NEET: How 16 Students with ranks as high as 22,26,607 Secured MBBS Seats in Government Medical Colleges

NEET: How 16 Students with ranks as high as 22,26,607 Secured MBBS Seats in Government Medical Colleges

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Maheshwer PeriUpdated on 25 Jul 2025, 04:31 PM IST
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Something very unusual is happening with NEET medical admissions in India. A shocking fact has recently come to light—at least 16 students who didn’t even qualify in the NEET UG exam in 2024, but still managed to get MBBS seats, and some of them were admitted to government medical colleges. This has caused a lot of anger and confusion among students, parents, and teachers. Now, many people are seriously questioning whether the NEET exam is truly fair, whether the admission process is transparent, and whether the rules set by the National Medical Commission (NMC) are being properly followed.

This Story also Contains

  1. The NEET Minimum Eligibility Norms
  2. Qualified vs Available Seats: The Bigger Gap
  3. List of MBBS Colleges which Allotted MBBS Seats (As per NMC Data)
  4. Case Example: Admission at Bhima Bhoi Medical College, Balangir
  5. Admission Granted with 10% NEET Score at Prafulla Chandra Sen Government Medical College
  6. NEET Qualification Mandatory Even for Central Pool Seats: Official Clarification
  7. This Isn’t Just About 16 Students — It’s About the Future
NEET: How 16 Students with ranks as high as 22,26,607 Secured MBBS Seats in Government Medical Colleges
NEET 2025: How 16 Students with ranks as high as 22,26,607 Got MBBS Seats in Government Colleges

The NEET Minimum Eligibility Norms

To be eligible for admission into any MBBS program in India, a candidate must meet minimum qualification criteria defined by the National Medical Commission (NMC). Students must secure the NEET UG cutoff marks to be eligible for the admission.

Category

Cut-off Percentile

Qualifying

Marks (2024)

Qualifying

Marks (2025)

General / UR

50th

162

144

OBC

40th

127

113

SC

40th

127

113

ST

40th

127

113

General-PH / UR-PwBD

45th

144

127

Any candidate scoring below these thresholds is officially deemed ineligible for MBBS admission as per the NEET UG rules and the Supreme Court guidelines.

Qualified vs Available Seats: The Bigger Gap

The NEET UG examination continues to highlight a glaring gap between the number of qualified candidates and the availability of MBBS seats in India.

According to official data:

NEET UG 2024

NEET UG 2025

Registered

Appeared

Qualified

Registered

Appeared

Qualified

24,06,079

23,33,162

13,15,853

22,76,069

22,09,318

12,36,531

Despite over 13.15 lakh students qualifying in 2024, the total number of MBBS seats available was only 1,09,145—creating a steep shortfall of over 12 lakh candidates who cleared NEET but had no seats to compete for. This makes it clear that only around 1 in every 12 qualified candidates could realistically secure admission.

The trend continues in 2025, where 12.36 lakh students qualified, while seat numbers have not significantly increased, deepening the competition further.

This massive mismatch not only creates pressure on students but also raises urgent concerns about the credibility of the admission process, especially in light of reports that even non-qualified candidates were granted MBBS seats, many in government colleges, bypassing the very merit-based framework that NEET was designed to uphold.

List of MBBS Colleges which Allotted MBBS Seats (As per NMC Data)

Below is the list of 16 colleges who admitted students who did not qualify NEET UG 2024 — many are government medical colleges — according to official NMC counselling data:

Sl. No.

State

College Name

Merit No.

Ownership

Type of Institute

1

West Bengal

Murshidabad Medical College & Hospital, Murshidabad

15,37,570

Public

Other - Public

2

Gujarat

GMERS Medical College, Vadnagar, Mehsana

16,24,953

Public

Other - Public

3

Karnataka

Raichur Institute of Medical Sciences, Raichur

16,35,033

Public

Other - Public

4

Arunachal Pradesh

Tomo Riba Institute of Health & Medical Sciences, Naharlagun

18,05,926

Public

Other - Public

5

Gujarat

Swaminarayan Institute of Medical Sciences & Research

18,25,706

Private

Other - Private

6

Maharashtra

Dr. Panjabrao Alias Bhausaheb Deshmukh Memorial Medical College, Amravati

18,65,485

Private

Other - Private

7

Maharashtra

Shri Vasantrao Naik Government Medical College, Yavatmal

18,99,141

Public

Other - Public

8

West Bengal

Rampurhat Government Medical College & Hospital, Rampurhat

19,44,367

Public

Other - Public

9

Karnataka

Mahadevappa Rampure Medical College, Kalaburagi (Gulbarga)

20,44,936

Private

Other - Private

10

Odisha

Government Medical College & Hospital (Bhima Bhoi Medical College), Balangir

20,50,495

Public

Other - Public

11

West Bengal

Prafulla Chandra Sen Government Medical College & Hospital

20,73,481

Public

Other - Public

12

Maharashtra

Shri Vasantrao Naik Government Medical College, Yavatmal

20,81,954

Public

Other - Public

13

Tamil Nadu

Madurai Medical College, Madurai

20,84,217

Public

Other - Public

14

Karnataka

Navodaya Medical College, Raichur

21,06,407

Private

Other - Private

15

West Bengal

Rampurhat Government Medical College & Hospital, Rampurhat

21,57,526

Public

Other - Public

16

Chhattisgarh

Late Shri Baliram Kashyap Memorial NDMC Govt. Medical College, Jagdalpur

22,26,607

Public

Other - Public

A growing list of students with ranks beyond 22 lakh and scores as low as 52 out of 720 (just over 7%) have been admitted to MBBS programs, many in state-run government colleges.

