Frequently Asked Questions
MBBS is a 5.5-year programme - 4.5 years of academic study (pre-clinical, para-clinical, and clinical phases) followed by a 1-year compulsory rotating internship (CRRI) across various hospital departments.
Yes. Since 2016, NEET UG is the sole entrance examination for admission to all MBBS programmes in India - including government, private, deemed, AIIMS, and JIPMER colleges. No other entrance exam is accepted for MBBS admission.
NEET UG cutoffs vary by category, state, and college. For top government colleges like AIIMS Delhi or Maulana Azad Medical College, General category students typically need 680+ marks (out of 720). State government colleges generally require 550-650 marks for General category. SC/ST/OBC cutoffs are lower due to reservation.
MBBS fees vary dramatically by institution type. AIIMS charges ₹1,000-6,000 total. State government medical colleges charge ₹20,000-5 Lakh. Private medical colleges charge ₹50 Lakh to 1.5 Crore. Management/NRI quota seats can cost up to ₹2-2.5 Crore.
Yes. After completing the 5.5-year MBBS programme (including internship), you receive a provisional registration from the State Medical Council, which allows you to practise as a general physician. Permanent registration follows after completing the internship satisfactorily. You do not need to complete MD/MS to practise medicine.
An MBBS graduate earns ₹6-12 LPA as a starting salary in hospitals. Government medical officers earn ₹8-15 LPA (including allowances). After MD/MS specialisation, salaries rise to ₹15-50 LPA. Superspecialists and senior consultants in private hospitals can earn ₹50 LPA to over ₹1 Crore.
AIIMS (All India Institutes of Medical Sciences) are centrally funded autonomous institutions with lower fees (₹1,000-6,000 total), their own hospital infrastructure, higher stipends, and greater research funding compared to state government medical colleges. There are 23 AIIMS institutions across India (including the original AIIMS Delhi). Admission is through NEET UG under the AIQ counselling process conducted by MCC.
MBBS abroad (Russia, China, Philippines, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Georgia) is significantly cheaper than private colleges in India, but comes with risks. Graduates must clear the FMGE exam (pass rate historically around 20-30% in recent years) to practise in India. Language barriers, different clinical exposure standards, and recognition issues are key concerns. NMC regulations require foreign medical colleges to meet specific criteria for Indian students.
NExT (National Exit Test) is a proposed exam by NMC that will serve three purposes simultaneously: as the final MBBS qualifying exam, as the licence-to-practise exam (replacing FMGE for foreign graduates), and as the basis for PG admissions (replacing NEET PG). NExT is expected to be implemented from 2026 onwards and will standardise assessment across all medical colleges in India.
After MBBS, you can pursue: MD (Doctor of Medicine) in clinical or non-clinical subjects, MS (Master of Surgery) in surgical specialities, DNB (Diplomate of National Board) at accredited hospitals, or PG Diploma in various specialities. Admission is through NEET PG (or NExT when implemented). There are approximately 67,000 PG seats for about 2.2 lakh candidates annually.
MBBS counselling happens at two levels. AIQ (All India Quota) counselling by MCC covers 15% of state government seats, 100% of AIIMS/JIPMER/central university seats. State counselling handles 85% of state government seats and most private college seats. Both are based purely on NEET UG rank. The process includes registration, choice filling, seat allotment, and reporting to college.
MD (Doctor of Medicine) is for non-surgical/clinical specialities like General Medicine, Paediatrics, Dermatology, Radiology, Psychiatry, Anaesthesiology, and pre/para-clinical subjects like Pathology, Pharmacology. MS (Master of Surgery) is for surgical specialities like General Surgery, Orthopaedics, ENT, Ophthalmology, and Obstetrics & Gynaecology. Both are 3-year programmes entered through NEET PG.
The minimum age for NEET UG is 17 years as on 31st December of the year of admission. There is no upper age limit as per current NMC/NTA guidelines. There is currently no restriction on the number of attempts, though NMC has proposed attempt limits that may be implemented in the future.
The most competitive MD/MS specialisations (requiring the highest NEET PG ranks) are: Dermatology, Radiology, General Medicine, Paediatrics, Orthopaedics, and Ophthalmology. These attract high competition due to favourable work-life balance, earning potential, or both. Surgical superspecialities like Cardiothoracic Surgery and Neurosurgery are highly competitive at the MCh/DM level.
Yes. MBBS graduates can work abroad after clearing the respective country's licensing exam - USMLE (USA), PLAB (UK), AMC (Australia), MCCQE (Canada). The USA is the most popular destination, with internal medicine, psychiatry, and family medicine being the common residency matches for Indian graduates. Gulf countries (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman) also recruit Indian doctors, often with simpler licensing requirements.