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  • Deemed universities in NEET counselling: fees, quotas, and what to expect

    Deemed universities in NEET counselling: fees, quotas, and what to expect

    Deemed universities are the largest single block of seats in MCC NEET UG counselling, with 13,939 seats across 88 institutions in the 2025 cycle. All deemed university admissions happen exclusively through MCC; no state counselling authority fills these seats. If you are considering a deemed university MBBS seat, this guide covers the fee structure, quota types, how admissions work, and how to evaluate whether a deemed university is the right choice for your situation.

    What deemed universities are

    A “deemed university” is an institution that has been granted deemed-to-be-university status by the University Grants Commission (UGC) under Section 3 of the UGC Act, 1956. In the medical context, these are privately operated institutions that run their own MBBS and BDS programmes. Before 2019, many deemed universities conducted their own admission tests. Since 2019, all deemed university MBBS admissions happen through NEET and MCC counselling.

    The 88 deemed medical institutions in MCC’s 2025 seat matrix include some well-known names (Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Kasturba Medical College, Sri Ramachandra Medical College, SRM Medical College) alongside smaller and newer institutions. Quality, infrastructure, clinical exposure, and reputation vary widely across the 88 institutions.

    Fee structure

    This is where deemed universities differ most from government colleges. Annual tuition fees for deemed university MBBS programmes in the 2025 cycle ranged from approximately Rs 10 lakh (Symbiosis Medical College, Pune) to Rs 30.5 lakh (Sree Balaji Medical College, Chennai).

    Over a 4.5-year MBBS programme (plus internship), the total cost at most deemed universities falls between Rs 50 lakh and Rs 1.5 crore. Over 32 deemed colleges in the 2025 cycle charged more than Rs 1 crore for the full course. In 2025, 36 deemed colleges increased their fees from the previous year.

    Over 32 deemed colleges charge more than Rs 1 crore for the full MBBS course. The cost gap between the cheapest deemed (Rs 50 lakh at Symbiosis) and the most expensive (Rs 1.5 crore at Sree Balaji) is threefold. Factor fees heavily into your preference ordering.

    Compare this to government colleges, where the entire MBBS programme costs between Rs 70,000 (Tamil Nadu) and Rs 15 lakh (Delhi).

    The higher fees fund the infrastructure, faculty salaries, and hospital operations that would otherwise be subsidised by the state. Whether this represents good value depends on the specific institution’s clinical facilities, teaching quality, and your financial situation.

    No reservation at deemed universities

    The central government reservation policy (SC 15%, ST 7.5%, OBC-NCL 27%, EWS 10%, PwD 5%) does not apply at deemed universities. This is a frequently misunderstood point. Deemed university seats are filled on NEET merit, with no category-based reservation.

    No SC/ST/OBC-NCL/EWS/PwD reservation applies at deemed universities. Your reserved category from state or central lists gives you no advantage here. All candidates compete equally on NEET rank.

    What deemed universities do have are separate quotas:

    Quota type Code in MCC Who is eligible
    General / Paid (no code; default) All NEET-qualified candidates, ranked by merit
    NRI NRI NRI candidates or children of NRIs. Higher fees than General.
    Jain Minority JMQ Jain candidates at Jain minority deemed institutions
    Muslim Minority MMQ Muslim candidates at Muslim minority deemed institutions

    Not all 88 deemed institutions have NRI or minority quotas. The MCC seat matrix specifies which quota types are available at each institution. General/Paid seats are the majority and are open to all candidates.

    For reserved-category candidates, this means your SC/ST/OBC-NCL/EWS status gives you no advantage at deemed universities. Your category helps you at government AIQ seats, AIIMS, JIPMER, ESIC, and central universities, but at deemed universities, everyone competes equally on NEET rank.

    The security deposit

    MCC charges a security deposit of Rs 2,00,000 for candidates who register for deemed university seats. This is 20 times the Rs 10,000 deposit for government AIQ seats. The deposit is refundable if you are not allotted a seat or if you take the free exit in Round 1. From Round 2 onward, non-joining forfeits the deposit.

    The Rs 2,00,000 deemed university security deposit is 20 times the government AIQ deposit. This amount is at risk from Round 2 onward if you do not join your allotted seat. Factor this into your financial planning before registering for deemed seats.

    The registration fee for deemed university seats is Rs 5,000 (non-refundable). If you register for both government AIQ and deemed seats, you pay the higher total of Rs 2,05,000 (Rs 5,000 registration + Rs 2,00,000 deposit).

