National Eligibility cum Entrance Test
Hello
With 392 marks in NEET 2025 and being from the VJNT category in Maharashtra, chances for a government MBBS seat through state quota are very low. Previous year cutoffs for VJNT in government colleges were around 500–525 marks. Your score may not meet the required cutoff for these colleges. However, you can explore private colleges under the VJNT quota or management/NRI seats.
Hello,
Sorry, but if you want to pursue the MBBS degree in India, you can't join without the NEET exam. You must qualify for the NEET exam, and then you will get admission to the MBBS course, but if you want another course other than MBBS in medical college, you can go for private colleges with management quotas.
I hope it will clear our query!!
Good morning. yes, you can absolutely add fresh courses in Round 2 of NEET UG counselling, even if you didn’t get a seat in Round 1
Modify your choices: You can add, remove, or change courses and colleges during the Round 2 choice filling window.
Fresh course selection: You’re free to include new courses like BDS, BSc Nursing, AYUSH (BAMS/BHMS), or MBBS if they weren’t selected earlier.
No seat in Round 1 No problem: If you registered in Round 1 but weren’t allotted a seat, you can directly participate in Round 2 without re-registering2.
Key Points to Remember
Round 1 choices are not carried forward — you must fill new choices in Round 2.
If you don’t fill fresh choices, you won’t be considered for allotment in Round 2.
You can also change your course preferences entirely, as long as you meet the eligibility criteria.
At a rank of 45,336, getting MS-Obs & Gyn or Ophthalmology in top private colleges of MP is a little difficult, as these courses close at much lower ranks (under 20–30k usually). However, you may still have chances in some colleges .
You can use this tool for predict your college: https://medicine.careers360.com/neet-pg-college-predictor
For ENT, chances are better compared to Obs & Gyn. You should definitely apply in Mop-Up rounds where vacant seats often open up, and sometimes cut-offs go higher.
Thank you!
Hello Taiba,
With a NEET PG rank of around 25,000 and score of 500, it will be very tough to get MS in Obstetrics & Gynaecology in government colleges, because the cut-off for Gynae in govt. institutes usually closes much earlier (mostly within top 8–10k ranks).
But you still have chances in private or deemed universities, where MS Gynae seats often go till 20–25k rank range. So while govt. options are almost closed at this score, you should definitely try in deemed/private colleges through counselling.
Hello aspirant,
ACMS generally has high cut-offs and mostly seats are reserved for children of Army personnel. Even with SC reservation, 427 marks (AIR ~1.6 lakh) is quite low for ACMS, so chances are very slim.
With the help of this tool you can predict your college: College predictor careers 360
At rank 1.3 lakh in NEET PG, clinical subjects are difficult, but paraclinical (like Pharmacology, Microbiology, Pathology, Biochemistry, Anatomy, Physiology, Forensic Medicine) have higher cut-offs.In Andhra Pradesh private colleges, chances are possible for paraclinical branches. Examples:
You can use this tool for more options : https://medicine.careers360.com/neet-pg-college-predictor
Thank you and best wishes!
With your air 9011 marks you can get clinical seats like general surgery, anathesia ,ent in govt colleges but if you are looking for these listed below branches it will be hard to get seats based on these courses like radiology, dermatologist,medicine if you are looking for any specific college look into their official website
With 252 marks (AIR ~5,95,873) in NEET UG 2025, you won’t get an MBBS seat in any government college as even SC/ST cutoffs stay higher, but you may still have chances in private BDS, BAMS, BHMS, Nursing, or Paramedical courses, and in some states, MBBS may be possible only through costly private management quota seats; the exact options will depend on your state and category.
Good afternoon with a NEET PG score of 414, getting MS Orthopedics in a government college under All India Quota (AIQ) for the General category is highly unlikely, as the expected cutoff for MS Ortho in 2025 is around 490–497 out of 800.
What Are Your Options? State Quota (if applicable)
Private medical colleges
Deemed universities
State government colleges (reserved seats)
DNB Orthopedics
DNB (Diplomate of National Board) programs in Orthopedics are a strong alternative. With 414, you can target:
Mid-tier private hospitals
Some government-affiliated DNB institutes
Rural or semi-urban setups with good hands-on exposure
Management Quota
If budget permits, private colleges under management quota may offer MS Ortho seats at this score.
What You Can Do Now
Track MCC and state counselling rounds closely.
Explore DNB options—I can help shortlist hospitals with good surgical exposure.
Consider backup branches like MS ENT, MS Ophthalmology, or MD Anaesthesia, which may be available at this score.
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