NEET College Predictor
Check your expected admission chances in MD/MS/Diploma courses based on your NEET PG Score
The NEET PG pass percentage 2025 is the percentage of students who passed the NEET PG exam 2025. To pass the NEET PG exam, students should score equal or more than the qualifying cutoff score. As per the NEET PG result 2025, a total of 242493 students registered for the exam, out of which, 230114 students appeared for the exam and 138671 students passed the exam. Based on this data, the NEET PG 2025 passing percentage is 60.26%.
On December 15, the MP NEET PG round 2 counselling registration will reopen on the Department of Public Health and Medical Education's official website, dme.mponline.gov.in. For admission to MD, MS, PG Diploma, and DNB programs, the Madhya Pradesh NEET PG round 2 counselling schedule has also been released.
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The passing percentage in NEET PG 2025 is calculated on the basis of the number of students who secured the qualifying marks out of the total appeared students in NEET PG 2025 exam. By knowing the pass percentage of NEET PG 2025 exam, students can get an idea about the competition level of the exam and also get an insight on how many students will be competing for a seat during the NEET PG counselling 2025. Read the full article to know comprehensively about the NEET PG pass percentage 2025.
The passing percentage of NEET PG 2025 is provided below. The NEET PG pass percentage 2025 is calculated on the basis of total qualified candidates and total appeared candidates.
Particular | Details |
Total registered candidates | 242493 |
Total appeared candidates | 230114 |
Total candidates securing cutoff marks | 138671 |
Pass percentage | 60.26% |
Particular | 2025 | 2024 | 2023 |
Total appeared candidates | 230114 | 216094 | 200517 |
Total passed candidates | 138671 | 129920 | 120607 |
Pass Percentage | 60.26% | 60.12% | 60.14% |
1. The number of candidates appearing for the NEET PG exam has increased steadily over the three years:
2023: 200,517 candidates
2024: 216,094 candidates (7.74% increase from 2023)
2025: 230,114 candidates (6.49% increase from 2024)
2. The interest and demand for postgraduate medical education has increased over the years.
3. The number of candidates passing the exam has also risen consistently. However the overall passing percentage has remained constant over the last three years.
2023: 120,607 candidates
2024: 129,920 candidates (7.72% increase from 2023)
2025: 138,671 candidates (6.74% increase from 2024)
4. The pass percentage has not changed much, only slightly (within 0.14%), indicating a consistent difficulty level or evaluation standard for NEET PG exam across these years.
Several factors influence the NEET PG pass percentage, which are discussed below -
Exam Difficulty: The difficulty level of the NEET PG exam paper plays a major role in determining the passing percentage. A tougher exam may result in lower scores, reducing the number of candidates securing the qualifying percentile.
Number of Candidates: With over 2.42 lakh candidates appearing in 2025, the competition is intense. A larger candidate pool leads to a lower pass percentage due to the higher cutoffs. The higher the cutoff, the more the number of candidates scoring the NEET PG cutoff.
Seat Availability: Approximately 42,717 seats are available under the AIQ and state quotas, with additional seats in private colleges and DNB programs. These limited seats relative to the number of candidates pushes the cutoff higher, and hence decreases the NEET PG pass percentage.
On Question asked by student community
Hello aspirant,
With a rank of 1760 in the NTRUHS PG management quota (B-category) and belonging to the AU region, getting a clinical seat is possible but mostly in the mid or lower-demand branches. High-demand clinical courses like Radiology, Dermatology and General Medicine generally close at much lower ranks, but seats in branches such as ENT, Opthalmology, Psychiatry, Anesthesia or General Surgery may still be available depending on this year's vacancy movement during later rounds. Keep track of round - wise allotments for clearer chances.
FOR REFERENCE : https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/neet-pg-counselling
Hope the details will help you.
THANK YOU
Resignation from your previously held seat is necessary for avoiding any forfeiture of the Counselling money and other legal barrings that can take place.
You can use the career 360 PG counselling companion to get one to one counselling advises to Ace your need counselling journey, follow the link below
https://www.careers360.com/campaign/neet-pg-counselling-companion
That's the pivotal moment in the NEET PG counseling process! The NEET PG 2025 Round 1 Seat Allotment List is released by the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC) on its official website.
While the exact final list will only be available after the counseling process is complete, here is what you need to know:
Release Mechanism: The allotment result is released online as a PDF document, containing the roll numbers and ranks of candidates who secured a seat, along with the allotted college/course.
Access: You must log in to the MCC portal using your credentials to download your individual allotment letter.
Keep checking the dedicated Careers360 page for the direct link and official updates regarding the list release and subsequent reporting schedule https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/neet-pg-2025-round-one-seat-allotment-result
Hello,
Your chances of securing an MD seat in government colleges are extremely low with 120349 NEET PG 2025 rank. However, you may still have chances in private medical colleges, deemed universities, or less competitive branches depending on your category and state quota.
To know more access below mentioned link:
https://medicine.careers360.com/articles/neet-rank-vs-colleges
Hope it helps.
Hello,
With an All India rank of around 82,471 and UP state rank around 4,633 , your chances for MS Surgery in government colleges are very low. You may get a seat in private or deemed colleges , mainly in UP. Chances in other states like Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Tamil Nadu are lower due to domicile rules and local quota preference.
Choice filling strategy:
Top: Private/deemed colleges in UP for Surgery.
Backup: Other clinical branches (Orthopaedics, ENT, Ophthalmology) in private/deemed colleges.
Safe: Non-clinical or less competitive branches in private/deemed colleges.
Tips:
Check fees, bond, and stipend before choosing.
Be flexible with branch and college to secure a seat.
You have a non-zero chance if you focus on private/deemed colleges and plan your choices wisely.
Hope it helps !
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