    Closing ranks at deemed universities

    Because deemed universities have more seats and higher fees, their closing ranks are generally higher (less competitive) than government colleges. The range in 2025:

    Most competitive deemed universities (OPEN, General seat, Round 1): Kasturba Medical College Manipal, Kasturba Medical College Mangalore, Sri Ramachandra Medical College Chennai, and SRM Medical College Chennai typically close between AIR 10,000 and 30,000.

    Mid-range: Institutions like Saveetha Medical College (Chennai), Amrita School of Medicine (Kochi), and DY Patil Medical College (Pune, Navi Mumbai) close between AIR 30,000 and 80,000.

    Wider closing ranks: Newer or less-known deemed institutions can close above AIR 1,00,000, sometimes filling seats in Round 3 or the stray vacancy round.

    Our AIQ cutoff analyzer shows exact closing ranks for every deemed university across 2023-2025, by seat type (General, NRI, JMQ, MMQ) and round.

    Check closing ranks for your target deemed universities across all three years and all seat types on our cutoff analyzer. NRI and minority quota cutoffs differ significantly from General/Paid seats.

    How to evaluate a deemed university

    With 88 institutions at widely varying price points, choosing a deemed university requires more research than choosing a government college (where the decision is largely rank-driven). Factors to weigh:

    Hospital bed count and patient volume. Clinical exposure during MBBS depends directly on the attached hospital. A deemed university with a 1,500-bed teaching hospital in a major city offers different exposure than one with a 300-bed hospital in a smaller town. The MCC seat matrix does not list hospital details; check each college’s website or NMC profile.

    NMC inspection status. NMC inspects medical colleges periodically. Colleges with conditional approval, reduced intake, or pending inspection outcomes carry risk. Our college pages show NMC data where available.

    Fee relative to peers. If two deemed universities have similar reputation and facilities but one charges Rs 15 lakh per year and the other Rs 25 lakh, the difference over 4.5 years is Rs 45 lakh. Make sure the premium is justified.

    Hospital bed count and patient volume matter more than institutional name. A deemed university with a 1,500-bed teaching hospital in a major city offers fundamentally different clinical training than one with a 300-bed facility in a smaller town.

    Location. A deemed university in Chennai, Pune, or Bangalore gives you access to a larger medical ecosystem (more hospitals for elective rotations, more PG preparation resources) compared to a remote location. This is not a quality judgment on the institution itself, but a practical consideration for your five years there.

    Deemed universities and the stray vacancy round

    Deemed universities are the primary source of seats in MCC’s stray vacancy round. Because some candidates opt for government colleges or state counselling seats instead, deemed university seats can remain unfilled through Round 3. If you are considering participating in the stray vacancy round, your options will be predominantly deemed universities.

    The stray round has stricter rules: joining is compulsory, there is no Float option (Freeze only), and non-joining results in deposit forfeiture plus potential debarment. Only list deemed universities in the stray round if you are certain you would attend and can afford the fees.

    FAQ

    Are deemed university degrees recognized the same as government college degrees?

    Yes. An MBBS degree from any NMC-recognized medical college (government or deemed) is equally valid for licensing (NEXT/NMC registration), PG entrance exams, and medical practice. The degree certificate is the same; the institution type does not affect recognition, provided the college has current NMC approval.

    Can I get a scholarship or fee reduction at a deemed university?

    Some deemed universities offer merit-based fee concessions for top rankers. These are institution-specific and not standardised through MCC. Check individual university websites for scholarship policies. Government financial aid schemes (like state-level post-matric scholarships for reserved categories) may also apply at deemed universities, but coverage varies by state.

    What happens if a deemed university loses NMC recognition after I join?

    If NMC derecognizes a college or reduces its intake, students already enrolled are generally allowed to complete their course. New admissions may be stopped. The Supreme Court has historically protected existing students in such situations. However, studying at an institution under regulatory scrutiny can affect your experience and morale.

    Is there any reservation at deemed universities?

    No. SC/ST/OBC-NCL/EWS/PwD reservation does not apply. All candidates compete on NEET merit for General/Paid seats. NRI and minority quotas (Jain, Muslim) at select institutions are separate from reservation and have their own eligibility criteria.

    Should I take a deemed university seat or wait and retake NEET?

    This depends on your rank, financial situation, and risk tolerance. If your rank can get you a decent deemed university (one with good hospital facilities and a track record) and you can afford the fees, joining now gives you a one-year head start. Retaking NEET means another year of preparation with no guarantee of a better rank. There is no universal right answer; evaluate it against your specific circumstances.

