The Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (BISE) Punjab has unveiled a revised and compressed admission schedule for Intermediate Part One (FA/FSc) for the academic session 2025-27 , sparking immediate concern among students and parents over the tight timeline and associated financial burdens.
According to the official notification issued on Thursday, December 5, the board has set the admission window from December 1 to December 12 for submissions with a single, standard fee . However, as the announcement came on December 5, five days of the stated period have already lapsed, effectively leaving prospective students with only seven calendar days to gather documents and complete the process. You can also view Inter Part One Smart Syllabus 2025 .
Education sector analysts and teachers on the ground have pointed out a more critical bottleneck. “When you exclude the upcoming bank holidays and the intervening weekend, students realistically have only four or five working days to finalize everything,” explained Mr. Ali Raza, a senior college administrator in Lahore. “This includes form collection, document attestation, fee submission at designated banks, and final submission to institutions. For students from rural areas or those awaiting results from other boards, this is an incredibly short timeframe.”
The board has provisioned for a late admission period running from December 13 to December 22 , but this comes with a significant financial penalty. Admissions submitted during this late window will be subject to a late fee , which is typically double or triple the original single fee, a point of major contention.
The financial aspect of the announcement has drawn sharp criticism from parents’ groups. In an era of record inflation, the single fee itself is reported to be a strain on many household budgets. The prospect of paying double or triple that amount is causing severe anxiety.
“The single fee is already a heavy load for a middle-class family managing education costs for multiple children, skyrocketing utility bills, and daily necessities,” said Farah Khan, a parent from Gujranwala. “To then be penalized with a late fee double or triple that amount, especially when the schedule is so abruptly announced, feels punitive. It’s not about negligence; it’s about the practical difficulties of arranging funds and paperwork within days.”
Multiple parent associations and voices on social media have directly appealed to Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif to intervene. They are urging the provincial leadership to take immediate notice of the situation and instruct the education department to either extend the single-fee deadline significantly or rationalize the late fee structure.
“We urge the Chief Minister, who has championed educational initiatives, to ease this undue pressure on students and parents,” a collective statement from a Lahore-based parents’ forum read. “An extension of at least two weeks for the single fee is a reasonable demand to ensure no student is disadvantaged due to administrative timelines or economic hardship.”
Sources within the Punjab Boards Committee of Chairmen (PBCC) indicate that the compressed schedule is aimed at ensuring the new academic session for first-year students begins promptly after the winter holidays, avoiding further delays in the academic calendar. The process is largely centralized and online through the Punjab Boards Online Admission System , but several steps still require physical bank visits and institutional submissions, which take time.
A board official, speaking on condition of anonymity, stated, “The schedule is published with the intent to keep the session timely. Notifications are disseminated to all affiliated colleges and on our official website immediately. Students are advised to prioritize the completion of their admissions to avoid late fees.”
Education consultants are advising students and parents to act with utmost urgency:
Immediate Action: Collect admission forms and required documents (matriculation result card, CNIC/B-Form, domicile, photographs) without delay.
Fee Submission: Deposit the single fee at the designated banks as early as possible , well before the December 12 cutoff.
Online Portal: Complete all steps on the official online admission portal meticulously.
Final Submission: Ensure the complete application packet is submitted to the concerned college or designated center before the deadline.

This annual rush highlights persistent calls for systemic reform in the intermediate admission process. Stakeholders advocate for:
More realistic and student-friendly timelines announced well in advance.
A fully streamlined, end-to-end online process to reduce physical hurdles.
A graded late fee system that is more considerate of socioeconomic realities.
As the clock ticks down to December 12 , thousands of students across Punjab are now in a frantic race to secure their academic futures. The coming days will test the efficiency of the board’s systems and the resilience of families navigating both bureaucratic and economic challenges. All eyes are now on the Chief Minister’s office and the board administration to see if an ameliorative measure will be announced to defuse the growing tension.