feedzop-word-mark-logo
searchLogin
Feedzop
homeFor YouIndiaIndia
You
bookmarksYour BookmarkshashtagYour Topics
Trending
Terms of UsePrivacy PolicyAboutJobsPartner With Us

© 2026 Advergame Technologies Pvt. Ltd. ("ATPL"). Gamezop ® & Quizzop ® are registered trademarks of ATPL.

Gamezop is a plug-and-play gaming platform that any app or website can integrate to bring casual gaming for its users. Gamezop also operates Quizzop, a quizzing platform, that digital products can add as a trivia section.

Over 5,000 products from more than 70 countries have integrated Gamezop and Quizzop. These include Amazon, Samsung Internet, Snap, Tata Play, AccuWeather, Paytm, Gulf News, and Branch.

Games and trivia increase user engagement significantly within all kinds of apps and websites, besides opening a new stream of advertising revenue. Gamezop and Quizzop take 30 minutes to integrate and can be used for free: both by the products integrating them and end users

Increase ad revenue and engagement on your app / website with games, quizzes, astrology, and cricket content. Visit: business.gamezop.com

Property Code: 5571

Home / Education / NEET PG Cut-off Drop: Private Colleges Reap Big Rewards

NEET PG Cut-off Drop: Private Colleges Reap Big Rewards

7 Feb

•

Summary

  • Private colleges secured 64% of seats filled below original NEET PG cut-off.
  • 85% of clinical specialty seats for low-scorers were in private institutions.
  • General category students saw the largest benefit from the cut-off reduction.
NEET PG Cut-off Drop: Private Colleges Reap Big Rewards

In 2023, a significant reduction of the NEET PG cut-off percentile to zero has largely benefited private medical colleges. These institutions filled about 64% of the seats that became available to students scoring below the original cut-off.

The impact was particularly striking in clinical specialties, where private colleges admitted 2,677 students, representing 85% of those who scored below the initial threshold in these sought-after programs. In contrast, government colleges admitted only 485 such students.

Tuition fees for clinical specialties are notably higher in private colleges. The policy change disproportionately benefited general category candidates, who comprised over 56% of those admitted with scores below the initial cut-off. OBC candidates made up 26%, while SC and ST candidates constituted 11% and 6%, respectively.

Analysis of admissions data, despite its incompleteness, reveals that the lowest score to gain admission was zero out of 800, achieved by a general category candidate. A total of 69 candidates scored less than 50 marks, including 39 from the general category.

Data for over 10,900 PG seats, including those in central government-funded institutions like AIIMS and JIPMER, and over 10,000 DNB seats, were not included in the consolidated list published on the National Medical Commission website.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Private medical colleges benefited most, securing a significant majority of seats filled by students who scored below the initial cut-off.
Approximately 85% of clinical specialty seats filled by students with scores below the initial cut-off were in private medical colleges.
General category candidates accounted for the majority of admissions among those who scored below the initial cut-off.

Read more news on

Educationside-arrow
trending

Islamabad suicide blast kills 31

trending

Ronaldo trains with Al Nassr

trending

India A vs Namibia live

trending

Vaibhav Suryavanshi scores 175

trending

VTU adopts Artificial Super Intelligence

trending

Riyan Parag scores fifty

trending

T20 World Cup opening ceremony

trending

Tiigers Kolkata reach ISPL final

trending

Al Ettifaq favored vs Damac

You may also like

Baby Swallows 2-Inch Metal Spring: Doctors Save Life

21 hours ago • 4 reads

article image

Zero Percentile NEET PG: Doctors Warn of Education Crisis

15 Jan • 132 reads

article image

NMC Approves More PG Medical Seats for 2025-26

1 Jan • 189 reads

article image

India Boosts Medical Seats: 77K More by 2026

16 Dec, 2025 • 228 reads

article image

Paderu Medical College Secures 100 MBBS Seats for 2026-27

9 Dec, 2025 • 299 reads

article image