Admit Card Generator Free โ€” Create Exam Admit Card PDF Online | PDF Online Editor
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Admit Card Generator โ€” Create Exam Admit Card PDFs Free

Generate professional exam admit cards, hall tickets, and roll number slips for schools, colleges, universities, and competitive exams in seconds. Add student details, exam schedule, subject timetable, and QR code โ€” then download a print-ready PDF instantly. Free, no account needed.

โœ… 100% Free ๐ŸŽ“ Schools & Colleges ๐Ÿ“ฑ QR Code ๐Ÿ–จ๏ธ Print Ready โšก No Signup
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Admit Card Generator

Fill in institution & student details ยท Download admit card PDF

๐ŸŽจ Card Theme
Navy
Maroon
Forest
Royal
Teal
Slate
๐Ÿซ Institution / Organization Details
๐Ÿ“ Examination Details
๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐ŸŽ“ Student / Candidate Details
๐Ÿ“… Subject / Paper Schedule
Subject / Paper
Date
Time
๐Ÿ“‹ Instructions & Options

๐ŸŽ“Admit Cards โ€” The Document Students Forget Until the Night Before

I've run exams for a small technical institute for several years, and the single most stressful part of every exam week isn't setting the question papers โ€” it's the admit card situation. Every semester, without fail, a handful of students show up at the gate without their admit card. Some say they forgot to download it, some say the link expired, some say they never got the email. And then there's the 6 AM phone call to the registrar's office.

The problem is usually on the institution's side. When admit cards are generated manually through spreadsheets and email, something always breaks โ€” a batch doesn't go out, a link expires, a student's email address has a typo. Having a reliable, simple way to generate individual admit card PDFs that can be printed, emailed, or shared directly makes the whole process a lot cleaner.

This tool generates a complete admit card with all the fields exam authorities actually need โ€” roll number, seat number, exam venue, subject-wise timetable, reporting time, and student verification details. According to UGC examination reform guidelines, admit cards must contain the candidate's photo, roll number, exam center, and invigilator verification space โ€” all of which this tool includes. Whether you're running a school exam, a university semester, or a competitive entrance test, the PDF you download here covers what's needed.

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Subject Table

Date & time per subject/paper

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QR Code

Scannable roll number verification

๐Ÿ“ท

Photo Box

Student photo placeholder

๐ŸŽจ

6 Themes

Navy, Maroon, Forest, Royal, Teal, Slate

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Signatures

Student & authority sign blocks

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Print Ready

A4 layout, clean borders


๐Ÿ“‹How to Create an Admit Card Here

1

Choose Theme

Pick a colour theme that matches your institution โ€” Navy, Maroon, Forest, Royal, Teal, or Slate.

2

Institution Info

Add your school or university name, address, type, and affiliation.

3

Exam Details

Enter the examination name, session, dates, reporting time, and venue.

4

Student Details

Fill in the student's name, roll number, class, section, seat number, and date of birth.

5

Subject Schedule

Add each subject with its exam date and time. Add as many subjects as needed.

6

Download PDF

Add instructions, issuing authority, toggle options, and download the admit card PDF.


๐Ÿ’กWhat Makes a Good Admit Card โ€” Tips From Running Exams

  • The roll number needs to be the most visible thing on the card. Invigilators have to match students to their roll numbers quickly, often in a crowded hall. Put the roll number in large, bold text near the top. Everything else can be smaller. I've seen admit cards where the roll number is buried in a table of fields and the invigilator has to squint to find it โ€” that slows down the seating process and creates confusion.
  • Include the reporting time, not just the exam time. Students need to know when to arrive, not just when the exam starts. "Report by 9:00 AM, exam starts 9:30 AM" is much clearer than just "9:30 AM." Many students don't realize that arriving at exam time means they might be turned away.
  • Put the exam venue address on the card. "Main Examination Hall" means nothing to a first-year student who's never been to the campus. The full building name, block number, or street address helps โ€” especially for external or competitive exam centers that the student has never visited. I've had students show up at the wrong campus entirely because the venue was listed as just the institution name.
  • The subject timetable prevents the most common last-minute panic. A single-exam admit card tells a student when to show up. A card with the full subject schedule tells them when every paper is, which means they can plan their revision. Students who lose their admit card and try to reconstruct the schedule from memory are the ones who miss papers.
  • Instructions should be on the card, not in a separate email. Any instruction that a student needs to follow on exam day should be printed directly on the admit card. "No calculator allowed," "bring a valid ID," "blue or black pen only" โ€” these go on the card. If it's only in an email, half the students won't remember it.
  • For competitive exams, include the category / reservation status. Students appearing under reserved categories (SC/ST, OBC, PwD) often have different eligibility criteria, separate cut-offs, or different seating arrangements. Having the category clearly stated on the admit card prevents disputes at the center. According to India's National Education Policy guidelines and similar frameworks internationally, examination documentation should clearly reflect a student's examination category for fair administration.

โ“Frequently Asked Questions

What is an admit card and is it different from a hall ticket? +
They're the same thing, just called by different names in different countries and institutions. "Admit card" is the most common term across South Asia and for many competitive exams. "Hall ticket" is widely used in India, particularly by state boards and public universities. "Roll number slip" is common for school-level exams. Some international institutions call it an "examination entry slip" or "exam authorization card." Regardless of the name, the document serves the same purpose: authorizing a specific student to appear in a specific exam, and providing the details they need to do so.
Can I use this for competitive exams like entrance tests? +
Yes, absolutely. The tool works for any exam type โ€” school annual exams, university semester exams, board exams, entrance tests, mock exams, and internal institutional assessments. For competitive entrance exams, make sure to fill in the exam type as "Competitive Exam" or "Entrance Exam" and add any specific instructions about what identification documents the candidate needs to bring. Competitive exam admit cards typically also need a photo โ€” the photo placeholder box in this tool covers that.
How do I generate admit cards for multiple students? +
Fill in the institution details, exam details, and subject schedule once โ€” those stay the same for all students. Then just update the student-specific fields (name, roll number, seat number, date of birth) and download a new PDF for each student. The form doesn't clear automatically, so you only need to change what's different from one student to the next. For large classes, this works well for generating 20โ€“30 cards. If you need hundreds of cards, you'd be better served by a mail-merge system or a dedicated student information system โ€” this tool is better suited for smaller batches.
What happens if a student loses their admit card? +
Since the admit card is generated as a PDF on your device, you can simply regenerate it with the same details and give the student a fresh copy. There's no server-side storage โ€” the document lives as a file you downloaded, so keep a copy in a folder organized by batch or roll number. Many institutions also send the PDF to the student's email at the time of issue so there's always a digital backup. If the original was physically lost rather than digitally, just download another copy from the PDF you saved and print it again.
Should the admit card have the student's photograph? +
For formal exams โ€” board exams, university exams, competitive entrance tests โ€” yes, a photo is typically required. It helps invigilators verify that the person sitting in the hall is the same person the card was issued to. This tool includes a photo placeholder box that you can print and physically attach the student's photo to, or you can leave it for the student to affix. For internal school or college exams where invigilators know the students, or for mock/practice exams, the photo is often skipped. Toggle the photo placeholder on or off depending on your requirement.
Can I add more than 5 subjects on the admit card? +
Yes. You can add as many subjects as needed using the "+ Add Subject" button. Each subject gets its own row in the timetable with date and time. For exams with many subjects โ€” 8, 10, or more papers โ€” the card automatically expands to fit them all. If you have a very large number of subjects, the card will naturally grow longer, which is fine for A4 printing. The PDF adjusts to the content height when you download it.