The three choices, in one minute
After every JoSAA round, the system asks each allotted candidate one question: do you Freeze, Float, or Slide your seat? The answer changes what happens in the next round. Here is what each option does.
Freeze
Freeze locks your current allotment. You stop participating in further rounds. The seat is yours subject to acceptance fee payment and reporting. Use Freeze only when you are sure this institute and this branch are the final answer.
Float
Float keeps your current seat as a minimum and tries for any higher preference (different institute or different branch) from your locked choice list. The next round will either upgrade you or leave you with the current allotment. You never lose the current seat by floating.
Slide
Slide is more conservative than Float. It tries for higher preference branches only within your current institute. If you love SPA Delhi but got Architecture and would prefer Planning at SPA Delhi, Slide. You will not be moved to a different institute through Slide.
Worked example: a real candidate
Imagine a candidate ranked CRL 350 with this preference order:
- SPA Delhi B.Arch
- NIT Calicut B.Arch
- NIT Trichy B.Arch
- VNIT Nagpur B.Arch
After Round 1, the candidate is allotted NIT Calicut B.Arch (preference 2). What now?
If they Freeze
They keep NIT Calicut. They cannot get SPA Delhi even if a vacancy opens up later. Safe but caps the upside.
If they Float
They try for SPA Delhi (preference 1) in subsequent rounds. NIT Calicut is the floor. If SPA Delhi opens up due to other candidates withdrawing, they upgrade. If not, they keep NIT Calicut.
If they Slide
Slide does not help here because there is no higher-preference NIT Calicut option in their list. Slide would matter if their list had multiple branches at the same institute and the current allotment was a lower-preference branch there.
Float is usually the right answer when you have a strict preference order and you would attend any of the preferred options above your current allotment. Freeze when current is acceptable and you would not actually attend the higher options. Slide when you want a different branch at the same institute.
The Round 6 trap
Round 6 only allows Freeze. You cannot Float or Slide in the final round. This means: any upgrade you wanted has to happen in Rounds 1 through 5. If you Float into Round 6 still hoping for an upgrade, you will be locked into whatever you currently hold. Plan your strategy with this constraint, especially for borderline candidates targeting top SPAs and NITs.
Common mistakes
- Freezing too early. Locking in Round 1 forfeits any chance to upgrade in later rounds. Unless you are absolutely certain, Float gives you the option to upgrade without losing what you hold.
- Floating without a clean preference list. If your locked choice list includes institutes you would never actually attend, Float can move you into one of them and trap you.
- Confusing Slide with Float. Slide is institute-internal only. Use it for branch upgrades within the same institute.
- Not changing strategy across rounds. You can re-decide each round. A Float in Round 1 can become a Freeze in Round 3 if you change your mind.
Decision flow
Are you happy with this institute AND this branch?
Yes, completely → Freeze
Same institute, want a better branch → Slide
Want a higher-preference institute or branch → Float