
How to Choose Right MBBS College? Why Most Students Choose the Wrong MBBS College (And How You Can Avoid It)
To choose the right MBBS college, evaluate these 5 critical factors: NMC/WHO recognition status, total fee structure (including hidden costs), clinical exposure quality, location advantages, and post-graduation ROI. Wrong choice = wasted ₹50L+ and 5.5 years.
You’ve cleared NEET. Congratulations.
But here’s the harsh truth: Choosing the wrong MBBS college ruins more medical careers than failing exams.
Every year, thousands of Indian students make ₹50-60 lakh decisions based on:
- Incomplete information
- Emotional pressure from family
- Misleading college brochures
- Advice from people who’ve never studied medicine
The result?
Students trapped in unrecognized colleges, struggling with poor clinical training, facing job rejection, or burning money on repeat licensing exams.
This article gives you the complete framework—the same one top admission counsellors use—to evaluate MBBS colleges systematically, avoid expensive mistakes, and choose a college that actually builds your medical career.
Why Choosing the Right MBBS College Matters More Than Your NEET Score
Your NEET score opens doors. Your college choice determines your entire medical career trajectory.
The Real Impact:
| Factor | Right College Choice | Wrong College Choice |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical Training | 2000+ real patient cases by final year | <500 cases, mostly observation |
| License Exam Pass Rate | 70-85% (FMGE/NExT first attempt) | 15-30% pass rate |
| Total Cost | ₹25-45L (transparent structure) | ₹60L+ (hidden fees + coaching) |
| Job Placement | PG seat / hospital job within 6 months | 2-3 years struggle, career uncertainty |
| ROI Timeline | Break-even in 4-6 years | 10-15 years (if successful) |
Fact: According to NMC data, only 15-18% of foreign medical graduates clear FMGE in their first attempt. The primary reason? Poor clinical exposure in their chosen college.
The 5 Non-Negotiable Criteria for Choosing Your MBBS College
1. NMC/WHO Recognition: Your License to Practice in India
Why it matters: Without NMC recognition, you cannot practice in India, no matter how good your marks are.
What to Verify:
✅ NMC-Approved College List: Check the official NMC website (nmc.org.in)
✅ WHO WDMS Listing: Verify on wdms.who.int
✅ Recognition Status: Current, not “under review” or “temporarily approved”
✅ Approval Year: Older = more stable (5+ years preferred)
Red Flags to Avoid:
🚩 College claims “recognition pending” or “applied for NMC approval”
🚩 Not listed on NMC’s official website (students trust agents over official sources)
🚩 Recent regulatory issues or warnings
🚩 Affiliation changes or management disputes
Pro Tip: Don’t rely on college brochures. Download the official NMC-approved college list quarterly. Recognitions can be withdrawn.
2. Fee Structure: Total Cost vs Hidden Charges Analysis
Most colleges advertise attractive “tuition fees” but hide the real costs.
Complete Cost Breakdown You Must Ask:
| Cost Component | Typical Range (India) | Typical Range (Abroad) |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition Fees (Total 5.5 years) | ₹50L – ₹1.5Cr | ₹20L – ₹50L |
| Hostel & Mess (Annual) | ₹80K – ₹2L | ₹1.5L – ₹4L |
| One-Time Fees (Admission, Caution) | ₹2L – ₹8L | ₹1L – ₹5L |
| Hidden Costs (Books, Equipment, Visa) | ₹3L – ₹5L | ₹5L – ₹10L |
| Coaching for License Exams (FMGE/NExT) | ₹2L – ₹4L | ₹3L – ₹6L |
| Living & Travel (5.5 years) | ₹5L – ₹10L | ₹8L – ₹15L |
| TOTAL REALISTIC COST | ₹60L – ₹1.8Cr | ₹40L – ₹90L |
Critical Questions to Ask:
- Is the fee structure fixed for all 5.5 years?
- Are there annual fee hikes? (10-15% annual increase is common abroad)
- What fees are refundable if you leave after 1st year?
- Are internship costs included or separate?
Reality Check: A college showing ₹25L total fees might actually cost ₹45L after hidden charges, visa renewals, travel, coaching, and living expenses.
3. Clinical Exposure & Patient Load: The Real Determinant of Your Skills
Brutal Truth: You don’t become a doctor by reading textbooks. You become one by treating real patients.
