The Federal Directorate of Education (FDE) has officially moved its admissions process online, launching a centralized portal for the 2026-27 academic session. Parents seeking enrollment for their children in Islamabad’s public sector institutions can now bypass the traditional paper-based queues that defined previous years.
The portal, accessible through the FDE’s official website, covers admissions from Prep through Grade 12. For families, this shift marks the end of navigating multiple school offices to submit forms and track status updates
. Instead, the system promises a streamlined dashboard where applicants can upload documents, select preferred institutions, and receive real-time notifications on their application status. “We wanted to remove the manual burden,” an FDE official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “The goal is transparency. When the process is digital, the room for human error—or external interference—shrinks significantly.
” While the shift toward digitization aims to simplify the administrative load, the true test lies in the system’s stability. In previous years, high traffic during peak admission windows often paralyzed government web portals.
The FDE claims to have upgraded its server capacity to handle the surge, though tech-savvy parents remain wary of potential glitches during the first few days of operation. The portal requires a valid B-form or Child Registration Certificate (CRC) to initiate any application. Applicants must also provide verified proof of residence within the capital territory, as the FDE continues to prioritize neighborhood-based enrollment to manage overcrowding in high-demand institutions like the Islamabad Model Colleges.
Critics of the move point to the digital divide. While the portal is a step forward, families in rural areas under the FDE’s jurisdiction may face hurdles if they lack reliable internet access or the technical literacy to navigate the platform.
To mitigate this, the directorate has designated “facilitation desks” at select model colleges where staff are tasked with helping parents submit their forms digitally.
Despite these logistical challenges, the move signals a broader push within the federal education sector to modernize its legacy systems. If the portal holds up under the weight of thousands of concurrent users, it could pave the way for a fully paperless enrollment cycle by 2028.
For now, the deadline for submissions is set for the coming weeks, and the FDE has urged parents not to wait until the final day to register their accounts. Missing the window now means defaulting to a secondary, manual process—or risking a seat at their preferred institution altogether.
