Loading...
Loading...
The NEET UG cutoff is one of the most consequential pieces of data in any medical aspirant's journey, and also one of the most consistently misunderstood. Every year, lakhs of candidates conflate two fundamentally different numbers: the NTA qualifying cutoff (the minimum score to become eligible for counselling) and the admission cutoff (the actual score needed to secure a seat in a government medical college). Confusing these two leads to both overconfidence and unnecessary despair.
This page resolves that confusion with authenticated, official data. It covers the complete NEET UG cutoff landscape: the NTA qualifying cutoff category-wise for 2022 to 2025 (official released data), expected 2026 cutoff based on paper analysis and historical trends, how to interpret the marks-versus-rank relationship, government MBBS admission cutoffs under the All India Quota and state quota, AIIMS-specific cutoffs, BDS and AYUSH cutoffs, and the factors that determine whether the 2027 cutoff rises or falls.
Note on NEET 2026 cutoff: NEET UG 2026 was conducted on May 3, 2026. As of May 2026, the official result and cutoff have not been released. The 2026 cutoff will be released with the result, expected second week of June 2026, and will be updated on this page immediately upon release.
Visit the NEET UG complete guide for the full exam overview, dates, eligibility, syllabus, and all resources.
Every NEET aspirant must understand this fundamental distinction before interpreting any cutoff number.
| Type Set By Released When What It Determines | |||
| Qualifying Cutoff | NTA (National Testing Agency) | With NEET UG result (June each year) | Minimum marks to be eligible for NEET counselling |
| Admission Cutoff | MCC for AIQ; State authorities for State Quota | Round-wise during counselling (July to October) | Actual marks or rank at which a seat is allotted in a specific college, course, quota, and category |
The critical reality: Qualifying the NTA cutoff is the floor, not the goal. In NEET 2025, the General category qualifying cutoff was 144 marks out of 720. The last General category candidate to receive an MBBS government college seat through AIQ counselling (Round 3) had an AIR of 26,178, corresponding to approximately 560 to 580 marks. The qualifying cutoff at 144 marks gave no meaningful advantage for government MBBS admission.
NEET scores are valid only for the year in which they are obtained. A NEET 2025 score cannot be used for 2027 admissions.
All qualifying cutoffs below were officially released by NTA with the respective year's result.
| Category NEET 2022 NEET 2023 NEET 2024 NEET 2025 | ||||
| General / UR / EWS (50th Percentile) | 715 to 117 | 720 to 137 | 720 to 162 | 686 to 144 |
| OBC-NCL (40th Percentile) | 116 to 93 | 136 to 107 | 161 to 127 | 143 to 113 |
| SC (40th Percentile) | 116 to 93 | 136 to 107 | 161 to 127 | 143 to 113 |
| ST (40th Percentile) | 116 to 93 | 136 to 107 | 161 to 127 | 143 to 113 |
| UR/EWS - PwD (45th Percentile) | 116 to 105 | 136 to 121 | 161 to 143 | 143 to 127 |
| OBC/SC/ST - PwD (40th Percentile) | 104 to 93 | 120 to 107 | 142 to 127 | 126 to 113 |
| Total Qualified | 9,93,069 | 11,45,976 | 13,15,000 (approx.) | 12,36,531 |
Reading the cutoff format: The cutoff is displayed as a range (e.g., "686 to 144" for General in 2025). This represents the score range within the qualifying percentile band. The highest scorer (AIR 1) had 686 marks, and the lowest score that still qualified at the 50th percentile for General category was 144 marks. Candidates who scored exactly 144 qualified for counselling but were ranked very low.
| Year Qualifying Marks (General) Direction Primary Reason | |||
| 2022 | 117 | Baseline | Standard paper difficulty |
| 2023 | 137 | Up 20 marks | Easier paper; more candidates scored high |
| 2024 | 162 | Up 25 marks | Easiest-to-moderate paper; highest qualifying marks in recent years |
| 2025 | 144 | Down 18 marks | Tough paper; fewer candidates crossed the 50th percentile threshold |
| 2026 (Expected) | 135 to 145 | Approximately flat to slight drop | Moderate paper (easier than 2025 but not as easy as 2023) |
The qualifying cutoff is not a fixed number NTA decides in advance. It is calculated automatically from the marks distribution. In a tough year (like 2025), the 50th percentile corresponds to a lower mark because fewer candidates scored high. In an easy year (like 2023), more candidates score high, so the 50th percentile corresponds to a higher mark.