What Separates Good Colleges from Degree Mills:
| Quality Indicator | Excellent College | Poor College |
|---|---|---|
| Attached Hospital Bed Strength | 800+ beds (active patients) | <300 beds (often empty) |
| OPD Patient Flow (Daily) | 1000+ patients | <200 patients |
| Student-Patient Ratio | 1:10 (hands-on practice) | 1:50 (watching seniors) |
| ICU/Emergency Exposure | From 3rd year onwards | Limited to observation |
| Surgical Assistance | 50+ procedures (assisted) | <10 procedures |
| Practical Skill Development | IV cannulation, suturing, catheterization (done independently) | Demonstrated on models only |
How to Evaluate Before Joining:
✅ Visit the hospital during working hours (not weekends)
✅ Ask current students: “How many real patients have you examined this month?”
✅ Check the hospital’s surgical schedule and ICU capacity
✅ Review final year students’ logbooks (patient case records)
Warning Sign: If the college hospital looks clean and empty during weekdays, there’s no patient load. No patients = no clinical training.
4. Location: Geographic Advantage & Lifestyle Fit
Location affects your mental health, cultural adjustment, safety, and focus.
Key Location Factors:
A. For Indian Colleges:
| Location Type | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Tier-1 Cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore) | Better hospitals, PG prep coaching, networking | High living cost, intense competition |
| Tier-2 Cities (Jaipur, Pune, Lucknow) | Balance of exposure + affordability, less distraction | Limited international exposure |
| Rural/Remote | Low living cost, focused study environment | Limited clinical diversity, cultural isolation |
B. For Abroad Colleges:
| Country | Language Barrier | Cultural Fit | Weather | Indian Community |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Russia/Ukraine | High (Russian medium initially) | Moderate | Extremely cold (-20°C winters) | Large, established |
| Kazakhstan/Kyrgyzstan | Medium (English + local language) | Good for Indians | Very cold | Growing |
| Philippines | Low (English medium) | Excellent | Tropical (hot, humid) | Large |
| Georgia/Armenia | Medium | Good | Moderate cold | Medium |
| Bangladesh | Low (similar culture) | Excellent | Familiar | Very large |
Lifestyle Questions to Ask Yourself:
- Can I handle extreme cold/heat for 5.5 years?
- Do I need a strong Indian community for emotional support?
- Am I comfortable learning medicine in a second language initially?
- How far is the college from the airport? (Family emergencies matter)
Pro Tip: Join current student WhatsApp groups before deciding. Ask them about daily life, not just academics.
5. Post-Graduation ROI & Career Outcomes
The ultimate question: Will this college help me build a successful medical career?
ROI Calculation Framework:
Total Investment: ₹40L – ₹80L (varies by college)
Career Timeline:
| Stage | Timeline | Income |
|---|---|---|
| Internship | 1 year | ₹10K – ₹25K/month |
| Junior Resident (Post-FMGE) | 1-3 years | ₹40K – ₹80K/month |
| Medical Officer / Private Practice Start | Years 3-5 | ₹60K – ₹1.5L/month |
| Established Practice / Senior Resident | Years 5-10 | ₹1.5L – ₹5L/month |
| Specialist (Post-MD/MS) | Years 10+ | ₹3L – ₹15L+/month |
Break-Even Point (Foreign MBBS): 6-10 years
Break-Even Point (Premium Indian Private): 8-12 years
Career Success Indicators:
✅ Alumni Network: Are graduates working in good hospitals?
✅ FMGE Pass Rate: College-specific data (request from administration)
✅ PG Conversion Rate: % of students getting MD/MS seats
✅ Practice Establishment Support: Does the college help with job placements?
Data Point: Colleges with 60%+ FMGE pass rates produce doctors who establish practices 2-3 years faster than those from colleges with <30% pass rates.
Step-by-Step: How to Choose Your MBBS College (Decision Framework)
Follow this exact process:
Phase 1: Research & Shortlisting (2-3 weeks)
Week 1: Create Your Long List
- Download the official NMC-approved college list
- Filter by your NEET score category (State quota / AIQ / Management / Abroad)
- List 15-20 colleges within your budget range
- Cross-verify WHO recognition for foreign colleges
Week 2: Primary Filtering
Apply these filters:
- ✅ NMC/WHO recognized
- ✅ Total cost ≤ your maximum budget
- ✅ Location acceptable for 5.5 years
- ✅ Hospital bed strength ≥ 500
Shortlist to 8-10 colleges.