Case Example: Admission at Bhima Bhoi Medical College, Balangir

One of the clearest pieces of evidence supporting the claim of NEET-unqualified students securing MBBS seats comes from Government Medical College & Hospital, Balangir (renamed as Bhima Bhoi Medical College & Hospital).

As per official admission data released by the college:

General category student was granted an MBBS seat in 2024 despite scoring only 55 out of 720 in NEET—equivalent to 11%, far below the qualifying cut-off of 162 marks for the General category.

The student was admitted on 26 October 2024, and paid a fee of 41,450. According to NEET UG 2024 norms set by the National Medical Commission (NMC), such a low score renders the candidate ineligible for admission.

This case raises serious concerns over the transparency and fairness of the NEET counselling and admission process, especially in government medical colleges where merit is expected to be strictly upheld.

NEET Syllabus: Subjects & Chapters
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Admission Granted with 10% NEET Score at Prafulla Chandra Sen Government Medical College

An official admission record from Prafulla Chandra Sen Government Medical College & Hospital, West Bengal, shows that a student from the OBC (NCL) category was admitted to the MBBS program in 2024 with a NEET score of just 52 out of 720, equivalent to only 10%.

According to the NEET UG 2024 eligibility criteria, OBC-NCL candidates must secure at least the 40th percentile, which equated to 127 marks in 2024. The student in this case scored well below the required cutoff, making them officially ineligible for admission.

This incident adds to the growing list of documented cases where NEET-unqualified candidates were allegedly admitted to MBBS programs, undermining the fairness and transparency of the national medical admission framework.

NEET Qualification Mandatory Even for Central Pool Seats: Official Clarification

In light of the recent controversy surrounding admissions of NEET-unqualified candidates, an official memorandum from the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, dated 12th August 2024, clarifies that Central Pool MBBS/BDS seats are not exempt from NEET eligibility criteria.


This makes it explicitly clear that NEET qualification remains mandatory, even for those selected under Central Pool nominations. Therefore, candidates scoring below the qualifying percentiles (162 marks for General, 127 for OBC/SC/ST in 2024) are not eligible for admission, irrespective of quota or category.

This official guideline further contradicts and questions the legitimacy of several documented admissions where students with NEET scores as low as 10%–11% were granted MBBS seats in government medical colleges. If these admissions were processed under Central Pool claims, they too appear to be in direct violation of NMC regulations.

This Isn’t Just About 16 Students — It’s About the Future

The NEET UG exam was introduced to ensure merit-based, transparent, and equal opportunity admissions to medical colleges across India. But the shocking evidence of students with ranks beyond 22 lakh and scores as low as 10% getting MBBS seats—many in government institutions—shows a serious breakdown in the system.

This is not just about 16 students. It’s about the trust of lakhs of deserving candidates who followed the rules, worked hard, and still didn’t get a seat. When unqualified students bypass the system, it destroys the very purpose of NEET and damages the future of India’s healthcare system.

Despite repeated guidelines from the NMC and the Ministry of Health, basic rules are being ignored. If qualifying in NEET is not mandatory anymore, then why conduct the exam at all?

It’s time for authorities to give clear answers. Students and parents deserve to know:

  • Who allowed these admissions?

  • Under what quota or authority?

  • And most importantly, will any action be taken?

Until that happens, this issue must be called what it is—a national-level medical admission scandal that needs urgent investigation, accountability, and reform.

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Questions related to NEET

On Question asked by student community

Have a question related to NEET ?

Hello,

Yes, you can clear NEET examination in 5 months if you follow this strategy:

  • Time Management
  • Syllabus Coverage
  • Practice & Revision
  • Consistency & Discipline
  • Last 1 Month preparation

For more guidance access below mentioned link:

https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/how-prepare-for-neet-in-5-months

Hope it helps.

Hello aspirant,

The sample paper PDF can help NEET 2026 candidates better prepare.  These NEET 2026 sample papers, which cover questions from physics, chemistry, and biology, adhere to the most recent exam format.  Students can learn about question kinds, chapter-wise weighting, and difficulty level by solving the question paper, which also provides them with exam-like practice.

To get the sample papers, you can visit our site through following link:

https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/neet-sample-paper

Thank you

The options for a PCB (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) medical student are vast, even if they don't pursue or crack NEET!

The best careers utilize the strong scientific foundation gained in high school.

A PCB background prepares you well for entrance exams like AIIMS Paramedical, JENPAS UG, or BITSAT. Don't limit yourself to NEET; use your science skills for highly in-demand careers in diagnostics, research, and therapy.

This article details a range of science career options available after Class 12: https://www.careers360.com/careers/articles/career-options-after-12th-science-pcb-counar


Hello,

Neet exam ke liye sabse important or crucial book NCERT hai.

Kisi bhi or book ko krne ke pehle make sure ki aap ncert achhe se krlo.

Uske baad physics me grip achhi krne ke liye hc verma kr skte hain mechanics le portion ke liye

Inorganic, organic chemistry or biology le liye strictly NCERT follow karein

Physical chemistry ke liye kisi module ki help lein

Hello,

The NEET application form usually opens in February and the last date is usually in March . The exam is generally held in May . The form is filled online on the official NTA NEET website.

For the SC category , you need at least 40% marks in Physics, Chemistry, and Biology in Class 12 to be eligible. The minimum age required is 17 years , and there is no upper age limit .

You can fill the NEET form only through the official NTA website when the registration starts.

Hope it helps !