NEET UG 2026 was conducted on May 3, 2026. Expert analysis from Allen, Aakash, and Physics Wallah, combined with student feedback, rated it as moderately difficult with Physics tough, Chemistry moderate, and Biology easy to moderate. Based on this difficulty assessment and the historical pattern:
| Category Expected NEET 2026 Qualifying Cutoff Range | |
| General / EWS (50th Percentile) | 710 to 135 (approximately) |
| OBC-NCL / SC / ST (40th Percentile) | 134 to 115 (approximately) |
| UR/EWS-PwD (45th Percentile) | 142 to 128 |
| OBC/SC/ST-PwD (40th Percentile) | 127 to 113 |
These are estimates based on paper difficulty and historical trend. The official 2026 cutoff will be confirmed with the NEET UG 2026 result (expected second week of June 2026) and will be updated here immediately.
NEET UG 2027 is expected in May 2027. The qualifying cutoff will depend on the paper's difficulty. Based on the five-year trend:
| Category Conservative Estimate Optimistic Estimate (easier paper) | ||
| General / EWS | 130 to 145 | 145 to 162 |
| OBC-NCL / SC / ST | 112 to 120 | 120 to 135 |
Candidates targeting government MBBS must NOT prepare to just cross the qualifying cutoff. The qualifying cutoff is irrelevant for government MBBS aspirations. The target must be 600+ marks for a safe government MBBS seat and 650+ for AIQ government medical colleges and AIIMS campuses.
The following table combines marks, approximate rank, and realistic admission outcomes based on NEET 2025 official result data and MCC 2025 counselling closing ranks.
| Score (out of 720) Approx. AIR (General) Admission Reality | ||
| 700 to 720 | 1 to 50 | AIIMS New Delhi; top JIPMER; any college in India |
| 680 to 700 | 50 to 200 | AIIMS (all campuses); JIPMER; top state government colleges (AIQ) |
| 660 to 680 | 200 to 800 | AIIMS (other campuses); top state government colleges (MAMC, VMMC, Safdarjung) |
| 640 to 660 | 800 to 3,000 | Top government medical colleges (AIQ and state) |
| 620 to 640 | 3,000 to 8,000 | Government medical colleges (AIQ); good state government colleges |
| 600 to 620 | 8,000 to 20,000 | Government college (state quota); some AIQ seats in newer GMCs |
| 570 to 600 | 20,000 to 50,000 | Government college (state quota, OBC/SC/ST); good private MBBS |
| 540 to 570 | 50,000 to 80,000 | Government BDS (AIQ); Private MBBS |
| 480 to 540 | 80,000 to 1,50,000 | Private MBBS; government BDS (state quota); government BAMS |
| 400 to 480 | 1,50,000 to 4,00,000 | Private BDS; BAMS private; BHMS government |
| 300 to 400 | 4,00,000 to 10,00,000 | AYUSH private courses; B.Sc Nursing options |
| 144 to 300 | 10,00,000 and above | Qualified but below government MBBS range; AYUSH only |
In NEET 2025, the MCC AIQ NEET cutoff for MBBS in government colleges (Round 3, final round) for General category was AIR 26,178, corresponding to approximately 560 to 580 marks. For OBC category, the AIQ AIR was 26,231. For SC, the closing AIR was 1,36,445, and for ST, it was 1,62,975.
All 15 AIIMS campuses allocate MBBS seats through MCC AIQ counselling using NEET UG scores. There is no separate AIIMS entrance examination since 2020.
| AIIMS Campus General (Approx. Closing Rank) OBC (Approx. Closing Rank) SC (Approx. Closing Rank) | |||
| AIIMS New Delhi | Top 50 to 100 | Top 150 to 300 | Top 500 to 800 |
| AIIMS Bombay (Mumbai) | 300 to 600 | 600 to 1000 | 2000 to 4000 |
| AIIMS Jodhpur | 400 to 700 | 700 to 1200 | 3000 to 5000 |
| AIIMS Bhopal | 500 to 800 | 800 to 1300 | 3500 to 5500 |
| AIIMS Rishikesh | 600 to 1000 | 900 to 1500 | 4000 to 6000 |
| AIIMS Bhubaneswar | 700 to 1200 | 1000 to 1800 | 4500 to 7000 |
| AIIMS Patna | 800 to 1400 | 1100 to 2000 | 5000 to 8000 |
| AIIMS Raipur | 900 to 1600 | 1200 to 2200 | 5500 to 9000 |
| AIIMS Nagpur | 1000 to 1800 | 1300 to 2400 | 6000 to 10,000 |
| Other newer AIIMS | 1500 to 3000 | 2000 to 4000 | 8000 to 15,000 |
For AIIMS New Delhi General category, the closing rank is typically within AIR 50 to 100. A score of 695 to 720 is the practical requirement. AIIMS Bombay typically closes at AIR 300 to 600 for General, requiring approximately 680 to 700 marks.