Week 3: Deep Research
For each shortlisted college:
- Join student groups (Telegram/WhatsApp)
- Read Google reviews + Quora discussions (filter fake reviews)
- Check college website last update date (active = updated quarterly)
- Request admission brochure + detailed fee structure
Shortlist to 4-5 colleges.
Phase 2: Ground Verification (1-2 weeks)
Campus Visit Checklist:
Visit during working days (Tuesday-Thursday ideal):
At the Hospital:
- ✅ Count active patients in wards (not empty beds)
- ✅ Observe student-doctor interaction in OPD
- ✅ Check ICU, emergency, operation theater (even from outside)
- ✅ Talk to 3-4 different year students (separately, not in college presence)
At the Campus:
- ✅ Hostel rooms (check ventilation, cleanliness, safety)
- ✅ Library (check book inventory, digital access)
- ✅ Labs (anatomy, physiology, pathology equipment)
- ✅ Mess food quality (eat one meal there)
Critical Questions to Ask Students:
- “How many real patients have you examined this month?”
- “What’s the actual monthly expense beyond fees?”
- “Would you choose this college again?”
- “What’s the biggest challenge here?”
- “How is the administration when students have problems?”
Red Flag: If college doesn’t allow campus visits or restricts student interaction, walk away.
Phase 3: Financial & Documentation Verification
Documents to Demand:
- ✅ Detailed fee structure (year-wise breakdown)
- ✅ Refund policy (if you leave after 1st year)
- ✅ NMC recognition certificate (original copy)
- ✅ Previous batch FMGE results (college-specific)
- ✅ Hostel agreement terms
- ✅ Medical insurance coverage (especially abroad)
Financial Red Flags:
🚩 College asks for full payment upfront (suspicious)
🚩 No written fee structure provided
🚩 “Trust-based” verbal promises
🚩 Pressure tactics: “Seat will be gone tomorrow”
Pro Tip: Demand everything in writing. Verbal promises mean nothing during disputes.
Phase 4: Final Decision (Comparison Matrix)
Create a scoring system (1-10) for your top 3 colleges:
| Criteria | Weight | College A | College B | College C |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NMC/WHO Recognition | 25% | 10 | 10 | 8 |
| Clinical Exposure | 25% | 8 | 6 | 7 |
| Total Cost vs Budget | 20% | 7 | 9 | 8 |
| Location & Lifestyle Fit | 15% | 6 | 8 | 9 |
| Alumni Success & FMGE Rate | 15% | 7 | 5 | 6 |
| TOTAL WEIGHTED SCORE | 100% | 8.05 | 7.55 | 7.55 |
Decision Rule: Choose the highest score unless:
- Financial strain would affect your study focus
- Gut instinct strongly opposes (trust your instinct after logical analysis)
India vs Abroad MBBS: Honest Comparison for Decision-Making
Detailed Comparison Table
| Factor | Government Medical College (India) | Private Medical College (India) | Abroad MBBS (Russia/Philippines/Bangladesh) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Cost | ₹5L – ₹15L | ₹60L – ₹1.5Cr | ₹25L – ₹50L |
| NEET Score Requirement | 600+ (General category) | 450-550 | 200-300 (qualifying) |
| Medium of Instruction | English/Regional | English | English (with local language basics) |
| Clinical Exposure | Excellent (high patient load) | Good to Excellent | Varies (verify carefully) |
| Cultural Adjustment | Zero | Zero | Moderate to High |
| License Exam (FMGE/NExT) | Not required | Not required | Mandatory (15-20% pass rate) |
| Job Market Acceptance | Immediate | Immediate | After clearing FMGE |
| Total Duration to Practice | 5.5 years | 5.5 years | 6.5 – 8 years (including FMGE prep) |
| Post-Graduation (MD/MS) Access | NEET-PG (same for all) | NEET-PG (same for all) | NEET-PG (after FMGE) |
Who Should Choose What:
Choose Government College (India) if:
- You scored 600+ in NEET
- Budget-conscious family
- Want immediate practice rights in India
Choose Private College (India) if:
- NEET score: 450-550
- Family can afford ₹60L – ₹1Cr
- Want zero license exam hassle
Choose Abroad MBBS if:
- NEET score: 200-400
- Budget: ₹25L – ₹50L
- Confident about clearing FMGE (disciplined study approach)
- Open to cultural adaptation
Avoid Abroad MBBS if:
- You struggle with self-discipline (no FMGE clearing pressure = no practice rights)
- Cannot handle 2-3 years of language/cultural adjustment
- Family expects you to start practicing immediately after graduation
Common Mistakes Students Make (And How to Avoid Them)
Mistake #1: Choosing Based on Marketing, Not Reality
What Happens: Glossy brochures, fake testimonials, agent commissions.
