The current approach to marking attendance in colleges is tedious and time consuming. I propose AttenFace, a standalone system to analyze, track and grant attendance in real time using face recognition. Using snapshots of class from live camera feed, the system identifies students and marks them as present in a class based on their presence in multiple snapshots taken throughout the class duration. Face recognition for each class is performed independently and in parallel, ensuring that the system scales with number of concurrent classes. Further, the separation of the face recognition server from the back-end server for attendance calculation allows the face recognition module to be integrated with existing attendance tracking software like Moodle. The face recognition algorithm runs at 10 minute intervals on classroom snapshots, significantly reducing computation compared to direct processing of live camera feed. This method also provides students the flexibility to leave class for a short duration (such as for a phone call) without losing attendance for that class. Attendance is granted to a student if he remains in class for a number of snapshots above a certain threshold. The system is fully automatic and requires no professor intervention or any form of manual attendance or even camera set-up, since the back-end directly interfaces with in-class cameras. AttenFace is a first-of-its-kind one-stop solution for face-recognition-enabled attendance in educational institutions that prevents proxy, handling all aspects from students checking attendance to professors deciding their own attendance policy, to college administration enforcing default attendance rules.