Note: These ranges are based on MCC NEET UG Counselling 2024 and 2025 data and will vary in 2027 based on seat matrix changes and candidate performance.
| College General AIQ Closing Rank (2025) Approximate Required Marks | ||
| Maulana Azad Medical College, Delhi (MAMC) | 50 to 300 | 690 to 710 |
| Vardhman Mahavir Medical College, Delhi (VMMC) | 300 to 600 | 670 to 700 |
| Safdarjung Hospital Medical College, Delhi | 600 to 1200 | 655 to 680 |
| KGMU Lucknow | 5,000 to 8,000 | 630 to 650 |
| SMS Medical College, Jaipur | 3,000 to 6,000 | 635 to 660 |
| Grant Medical College, Mumbai | 4,000 to 8,000 | 630 to 655 |
| Osmania Medical College, Hyderabad | 8,000 to 15,000 | 615 to 640 |
| Madras Medical College, Chennai | 5,000 to 10,000 | 625 to 650 |
| BJ Medical College, Pune | 6,000 to 12,000 | 620 to 645 |
| RIMS Ranchi | 15,000 to 25,000 | 590 to 615 |
The All India Quota closing rank for MBBS government colleges for General category in MCC 2025 Round 3 was AIR 26,178. Any rank beyond this did not secure an AIQ government MBBS seat in 2025.
State quota (85 percent of government medical college seats) is controlled by state counselling authorities. Cutoffs are lower than AIQ for the same colleges because competition is limited to state domicile candidates.
| State Approx. Score for Top Government College (State Quota, General) Approx. Score for Any Government College Seat (State Quota, General) | ||
| Maharashtra | 620 to 650 | 540 to 580 |
| Karnataka | 620 to 660 | 550 to 590 |
| Tamil Nadu | 580 to 630 | 510 to 560 |
| Uttar Pradesh | 580 to 640 | 510 to 560 |
| Rajasthan | 570 to 620 | 500 to 545 |
| Delhi | Managed by MCC (no separate state quota for Delhi GMCs) | - |
| Punjab | 540 to 590 | 480 to 530 |
| West Bengal | 560 to 610 | 500 to 550 |
| Telangana | 570 to 620 | 510 to 560 |
The NEET 2026 cutoff for state government MBBS seats varies widely by state. In top states like Karnataka and Maharashtra, where private coaching penetration and student population are high, state quota cutoffs approach AIQ cutoffs. In less competitive states, a score of 500 to 530 may secure a government MBBS seat through state quota.
NEET UG scores are also used for BDS, BAMS, BHMS, BUMS, and other AYUSH courses. The cutoffs for these are significantly lower than for MBBS.
| Category Government BDS (AIQ) Closing Rank Approx. Score | ||
| General | 60,000 to 1,40,000 | 480 to 540 |
| OBC-NCL | 65,000 to 1,50,000 | 450 to 510 |
| SC | 1,00,000 to 2,50,000 | 370 to 450 |
| ST | 1,20,000 to 3,00,000 | 330 to 400 |
| Category Government BAMS Approx. Score | |
| General | 400 to 500 |
| OBC-NCL | 350 to 450 |
| SC / ST | 300 to 400 |
Government BHMS and BUMS seats are generally accessible at scores between 300 and 450 for General category and 250 to 380 for reserved categories.
Understanding these factors allows candidates to interpret the cutoff trend and set preparation targets accordingly.
1. Paper Difficulty Level The single most impactful factor. A tough paper (NEET 2025) reduces the number of high scorers, pulling the 50th percentile threshold lower. An easy paper (NEET 2023) increases high scorers, pushing the threshold higher.
2. Total Candidates Appeared More candidates means more competition at every score band, but the qualifying percentile mechanism means the absolute cutoff marks are more influenced by difficulty than by candidate count. However, increasing candidate numbers increase competition for admission cutoffs (college seats) even when qualifying marks remain stable.
3. Number of Available Seats Total MBBS seats in India: approximately 1,18,190 as of 2026. As seats increase (new colleges), the admission cutoff may slightly ease. As candidate numbers grow faster than seat additions, competition for top colleges intensifies.
4. NTA Normalisation and Percentile Calculation NEET does not use multi-shift normalisation (unlike JEE Main) because it is conducted in a single shift. The qualifying percentile is calculated directly from the marks distribution of all candidates in that year.
5. Reservation Policy Application The top 2,50,000 to 12,00,000 qualifiers are distributed category-wise following statutory reservation norms. General category requires the 50th percentile, reserved categories require the 40th percentile. This means the General cutoff is always higher in marks than the OBC/SC/ST cutoff.