Solution:
- Visit campus unannounced (mid-week)
- Talk to seniors independently (not arranged by college)
- Verify every claim on official NMC/WHO websites
Mistake #2: Ignoring Hidden Costs
What Happens: “₹25L total fees” becomes ₹50L after hostel, visa, travel, coaching.
Solution:
- Create a full 5.5-year cost spreadsheet
- Add 15% buffer for unexpected expenses
- Ask for written fee structure (year-wise)
Mistake #3: Underestimating FMGE Difficulty (for Abroad Students)
What Happens: Students assume “I’ll clear easily”—then fail 3-4 times, wasting years.
Reality: 82% of foreign medical graduates fail FMGE on first attempt.
Solution:
- Start FMGE prep from 3rd year itself
- Choose colleges with active India-pattern teaching
- Budget ₹3-5L for dedicated FMGE coaching
Mistake #4: Overlooking Mental Health & Lifestyle Fit
What Happens: Depression, anxiety, inability to focus due to extreme weather/isolation.
Solution:
- Honestly assess your adaptability
- Choose locations with strong Indian student communities
- Ensure regular family communication options (good internet)
Mistake #5: Trusting Agents Over Official Sources
What Happens: Agents get ₹50K – ₹2L commission per student—they’ll push their partner colleges, not your best fit.
Solution:
- Use agents only for documentation help, not decision-making
- Verify every claim independently
- Never pay agents before admission confirmation
Real Student Success Stories: Lessons from the Right & Wrong Choices
Success Story 1: Priya Sharma – Strategic Abroad Choice
Background: NEET Score: 285 | Budget: ₹40L | From: Jaipur, Rajasthan
Challenge: Couldn’t afford ₹1Cr+ Indian private colleges. Skeptical about abroad MBBS and FMGE.
Decision Process:
- Shortlisted 6 colleges (Russia, Kazakhstan, Philippines)
- Visited 3 colleges personally during summer break
- Chose Kazakh-Russian Medical University (Kazakhstan)
- Reasons: 800-bed hospital, 70% English medium, strong Indian community, ₹38L total cost
Outcome:
- Cleared FMGE in 1st attempt (started prep from 3rd year)
- Currently Junior Resident at a Rajasthan government hospital
- Total time to practice: 7 years (vs 10+ years for peers who failed FMGE multiple times)
Key Lesson: “I treated FMGE preparation like an additional subject from Day 1. That’s the only difference between me and my batchmates who are still struggling.”
Success Story 2: Arjun Menon – Private College ROI Realization
Background: NEET Score: 480 | Budget: ₹70L | From: Kochi, Kerala
Initial Plan: Was considering abroad MBBS (₹35L total) to save money.
Decision Process:
- Calculated full ROI including FMGE failure risk (2-3 attempts = 2-3 years lost income)
- Realized practicing 2 years earlier = ₹15-20L additional earnings
- Chose a Tier-2 city private college in Tamil Nadu (₹65L total)
Outcome:
- Started practicing immediately after internship (no FMGE delay)
- Break-even achieved in 8 years vs projected 11 years for abroad option
- Now planning MD Radiology
Key Lesson: “For me, the ‘cheaper’ option would have been more expensive when I calculated lost income from FMGE delays. Sometimes paying more upfront saves money long-term.”
Success Story 3: Rahul Verma – The Research That Paid Off
Background: NEET Score: 315 | Budget: ₹45L | From: Patna, Bihar
Challenge: Multiple agents pushed him toward a newly-opened college in Kyrgyzstan offering “50% scholarship.”
Research Process:
- Joined 15+ student WhatsApp groups from different colleges
- Discovered the “scholarship college” had zero clinical exposure (hospital under construction)
- Found an established Philippines college with strong patient load and 55% FMGE pass rate
Decision:
- Chose Philippines despite ₹8L higher cost
- Invested extra in quality clinical training
Outcome:
- Assisted in 100+ deliveries, 200+ minor surgical procedures
- Cleared FMGE in 2nd attempt (1st attempt: 155/300, 2nd: 178/300)
- Currently practicing in Patna with strong surgical fundamentals
Key Lesson: “The 15 hours I spent researching saved me 3-4 years of career struggle. Never trust an agent’s ‘special deal’ without ground verification.”
Cautionary Tale: Neha Gupta – The Wrong Choice
Background: NEET Score: 295 | Budget: ₹50L | From: Indore, MP
Mistake: Chose a college based on beautiful website and agent’s promise of “100% FMGE pass guarantee.”
Reality:
- Hospital had only 150 functional beds (400 advertised)
- Most patients were outpatient (no hands-on training)
- Clinical exposure limited to observation
- College’s actual FMGE pass rate: 12%
Outcome:
- Failed FMGE 4 times over 4 years
- Spent additional ₹8L on coaching
- Switched to non-clinical healthcare roles (medical coding)
- MBBS degree never used for practice
Key Lesson: “I trusted glossy brochures over campus visits. That ₹50L investment gave me a degree I can’t use. Don’t make my mistake—verify everything in person.”
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. What is the minimum NEET score required for MBBS admission in India and abroad?
India:
- Government colleges: 600+ (General category, varies by state)
- Private colleges: 450-550 (General), 400+ (OBC), 350+ (SC/ST)
Abroad: 200-250 (qualifying NEET score, no percentile requirement)
The qualifying score changes annually—verify on NTA’s official website.
2. Is MBBS from abroad (Russia/Philippines/Bangladesh) worth it?
Honest Answer: Worth it if:
- Your budget is ₹25-45L (can’t afford ₹1Cr Indian private)
- You’re disciplined enough to clear FMGE (treat it as mandatory, not optional)
- You can handle 2-3 years of cultural/language adjustment
Not worth it if:
- You struggle with self-study and discipline
- Family expects immediate practice after graduation
- You cannot afford 2-3 FMGE attempt costs (₹3-5L)
Key Stat: Students from colleges with 800+ bed hospitals have 3x higher FMGE pass rates than those from smaller clinical setups.
3. How do I verify if a college is NMC/WHO recognized?
Step-by-step:
- Visit nmc.org.in → “List of Colleges”
- Download the current approved college PDF
- Search your college name (Ctrl+F)
- For abroad colleges: Cross-verify on wdms.who.int
- Check recognition status: “Recognized” (good) vs “Under Review” (risky)
Warning: Don’t trust college websites or agent confirmations. Only official NMC/WHO sources are valid.
4. What is the realistic total cost of MBBS abroad including hidden fees?
Complete Cost Breakdown (5.5 years):
- Tuition Fees: ₹18L – ₹40L
- Hostel + Mess: ₹8L – ₹15L
- Visa + Migration: ₹2L – ₹5L
- Travel (yearly + emergency): ₹3L – ₹6L
- Books + Equipment: ₹2L – ₹3L
- Medical Insurance: ₹1L – ₹2L
- FMGE Coaching: ₹3L – ₹5L
- Miscellaneous + Buffer: ₹3L – ₹5L
Total Realistic Cost: ₹40L – ₹80L (country-dependent)
Always add 20% buffer for currency fluctuations and unexpected expenses.
5. Which is better: Russia or Philippines for Indian MBBS students?
Russia:
- ✅ Pros: Established medical education (50+ years), strong theoretical foundation, lower cost
- ❌ Cons: Extremely cold climate (-20°C), Russian language requirement (1st year), limited Indian food
Philippines:
- ✅ Pros: English medium (100%), tropical climate, culturally closer to India, large Indian community
- ❌ Cons: Higher cost (₹10-15L more than Russia), humid weather year-round
Verdict:
- Choose Russia if: Budget-tight, can handle extreme cold, okay with language learning
- Choose Philippines if: Prefer English comfort, need cultural familiarity, budget allows extra ₹10-15L
Both have NMC-approved colleges—verify specific college recognition, not country.
6. What is FMGE passing percentage, and how difficult is it?
FMGE Stats (2024):
- Overall Pass Percentage: 16.8%
- First Attempt Pass Rate: 10-12%
- Second Attempt Pass Rate: 18-22%
- Third+ Attempt Pass Rate: 25-30%
Why So Low?
