Skip to main content
iAMBBS - Study MBBS Abroad

Drop Year vs MBBS Abroad — Which Should You Choose?

You qualified NEET but won't get a government seat. Repeat the exam, or start MBBS abroad this September? Here is the honest comparison — costs, risks, and a decision framework by score band. Both paths are legitimate; the wrong one for you is expensive.

The short answer

Take a drop year if you missed your category's government cutoff by roughly 40–60 marks, you know specifically what went wrong, and your family can absorb a second miss. Choose MBBS abroad if you missed by 100+ marks, this was already your second attempt, or a ₹60L–1Cr private Indian seat is the only domestic alternative — an NMC-compliant university abroad costs ₹15–50 lakhs total and starts this year, not next.

Start with the seats math

Every year, 20+ lakh students sit NEET for roughly 1.1 lakh government MBBS seats. That ratio — about one government seat per eighteen candidates — is the entire reason this decision exists. Qualifying NEET is not the bottleneck; affording the seat your rank earns is. Private Indian colleges fill the gap at ₹60 lakhs to over ₹1 crore for the full course, which is why the realistic comparison for most families is drop year vs abroad, not government vs private.

A drop year is a bet that your rank improves enough to change which column you fall into. Before taking that bet, be precise about the gap: pulling 380 to 460 is a very different project from pulling 380 to 620.

What each path actually costs

FactorDrop yearMBBS abroad
Direct cost₹1.5–4L coaching (+ living if relocating)₹15–50L total for 6 years, all-in
Time to MBBS degree6 years + 1 (or 2) drop years6 years, starting September 2026
Best caseGovernment seat: ₹50K–1L/yr feesNMC-compliant degree at 1/4 the private-India price
Worst caseSecond miss → same decision, 1 year + lakhs laterFMGE not cleared → cannot practice in India until you do
LicensingNone extra (Indian degree)FMGE/NExT required — pass rates vary 16–46% by country

Coaching figures are typical published programme fees as of 2026; abroad totals are full-course (tuition + hostel + living) ranges across NMC-approved destinations. FMGE pass rates per NBE results data.

The honest case for a drop year

  • You were close. 40–60 marks is one subject fixed, not a transformation.
  • You can name the specific failure — incomplete syllabus, exam-day panic, no test series — and have a plan for it.
  • An Indian government degree means no FMGE, no relocation, and the lowest lifetime cost of any path.
  • This was your first attempt. Most toppers among repeaters were first-time near-misses.

The honest case for MBBS abroad

  • You start now. A 17-year-old who leaves in September is a doctor before a twice-repeating peer.
  • The gap was large. A 150+ mark improvement is rare even with a perfect year.
  • ₹15–50L all-in beats ₹60L–1Cr private India — and several countries (Bangladesh 46.1%, Philippines 42.7%, Georgia 33%) have FMGE pass rates far above the overall average.
  • This was already attempt two. A third attempt has the worst odds-to-cost ratio of all.

The risk nobody prices in

Both paths have a hidden failure mode. For the drop year, it's the second miss — statistically the most likely outcome for students who were far from the cutoff, and it converts into this same abroad-vs-repeat decision with less money and more pressure. For abroad, it's choosing a non-compliant university or skipping FMGE preparation until final year — both fully avoidable: verify every university against the NMC-approved list and budget FMGE coaching from year 3, not year 6.

Decision framework by NEET score

Your situationLean towardsWhy
Within ~50 marks of govt cutoff, 1st attemptDrop yearBest realistic odds of the cheapest outcome
100+ marks from cutoff, 1st attemptAbroad (or one disciplined repeat)Large gaps rarely close in one year — be honest about the plan
2nd attempt missedMBBS abroadThird-attempt odds don't justify another year
Family can fund private India (₹60L+)Compare all threeAbroad at ₹15–50L may still be the better degree-per-rupee
Budget under ₹20L totalAbroad (CIS countries)Kyrgyzstan/Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan fit; private India never will

Decided — or still split?

If abroad is on the table, the next question is which country. Compare them on data, or talk through your exact score and budget with a counsellor — we'll tell you honestly if a drop year looks like your better bet.

Frequently asked questions

Is a drop year worth it for NEET?

It depends on how close you were. If you scored within 40-60 marks of your category's government-college cutoff and you can identify exactly what went wrong, a structured drop year has a realistic chance. If you were 150+ marks away, a single year rarely closes that gap — most repeaters improve, but only a minority improve enough to convert a far miss into a government seat.

Can I do MBBS abroad with a low NEET score?

You must qualify NEET (cross the category cutoff percentile) to study MBBS abroad and later practice in India — but there is no separate "high score" requirement. A 350 and a 600 are treated the same for NMC eligibility. The score matters for Indian seats; abroad it mostly matters for scholarship and university selectivity.

What does a drop year actually cost?

Coaching for a repeat attempt typically runs ₹1.5-4 lakhs (classroom programmes in Kota/Delhi at the higher end, online at the lower end), plus living costs if you relocate. The larger cost is time: you graduate a year later, and if the second attempt also misses a government seat, you face this same decision again with one year and several lakhs spent.

Is MBBS abroad valid in India?

Yes — if the university meets NMC's FMGL Regulations 2021 criteria and you clear the FMGE/NExT licensing exam after graduating. Degree validity depends on choosing a compliant university, which is why verifying NMC status before admission matters more than anything else in the abroad route.

Can I prepare for NEET again while studying MBBS abroad?

No — these paths are exclusive in practice. MBBS abroad is a full-time six-year commitment starting from the September intake. Some students take admission abroad after their second NEET attempt fails, which is a common and reasonable sequence: one serious repeat, then abroad.

Get Free Expert Guidance

Our FMGE-qualified counselors will help you choose the right university based on your NEET score and budget.

No spam. Your data is secure. We call during 9 AM - 8 PM IST.