IIT & NIT Branch Change Rules 2026 — After First Year
“I’ll just change branch later” is the most over-trusted plan in counselling. Here is how branch change really works — and why it is a bonus, not a backup.
Last updated: 22 May 2026 · Reviewed against institute academic norms
Key takeaways
- Most IITs and NITs allow a limited branch change after the first year.
- It is decided mainly by first-year CGPA — top performers get first preference.
- Seat-limit caps restrict how many can move in or out of any branch.
- High-demand branches like CSE rarely have vacancies for incoming changes.
- Treat branch change as a bonus, never a plan — choose your JoSAA branch wisely.
How Branch Change Works
At most IITs and NITs, students who complete the first year may apply for a change of branch (also called a change of discipline) before the second year begins. The first year is largely common across branches, which is what makes a switch academically possible.
The process is institute-specific but follows a common shape: eligible students apply, a merit list is drawn up on first-year performance, and seats are offered within the limits set by the institute. Some institutes also require a minimum CGPA simply to be eligible to apply, and may bar students with backlogs. The exact rules live in each institute’s academic regulations — always read those for your specific IIT or NIT.
The CGPA-Based Selection
Branch change is fundamentally merit-based on first-year CGPA. There is no universal cut-off CGPA — selection works like a mini-counselling: students are ordered by first-year CGPA, and those at the top get first pick of the available moves, subject to the caps.
The practical consequence: to move into a sought-after branch, you typically need to be near the very top of your first-year batch. A moderate CGPA may allow a move into a less-contested branch, but rarely into the most popular one. Branch change rewards a genuinely strong first year — it is not a routine formality.
The Seat-Limit Caps
Branch change is bounded by seat-limit rules that keep batch sizes balanced. A common form of the rule: after all changes, no branch may fall below or rise above its sanctioned strength by more than a set percentage. The effect:
- A branch can release only a few seats, so only a few students can leave it.
- A branch can absorb only a few, so only a few can enter it.
- For a high-demand branch, the handful of outgoing seats are chased by many high-CGPA applicants.
This is the heart of the matter: even with an excellent CGPA, the seats simply may not exist in the branch you want.
Why It Is a Bonus, Not a Plan
Putting it together — branch change depends on a top first-year CGPA and on scarce seats actually being available in your target branch. Both must align, and for the most popular branches they usually do not.
So the sound approach to JoSAA is unchanged: fill your choices for a branch you would genuinely be content to study at a college you are happy with. If a branch change later works out, treat it as a welcome bonus. Building your whole decision on a switch that may never be possible is the mistake this guide exists to prevent.