  • Government medical colleges under All India Quota

    Government medical colleges under All India Quota

    Government medical college seats through the All India Quota are the most competitive seats in MCC NEET UG counselling. Low tuition fees (set by state governments, not the college), central reservation, and no domicile restriction make these 8,159 MBBS seats the primary target for most candidates. This guide covers how government AIQ seats work, the fee structure, what the competition looks like, and how to identify realistic targets for your rank.

    How the 15% AIQ pool is formed

    Every government and corporation medical college in India surrenders 15% of its total sanctioned MBBS (and BDS) intake to the All India Quota. MCC fills these seats through central counselling.

    The math for a specific college: if a government medical college has 250 sanctioned MBBS seats, 37 or 38 go to AIQ (15% of 250 = 37.5, rounded) and the remaining 212-213 stay with the state. For a 100-seat college, 15 go to AIQ. For a 150-seat college, 22 or 23.

    Private unaided colleges do not contribute to this pool. Their 15% institutional quota is a separate concept managed by the state or the institution, not by MCC.

    In the 2025 cycle, the AIQ government pool had 8,159 MBBS seats and 492 BDS seats, totalling 8,651 seats across government colleges from every state.

    Fee structure

    This is the primary advantage of government AIQ seats. Tuition fees at government medical colleges are set by the respective state government or its fee regulatory authority. AIQ students pay the same fees as state quota students at the same institution.

    The range across states is wide:

    State Approximate annual fee (government MBBS)
    Tamil Nadu Rs 13,610
    Andhra Pradesh Rs 26,500
    Karnataka Rs 36,070
    Kerala Rs 33,500 – Rs 53,865
    Maharashtra Rs 1,52,100 + Rs 5,000 development fee
    Delhi (MAMC, LHMC, UCMS) Rs 2,60,000

    These are approximate ranges from publicly available fee data. Exact amounts may change each year. Additional fees (hostel, library, gymkhana) add Rs 5,000-20,000 per year depending on the institution. The total five-year cost at a government medical college through AIQ ranges from roughly Rs 70,000 (Tamil Nadu) to Rs 15 lakh (Delhi).

    Compare this to deemed universities, where five-year costs routinely exceed Rs 50 lakh and can reach Rs 1.5 crore. The fee difference is why government AIQ seats are so competitive.

    The cost gap is staggering: a full MBBS at a government college through AIQ costs Rs 70,000 to Rs 15 lakh, versus Rs 50 lakh to Rs 1.5 crore at a deemed university. This fee differential drives the intense competition for government AIQ seats.

    Reservation at government AIQ seats

    Central government reservation applies to all government AIQ seats:

    Category Reservation Approx. MBBS seats (of 8,159)
    Open / UR 40.5% ~3,304
    OBC-NCL 27% ~2,203
    SC 15% ~1,224
    EWS 10% ~816
    ST 7.5% ~612

    PwD (5% horizontal) applies across all categories. State-level categories (Maharashtra’s VJ, NT-B, NT-C, NT-D, SEBC; Karnataka’s 2A, 2B, 3A, 3B, Category 1) do not apply to AIQ seats. Only the central government SC/ST/OBC-NCL/EWS classification is used.

    State-level categories (VJ, NT-B, NT-C, NT-D, SEBC in Maharashtra; 2A, 2B, 3A, 3B in Karnataka) do not apply to AIQ seats. Only central government SC/ST/OBC-NCL/EWS classification matters at MCC counselling.

    Competition: what the closing ranks look like

    Government AIQ is the most competitive segment of MCC counselling. Based on our 2023-2025 data across 112 government colleges in the AIQ pool:

    Top-tier (closing AIR under 1,000, OPEN category): AIIMS New Delhi, JIPMER Puducherry, MAMC Delhi, LHMC Delhi, VMMC Delhi, UCMS Delhi, and a handful of other established institutions. These are accessible only to the top 0.1% of NEET candidates.

    Upper-tier (closing AIR 1,000-10,000, OPEN): Established government colleges in major cities. Grant Medical College Mumbai, BJ Medical College Pune, Seth GS/KEM Mumbai, Bangalore Medical College, and similar institutions across metro cities.

    Mid-tier (closing AIR 10,000-50,000, OPEN): Government colleges in state capitals and large cities. GMC Nagpur, Osmania Medical College Hyderabad, Stanley Medical College Chennai, and comparable institutions.

    Lower-tier (closing AIR 50,000+, OPEN): Newer government colleges, colleges in smaller cities, and institutions in states with less demand. Some government AIQ seats close above AIR 1,00,000 in Round 3.

    Reserved category closing ranks are higher (meaning more seats are accessible): OBC-NCL seats typically close 30-50% higher than OPEN; SC and ST seats close even higher. Use our AIQ cutoff analyzer to check exact numbers for any college-category-year combination.