Based on five-year trend data and the consistent gap between qualifying cutoff and admission cutoff, the following preparation targets are recommended for different aspirational outcomes:
| Aspirational Goal Required Score Preparation Target | ||
| Just qualifying (AYUSH counselling eligibility) | 135 to 150 marks | Not recommended as a standalone target |
| Any MBBS seat (private, management quota) | 300 to 450 marks | Foundation level preparation |
| Government BDS or BAMS | 450 to 550 marks | Moderate depth preparation |
| Government MBBS (state quota, competitive state) | 550 to 600 marks | Deep NCERT + strong mock test practice |
| Government MBBS (AIQ, any college) | 600 to 640 marks | Thorough preparation with consistent PYQ analysis |
| Top Government Medical College (AIQ) | 640 to 680 marks | Intensive, multi-year preparation with full-length mock tests |
| AIIMS (other campuses) | 680 to 700 marks | Top-tier preparation; multiple rounds of revision |
| AIIMS New Delhi | 700 to 720 marks | Exceptional preparation; top 50 in India target |
The preparation gap between "qualifying" and "government MBBS" is approximately 450 marks. This cannot be bridged through shortcuts; it requires 12 to 18 months of consistent, strategic preparation.
Use the NEET UG Complete Test Series 2027 to measure your current preparation level against these targets and identify gaps early.
Misconception 1: A candidate who scores 200 in NEET can get an MBBS seat. Fact: 200 marks out of 720 qualifies a candidate for counselling but no MBBS government college closes anywhere near this score. MBBS private management quota seats may be accessible at this score in some states, but at significantly high fees.
Misconception 2: The OBC/SC/ST cutoff is low so these candidates easily get government MBBS seats. Fact: The qualifying cutoff is lower for reserved categories (40th percentile vs 50th percentile for General). However, the admission cutoff for reserved category government MBBS seats is much higher than 113 marks. In MCC AIQ counselling 2025, SC category closing rank was 1,36,445, corresponding to approximately 450 to 480 marks.
Misconception 3: Scoring above the qualifying cutoff guarantees counselling participation. Fact: Qualifying the cutoff makes you eligible for counselling registration. It does not guarantee a seat allotment or even completing the process without further steps.
Misconception 4: Private medical college MBBS requires only the qualifying cutoff. Fact: Private medical colleges have their own closing ranks through MCC and state counselling. While lower than government colleges, these closing ranks are still significantly above the bare qualifying cutoff in most states.
Q1. What was the NEET 2025 qualifying cutoff for General category? The NEET 2025 qualifying cutoff for General category was officially released by NTA on June 14, 2025. The qualifying range was 686 to 144 marks (50th percentile), meaning the lowest score that qualified in the General category was 144 out of 720.
Q2. What is the expected NEET 2026 qualifying cutoff? Based on NEET 2026 paper analysis (moderate difficulty, easier than 2025), the expected qualifying cutoff for General/EWS category is approximately 135 to 145 marks. The official cutoff will be released with the result in June 2026 and will be updated on this page immediately.
Q3. What score do I need to get a government MBBS seat in NEET? A score of 600+ marks is generally considered a safe target for government MBBS through state quota counselling in moderately competitive states. 620+ is safer for AIQ government colleges, and 650+ provides strong safety at top-tier government colleges.
Q4. Is the NEET qualifying cutoff the same every year? No. The qualifying cutoff fluctuates every year based on paper difficulty. It ranged from 117 marks in 2022 to 162 marks in 2024 for General category, then dropped to 144 in 2025 when the paper was tougher.
Q5. Can a candidate with 400 marks in NEET get an MBBS seat? 400 marks makes a candidate eligible for counselling but is below the admission cutoff for government MBBS through AIQ in most states. Private MBBS management quota or NRI quota seats may be accessible at this score, but at significantly higher fees. BAMS and BHMS government seats may be within reach.
Q6. When will the NEET 2027 cutoff be released? The NEET UG 2027 qualifying cutoff will be released by NTA along with the NEET 2027 result, expected in the second week of June 2027. The admission cutoff (MCC counselling) will follow in July to October 2027 through the counselling process at mcc.nic.in.
Q7. Does NEET score validity extend to multiple years? No. NEET scores are valid only for the year of the examination. A NEET 2025 score cannot be used for 2027 admissions under any circumstances.
Stay updated with the latest news and notifications about NEET UG Cutoff 2027: Category-Wise Qualifying Marks, Year-Wise Trends and MBBS Admission Cutoff and other exams.
ExamUpdateAspirantMitraa
20 May 2026
ExamResultAspirantMitraa
20 May 2026