programme. Please nore that all fees and charges are provisional and subject to revision by University bodies.
Fee refunds for withdrawn admissions are governed by NALSAR’s Refund Policy and CLAT counselling guidelines. Candidates should consult both documents for timelines and permissible deductions.
Yes, NALSAR earmarks a scholarship budget for financially needy students, especially those below the poverty line, on a merit‑cum‑means basis. Scholarship regulations have been simplified to ensure faster disbursement, so that no student is deprived of education due to financial constraints.
The programme is fully residential; students stay in halls of residence and share a common dining hall. Hostels have a gym, indoor games, badminton courts and television facilities, supported by 24‑hour generator backup.
Students organise and participate in moot courts, debates, quizzes, literary festivals and other inter‑ and intra-institutional events. Active student groups include the Public Policy Group, Lecture Series on Constitutionalism, Nyaya Forum, Legal Aid Group, Savitribai Phule Intersectional Studies Circle, Tech Law Forum, and the elected committees of the Student Bar Council.
NALSAR has MoUs with over 38 foreign universities in North America, Europe, Asia and Australia for student exchange and collaborative research. Around 10-15 students study at partner universities each year, enriching academic discourse on campus.
Graduates work in litigation, judicial and civil services, academia, research, social advocacy, international organizations and corporate/transactional law. They are recruited by commercial law firms, corporates, PSUs and government agencies, and many have secured scholarships such as Rhodes, Gates Cambridge, Commonwealth, Felix, Leiden Gold, Inlaks and others.
Official updates appear on www.nalsar.ac.in and on the CLAT Consortium website for CLAT‑related information. For B.A., LL.B. (Hons.) 2026-31 admissions, you can email admissions2026@nalsar.ac.in or contact 040 23498105/23498164/23498115 (Registrar: 040 23498105/115/164/104).
Yes, a virtual campus tour is available through the official YouTube channel here: https://youtu.be/2t_ryCjbfiE?si=brP-d69GShJpic4r
To complete the B.A., LL.B. (Hons.) programme, students are required to accumulate 200 credits through a combination of mandatory and optional courses. All the law courses prescribed by the Bar Council of India as compulsory have been designated as mandatory. Foundational courses in the humanities and social sciences have also been designated as mandatory. In addition, students are required to earn credits through courses designated as electives, seminars, and social science seminars.
Here’s an illustrative list of all the electives, clinics, and seminars that are being offered in the current academic year:
