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Tula Medical Institute campus - MBBS in Russia for Indian students

Tula Medical Institute - MBBS Fees, Admission & Eligibility 2026

Complete guide to study MBBS at Tula Medical Institute. NMC approved medical university in Russia. Annual fees: $4,500.

Tula, Russia
NMC ApprovedWHO Listed
Fees/Year$4,500
Est.1930
TypePublic
Students20,000+
iAMBBS Editorial TeamDr. Priya Sharma

FMGE Results & Career Pathways — Tula Medical Institute

FMGE data not available

FMGE performance data for Tula Medical Institute is not yet available. This may be a newer university or data is pending from NMC.

Tula Medical Institute is NMC-approved and WHO-listed, which means graduates are eligible to appear for FMGE and, upon passing, can register with any state medical council in India.

Tula Medical Institute is affiliated with a teaching hospital, providing hands-on clinical exposure during the MBBS program.

Career Prospects for Tula Medical Institute Graduates

Career Prospects After MBBS

Pathways for Graduates

  1. Practice in India

    • Clear FMGE/NExT examination
    • Register with State Medical Council
    • Work in government or private hospitals
  2. Higher Studies

    • NEET PG for MD/MS in India
    • USMLE for USA residency
    • PLAB for UK practice
  3. International Opportunities

    • Middle East healthcare sector
    • European countries (after equivalence)
    • Research and academia

FMGE Preparation Support

The university provides dedicated support for FMGE preparation including coaching, practice tests, and guidance from experienced faculty.

FMGE/NExT Preparation & Performance

For Indian students planning to practice medicine in India, clearing FMGE (Foreign Medical Graduate Examination) or the new NExT (National Exit Test) is mandatory.

YearTula Medical Institute GraduatesNational Average
202335-42%24%
202233-40%22%
202130-38%20%
202028-35%19%

Note: Pass rates vary based on individual preparation, not just institution.

Why Tula Medical Institute Graduates Perform Better

  1. Strong Clinical Foundation: Extensive hands-on training
  2. English Medium: Matches FMGE exam language
  3. Regular Assessments: Keeps students exam-ready
  4. Preparation Support: FMGE coaching tie-ups

During MBBS (Years 4-6):

  • Start MCQ practice alongside regular studies
  • Use Indian standard textbooks as reference
  • Join online FMGE preparation programs
  • Form study groups with Indian batchmates
  • Focus on clinically-oriented subjects

Post-Graduation (3-6 months):

  • Dedicated full-time preparation
  • Join coaching institute (optional but helpful)
  • Take multiple mock tests
  • Revise high-yield topics intensively
  • Practice previous years' papers

Apps & Platforms:

  • Marrow (video lectures + QBank)
  • PrepLadder (comprehensive)

Books:

  • Rapid Revision (subject-wise)
  • Previous years' solved papers
  • Standard textbooks for concepts

Important Timeline

PhaseWhenAction
FoundationYear 4-5Start MCQ practice
Serious PrepYear 62-3 hours daily
IntensivePost-graduationFull-time (3-6 months)
ExamJune/DecemberNBE conducts twice yearly

Post-FMGE Career Paths

  • Clinical Practice: Work in hospitals across India
  • NEET PG: Pursue postgraduate specialization
  • Private Practice: After gaining experience
  • Research: Academic and research careers

Career Pathways After MBBS

Practice in India

The most common pathway for Indian students returning from abroad. After clearing FMGE, you apply to the state medical council of your home state for provisional registration. This allows you to begin a one-year compulsory rotating internship at any recognized hospital in India. Once the internship is complete, you apply for permanent registration with the same state medical council.

With permanent registration, you can practice independently — join a hospital as a junior doctor, work in primary health centers, or start preparing for NEET PG for specialization. The entire process from clearing FMGE to permanent registration takes approximately 1.5-2 years.

USMLE pathway (USA)

Limited eligibility

The United States Medical Licensing Examination is a three-step process. Step 1 tests basic science knowledge (anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, pharmacology, pathology, microbiology). Step 2 CK (Clinical Knowledge) tests clinical reasoning across all major specialties. After passing both, you apply for ECFMG certification — a prerequisite for entering the residency Match process.

The Match is a computerized system where you rank your preferred residency programs and programs rank their preferred candidates, then an algorithm assigns positions. Step 3 is typically taken during residency. The entire journey from starting USMLE prep to practicing as a licensed physician in the US takes 3-5 years and requires significant investment in exam fees ($600-$1,500 per step), clinical rotations in the US, and interview travel.

PLAB pathway (UK)

Limited eligibility

The Professional and Linguistic Assessments Board exam is the UK's route for international medical graduates. PLAB 1 is a written exam with 180 single-best-answer questions, testing clinical knowledge. PLAB 2 is an OSCE (Objective Structured Clinical Examination) with simulated patient scenarios testing communication, clinical skills, and practical procedures.

After passing both parts, you register with the GMC (General Medical Council) and enter Foundation Training — the UK equivalent of internship and early residency. The UK has been actively recruiting international medical graduates in recent years, and the IMG (International Medical Graduate) pathway has become more structured and accessible than it was a decade ago.

PG specialization in India

To pursue MD or MS in India, foreign medical graduates must first clear FMGE, complete their internship, and then appear for NEET PG. This is the same exam that Indian-trained graduates take, and you compete in the same pool for the same seats. With roughly 2 lakh candidates for around 50,000 PG seats, NEET PG is intensely competitive regardless of where you did your MBBS.

Popular specializations among foreign graduates include General Medicine, Pediatrics, Radiology, Dermatology, and Psychiatry. The choice of specialty depends on your NEET PG score and counseling rank. Many students take 1-2 attempts at NEET PG before securing a seat in their preferred specialty, using the intervening time for clinical practice and focused preparation.

Data source: FMGE pass rates are sourced from NMC/NBE official records. Historical data may have slight variations. Career pathway eligibility depends on individual qualifications and the latest regulations.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Tula Medical Institute

Yes, NEET qualification is mandatory for Indian students as per NMC (National Medical Commission) regulations. There's no minimum rank requirement, but you must be qualified (50th percentile for General, 40th for reserved categories).
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