- Covers all 19 subjects (4.5 years of MBBS)
- MCQ format (pattern different from university exams)
- High competition (30,000+ candidates, 5,000 qualify)
- Poor clinical training in many abroad colleges
How to Increase Success Odds:
- Choose colleges with India-pattern teaching
- Start FMGE prep from 3rd year (not final year)
- Focus on clinical subjects (Medicine, Surgery, Ob-Gyn, Pediatrics = 60% paper)
- Attempt FMGE within 1 year of graduation (knowledge fresh)
7. Can I do MD/MS after MBBS from abroad?
Yes, but with conditions:
- ✅ Clear FMGE first (mandatory)
- ✅ Appear for NEET-PG (same for all Indian + foreign graduates)
- ✅ Compete for All India Quota seats (50% seats reserved)
Reality Check:
- FMGE Pass → Eligible for NEET-PG
- NEET-PG Rank → Determines MD/MS seat (same difficulty for all)
- Foreign MBBS graduates get PG seats (approx 3-5% conversion rate vs 8-10% for Indian grads)
Bottomline: Possible, but competitive. Most foreign MBBS grads work 2-3 years, then attempt NEET-PG.
Resources & Official Links for MBBS College Verification
Government & Regulatory Bodies:
- National Medical Commission (NMC): nmc.org.in
➜ Download approved college list (updated quarterly) - WHO World Directory of Medical Schools: wdms.who.int
➜ Verify international college recognition - National Board of Examinations (FMGE): natboard.edu.in
➜ FMGE exam schedule, pass percentages, eligibility - National Testing Agency (NEET): nta.ac.in
➜ NEET cutoffs, counseling schedule, seat matrix
Useful Articles & Guides from Rise Up Education:
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7 NEET Marks Required for MBBS Admission 2026 Truths: Avoid Costly Mistakes & Secure Your Future
-
MBBS Budget Private Colleges in India (Under 50 Lakhs) for 2026
Final Word: Your MBBS College Choice Shapes Your Next 30 Years
Here’s the reality most counsellors won’t tell you:
Your MBBS college choice is more important than your NEET score.
A 500-scorer in the right college (strong clinical training, NMC-approved, good location) will build a better medical career than a 600-scorer in the wrong college (poor patient exposure, license exam struggles, ROI failure).
Medicine is a 30-40 year career. The 2-3 months you invest in strategic college selection will determine:
- How fast you start earning
- How confident you are as a clinician
- Whether you get PG seats
- Your lifetime earning potential (₹5 Cr vs ₹20 Cr difference)
The Framework You Now Have:
✅ 5 non-negotiable criteria (NMC status, fees, clinical exposure, location, ROI)
✅ 4-phase decision process (research → visit → verify → decide)
✅ Comparison matrices for India vs Abroad
✅ Red flags to avoid costly mistakes
✅ Real student outcomes (what works, what doesn’t)
Don’t rush. Don’t guess. Don’t trust agents blindly.
Verify every claim. Visit every campus. Talk to real students. Calculate full costs.
Need Expert Guidance? We’ve Helped 5,000+ Students Make the Right Choice
Choosing an MBBS college isn’t just about matching your NEET score to a college list.
It’s about:
- Understanding your financial reality
- Assessing your lifestyle compatibility
- Calculating genuine ROI
- Avoiding ₹50L+ mistakes
Rise Up Education specializes in honest, bias-free MBBS admission counseling for Indian students—both for Indian colleges and NMC-approved international universities.
How We Help:
✅ Personalized College Shortlisting (based on your NEET score, budget, location preference)
✅ Hidden Cost Analysis (real fee structure breakdowns, not marketing numbers)
✅ Campus Verification Support (we’ve visited 100+ campuses—we know what to check)
✅ FMGE Strategy Planning (for abroad students, we help you start FMGE prep from Day 1)
✅ Documentation & Visa Assistance (for international admissions)
We don’t get commissions from colleges. We work for you.
📞 Book a Free Consultation Call: +919587733989
🌐 Visit: riseupedu.com
📧 Email: info@riseupedu.com
Your medical career deserves strategic planning, not rushed decisions.
About the Author – M Fazeel
M Fazeel is a highly experienced admission counsellor with over 15 years of expertise in guiding students across India and abroad. Recognised among the top education counsellors in India, he has successfully mentored thousands of students who are now pursuing or have completed their education in leading institutions in India and overseas.
He is a well-educated researcher and author, known for providing practical, result-oriented guidance in career and admission planning. M Fazeel also holds professional certifications from Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, further strengthening his credibility and expertise in the education domain.
LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohammed-fazeel-9a543722/
© 2026 Rise Up Education. All Rights Reserved.
Disclaimer: This article provides general guidance for educational purposes. Individual college choices should be made after thorough personal research, campus visits, and verification of all claims with official regulatory bodies (NMC, WHO). Rise Up Education is not liable for decisions made solely based on this article without independent verification.