It’s the final bell. Viksit Bharat Buildathon 2025 closes tonight - October 6. Students from classes 6 to 12 are rushing to register on vbb.mic.gov.in. Some are huddled in school computer labs, others are logging in from home on patchy Wi-Fi. Teachers are shouting reminders, parents are pushing kids to “just fill the form before it’s too late.”
It feels less like a government program and more like exam results day - except this time, it’s about ideas, not marks.
Yes, the Union Ministry of Education launched it. Yes, the Atal Innovation Mission and Niti Aayog are backing it. But ask the kids, and you’ll hear something different.
For them, this is about finally getting a platform where their doodles, their rough notes, their “what if” questions are treated seriously. That’s the soul of Viksit Bharat - telling young minds “your ideas matter.”
Who says innovation has to start in college? Why not in Class 7, when you’re still drawing in the margins of your notebook?
If you’re still scrambling:
Step 1: Open vbb.mic.gov.in.
Step 2: Create your account. Don’t overthink it.
Step 3: Write down your idea - even if it feels small.
Step 4: Hit submit before midnight.
That’s it. No complicated forms, no scary process. The only tough part? Believing your idea is worth sharing.
Walk into a school today and it’s chaos - the good kind. Groups of kids are scribbling on whiteboards, arguing over whether their “smart dustbin” will actually work. A teacher in Mumbai laughed and said, “I’ve never seen them fight this hard over homework!”
In one small-town school, the principal kept the lab open late just so kids could upload entries. Some typed slowly, hunting for letters on the keyboard, but they still did it. That’s the energy this buildathon has sparked.
This isn’t only for Delhi, Mumbai, or Bengaluru. The heart of Viksit Bharat Buildathon 2025 is inclusivity. A student in Jharkhand sketching an irrigation idea, or a group in Kerala brainstorming solar-powered lamps, is as much a part of this as anyone in a fancy city school.
And honestly, that’s where the magic is - kids trying to fix problems they see every day around them.
This whole effort ties back to the National Education Policy 2020. No more rote learning, no more mugging up definitions. The push now is for creativity, curiosity, and hands-on problem solving.
Even the Ministry of Higher Education is watching closely, because they want today’s school projects to become tomorrow’s startups, tomorrow’s research labs, tomorrow’s big solutions.
It’s not just a competition. It’s a pipeline.
Sure, there will be prizes and certificates. But the real win?
One parent in Lucknow said, “I always thought innovation was for IIT kids. Now my daughter is submitting her own project. That’s a bigger prize than anything.”
The tension is real. Some kids are typing furiously, others are re-reading their answers for the tenth time. There’s nervous laughter, sweaty palms, and last-minute doubts: “What if my idea is too simple?”
But that’s exactly the point - it doesn’t matter. What matters is pressing “submit.” That click is bigger than marks on a report card.
At the end of the day, Viksit Bharat isn’t just about roads, GDP, or big policies. It’s about mindset. It’s about a 13-year-old believing she can solve a problem in her mohalla.
That belief - that’s what changes a country.
At The United Indian, we see the Viksit Bharat Buildathon 2025 as more than a school contest. It’s a moment where classrooms turn into idea labs, and children realise their voices matter in shaping the nation’s future. This challenge is a reminder that the road to a developed India starts with imagination - even if it’s drawn on a school notebook.
When the portal closes tonight, lakhs of students will have put their hearts into those forms. Some polished, some half-finished. Doesn’t matter. Because it’s not about perfection, it’s about participation.
That’s the promise of the Viksit Bharat Buildathon 2025 - making kids believe that their ideas, however small, can shape India’s tomorrow.
1. What is the Viksit Bharat Buildathon 2025 all about?
Think of it as India’s biggest school innovation challenge. Students from Classes 6–12 pitch ideas to solve real-life problems.
2. When is the last date to apply?
Today - October 6. After midnight, the portal shuts.
3. Who can take part?
Any student from Class 6 to 12, no matter if you’re in a big-city school or a small-town one.
4. Why link it with National Education Policy 2020?
Because NEP wants kids to stop memorising and start creating. The buildathon is proof of that.
5. What do students actually gain?
Confidence, exposure, mentorship and the joy of knowing their ideas count. The prizes are a bonus.
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Oct 10, 2025
TUI Staff
Oct 10, 2025
TUI Staff
Oct 09, 2025
TUI Staff
Oct 09, 2025
TUI Staff
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