CSIR NET December 2025 Result: Fee Return policy for Absentees
The CSIR NET December 2025 results were declared on January 30, 2026, following the release of the final answer key—a procedural step that wrapped up the evaluation process. This year’s announcement came slightly later than in previous cycles, possibly due to extended answer key challenges or administrative reviews by NTA. Official data shows 2,12,554 candidates registered, with 1,54,080 appearing, leaving 58,474 absentees—a notable 27.5% no-show rate.
Absentee Statistics
NTA transparently reported these figures, highlighting a gap of 58,474 registered candidates who didn’t take the exam. This absenteeism isn’t unusual for high-stakes tests like CSIR NET, where pressures like preparation gaps, personal emergencies, job conflicts, or strategic skips (e.g., awaiting better cycles) play roles. Importantly, registration alone doesn’t guarantee an admit card—full form completion and fee payment are prerequisites, so many absentees likely paid up but still skipped.

Fee Refund Policy
NTA’s policy is clear: application fees (INR 325–1150 by category) are non-refundable under all conditions, including non-appearance. Unlike RRB exams, where partial/full refunds are standard post-CBT-1 attendance to encourage participation and offset logistics, NTA retains fees to cover operational costs like portal maintenance, question paper printing (which scales with registered numbers, not just attendees), evaluation, and result processing. Absentee fees thus subsidize the process for all, regardless of turnout.
Comparison with Railways
Railways, India’s top job recruiter, refunds fees (e.g., INR 400 of 500 for UR post-exam) precisely because it organizes massive, multi-stage drives with high fixed costs—rewarding attendance maximizes evaluation efficiency and fairness. NTA exams like CSIR NET, while large-scale, follow UPSC/SSC norms where fees fund one-off events without post-exam rebates. Reworking for equity: absentees don’t “deserve” refunds, as payment secures exam access; skipping is a personal choice, not an entitlement. Implementing RRB-style refunds could spike costs (printing/logistics don’t shrink much with absentees) and burden payers further via higher fees elsewhere.
Insights and Implications
- Fairness Angle: Refunds might deter casual registrations, reducing no-shows (from 27.5% here), but NTA’s model prioritizes cost recovery over incentives.
- Candidate Impact: Absentees lose INR 325–1150 but retain future eligibility; many reapply anyway.
- Systemic Fix?: A hybrid policy (e.g., partial refunds for verified hardships) could emerge, but no signs yet—Railways’ scale justifies its outlier approach.
| Exam Body | Refund Post-Exam? | Absentee Policy |
| NTA (CSIR NET) | No | Fee forfeited |
| RRB Group D/NTPC | Yes (if attended) | Encourages turnout |
Csir ugc net December Application feeCategory Fee (INR) General/EWS 1150 OBC-NCL 600 SC/ST/PwD 325 Subject Registered Appeared Life Sciences 90434 67032 Earth,Atmospheric, Ocean and Planetary Sciences 8093 5444 Chemical Sciences 45348 32957 Mathematical Sciences 37177 26114 Physical Sciences 31500 22533 Total 2,12,552 1,54,080