The Rajasthan 2026 school uniform is a new statewide proposal. It pairs a light-brown shirt with brown trousers or shorts for boys. For girls, the set includes a light-brown kurta or shirt plus a brown salwar or skirt and a matching brown dupatta. This page shows an example image and explains grade exceptions, Thursday exemptions, and practical styling guidelines.
Full Description
The Rajasthan 2026 school uniform seeks to standardize student dress across government schools. It uses a modest, uncluttered palette: plain light-brown tops and plain brown bottoms. For boys, the typical outfit is a light-brown shirt with brown trousers; younger boys may wear shorts. For girls, the look is a light-brown kurta or shirt with a brown salwar or skirt, plus a matching brown dupatta. Importantly, the guidance excludes patterned designs, printed logos, and ties. Therefore garments remain solid colored to reduce costs and increase visual consistency.
Grade and schedule rules are simple. Uniforms are optional for Classes 1–5. Moreover, every student gets a uniform exemption on Thursdays and may wear non-uniform clothes that day. Aside from these exceptions, the color palette and cuts remain the same across upper primary and secondary grades.
Practical notes for schools and parents:
Fabric choices: choose plain cotton or cotton-poly blends for durability and breathability.
Colours: stick to solid light-brown and dark brown tones; avoid shiny or patterned fabrics.
Comfort & fit: offer short sleeves for hot months and long sleeves or sweaters when it cools.
Sizing & returns: publish a clear size chart, and provide easy exchanges to lower return rates.
Cost control: bulk purchasing and simple stitching trims production costs for school authorities.
Representative images below illustrate full-body views of boys and girls in the specified colors and cuts. However, these pictures are for illustration only. Official photos or diagrams may be released later by state education authorities. For news coverage and official quotes, see reporting by Times of India and NDTV, which cite announcements from Madan Dilawar about the policy in Rajasthan.