    State-wise distribution

    Every state contributes 15% of its government college seats. States with more government medical colleges contribute more AIQ seats. Some examples from the 2025 data:

    • Tamil Nadu: Among the largest contributors, with multiple government colleges (including Madras Medical College, Stanley Medical College, Thanjavur Medical College) each contributing 15%.
    • Maharashtra: 41 government and corporation colleges (5,850 state-level seats). 15% of those go to AIQ.
    • Karnataka: Multiple government colleges including BMCRI Bangalore, Mysore Medical College, and newer institutions.
    • Uttar Pradesh: Large state with many government colleges; significant AIQ contribution.
    • Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat: Growing number of government colleges as NMC approves new institutions.

    The geographic diversity means AIQ gives you access to government colleges in states you might not have considered. A candidate from Delhi can get a government seat in Kerala, and a candidate from Tamil Nadu can get one in Rajasthan. The only criterion is NEET rank and preference order.

    AIQ opens government college seats in states you might not have considered. A smaller-city government college at Rs 15,000-50,000 per year is often a better financial choice than a deemed university at Rs 15-25 lakh per year, even if the location is less glamorous.

    What happens to unfilled government AIQ seats

    If government AIQ seats remain unfilled after MCC completes Round 3 and the stray vacancy round, they revert to the respective state government. The state then fills these reverted seats through its own stray vacancy or mop-up process. Per a Supreme Court direction from July 2022, reversion cannot happen before MCC finishes all its rounds.

    Unfilled government AIQ seats are relatively rare at popular colleges but can occur at newer or less popular institutions. For the candidate, this means some government college seats that were not available during MCC counselling may appear in state-level stray rounds later.

    Strategy for targeting government AIQ seats

    Use three years of cutoff data. Our database covers 2023, 2024, and 2025. A single year can be an outlier. Look at the three-year range for your target colleges. If a college’s OPEN closing rank was 15,000 in 2023, 18,000 in 2024, and 14,000 in 2025, your realistic range is 14,000-18,000.

    Never rely on a single year’s cutoff data. Use three years of closing ranks to establish a realistic range. Cutoffs can shift by thousands of ranks year to year based on the candidate pool and seat availability.

    Check all three rounds. Closing ranks typically loosen (get higher) from Round 1 to Round 3. If your rank barely misses a college in Round 1, it may be within range in Round 2 or 3. Our cutoff analyzer shows round-wise data.

    Don’t overlook smaller cities. A government MBBS seat at GMC Srinagar or GMC Agartala is still a government medical education with the same degree recognition. The fee is similar; the clinical exposure depends on the hospital’s patient load, which can be high even at less “famous” institutions.

    Combine with our predictor. Our college predictor classifies colleges as safe, target, or reach for your rank. Start there to build your initial preference list, then fine-tune using the cutoff analyzer.

    Use our college predictor to build your initial list of safe, target, and reach government colleges, then verify with the cutoff analyzer. Check round-wise trends: a college out of reach in Round 1 may be within range in Round 2 or 3.

    FAQ

    Do I pay the same fee as a local student at a government AIQ seat?

    Yes. Government college fees are set by the state, and AIQ students pay the same as state quota students. There is no out-of-state surcharge for AIQ. Minor exceptions exist in a few states where AIQ fees differ slightly (for example, some Kerala government colleges), but the general rule is parity.

    Can I get a hostel at a government college through AIQ?

    Hostel availability depends on the college. Most government colleges provide hostel accommodation, but it is not guaranteed, especially at colleges with limited infrastructure. Check the college’s website or the MCC seat matrix notes for hostel details.

    How do I know which government colleges are in the AIQ pool?

    All government and corporation medical colleges in India are in the AIQ pool. The specific list for each year is in the MCC seat matrix, published on mcc.nic.in before choice filling. Our colleges page filters by government management type.

    Is AIQ the only way to get a government seat in another state?

    For most states, yes. State counselling is restricted to domicile holders at government colleges. AIQ is the only route to a government seat in a state where you do not have domicile. One exception: Karnataka is an open state for private college seats through KEA, but even there, government seats are domicile-restricted outside of AIQ.

    Are newer government colleges worth considering?

    Newer colleges may have less infrastructure and smaller hospitals. But they are still government colleges with government fees and recognized degrees. As they mature (typically 3-5 years), their hospitals grow and clinical exposure improves. If your rank does not reach an established college, a newer government college at Rs 15,000-50,000 per year is often a better financial option than a deemed university at Rs 15-25 lakh per year.