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Home UIDAI Aadhaar Enrollment Update: Birth Certificates Mandatory for 5-18 Years?

Aadhaar Enrollment Update: Birth Certificates Mandatory for 5-18 Years?

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New Aadhaar Rules 2025: Birth Certificate Mandatory for 5-18 Years?

UIDAI Tightens Norms: Birth Certificates Set to Become the Sole Document for Youth Aadhaar

  • Closing the Age Gap: Why 5-to-18-Year-Olds are Facing New Rules

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  • The “One-and-Done” Rule: Strict Limits on Name and DOB Changes

  • Universal Client Software: October 2025 Rollout for 100,000 Machines

  • Instant Verification: Linking 35 State Databases for QR-Based Scanning

  • Face Authentication: Pensions and Services from Your Living Room

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Aadhaar rules for children are getting a massive overhaul. The thing is, the UIDAI is moving toward a system where a birth certificate is the only way to prove who a child is.

Actually, this was already the rule for babies (0-5 years), but now they’re looking to apply it all the way up to age 18. Specifically, CEO Bhuvnesh Kumar recently noted that 98% of new applications come from people under 18.

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As a result, making birth certificates mandatory helps curb the roughly 75,000 daily attempts at “ghost” or “duplicate” enrollments. Consequently, if you’re planning an update for your teenager, you better have that original paper handy (let’s be real, it’s about making the system unshakeable).

And here’s the kicker. You can’t just change your name or birthday whenever you want anymore.

Basically, the UIDAI has put a hard cap on edits: you get one shot at fixing a Date of Birth and two chances for a name change. Instead of a simple correction, major name changes now require a full Gazette Notification. In fact, the system is being reinforced with AI and machine learning to ensure one person can’t game the system to get multiple IDs. And then Y followed. The birth certificate you use at age 5 will now be the permanent “anchor” for any future name changes.

  • Universal Client Software: Rolling out to 100,000 machines by October 2025. Actually, it allows for instant QR scanning of documents.

  • Database Integration: UIDAI has already linked up with 35 state birth certificate systems. Specifically, this means the operator can verify your certificate online in seconds.

  • Mandatory Biometric Update (MBU): Remember, children must update their biometrics at age 5 and again at age 15. Basically, if you miss these windows, the Aadhaar becomes inoperative (those too).

  • Fee Structure: First-time enrollment remains free, but biometric updates for adults now cost ₹125.

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Moreover, the focus is shifting away from physical papers. Specifically, the UIDAI is performing 90 million authentications every single day.

Actually, they’re pushing Face Authentication as the safest method. As a result, senior citizens can now complete their “Life Certificate” for pensions just by looking into their smartphone camera. Consequently, the need to visit a government office is slowly dying out (I checked this twice).

The thing is, the “strictness” is by design. In fact, the government claims that Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) via Aadhaar has already saved 40 times the cost of the entire project.

Basically, by making the 5-18 year age group use birth certificates, they are ensuring that the “next generation” of the database is 100% clean. Instead of a tidy wrap-up, expect more tech-heavy changes as we head into 2026. And then Y followed. The goal is a “faceless” identity system where your face and your birth record are all the ID you’ll ever need…

Also Read | Ration Card Online: Step-by-Step Guide via UMANG App


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