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NIRF, explained
by Chitranjan Jegadeesan
HomeBlog › Faculty–Student Ratio (FSR) Explained

Faculty–Student Ratio (FSR) Explained

By Chitranjan Jegadeesan · NIRF 2026 methodology

FSR is worth 30 marks — the largest single sub-metric in NIRF. Get it wrong and you can lose a tenth of your whole score. Here's exactly how it works.

The formula

FSR = 30 × [15 × (F ÷ N)], where F = qualified full-time faculty and N = sanctioned intake + PhD students.

Who actually counts as faculty

The denominator trap

N uses sanctioned intake, not enrolled. So empty seats don't shrink the denominator — they just hurt you elsewhere (SS and GUE). Fill your sanctioned seats and hire qualified faculty; both move real marks.

Anti-gaming you should know

For research, NIRF measures output per faculty using the larger of (a) faculty needed for 1:15 or (b) your actual faculty. So you can't shrink faculty to flatter research numbers — and adding faculty helps FSR and research capacity at once.

How to score full marks

  1. Count how many qualified faculty you need for 1:15 vs your N.
  2. Hire qualified, permanent faculty up to that number — then stop (the cap means extra earns 0 here).
  3. Document qualifications and both-semester teaching for every faculty member.

Our free tool computes your exact FSR and tells you how many faculty close the gap.

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