Medical aspirants are eagerly waiting to know the Safe Score for Re-NEET 2026 after the re-examination. While the official cutoff will be announced only after the declaration of results, candidates often use safe score estimates to understand their chances of securing an MBBS seat.
A safe score is different from the qualifying cutoff. It is simply a planning benchmark that reflects the marks generally required to stay competitive for admission based on previous counselling trends and expert analysis.
For General category candidates aiming for government MBBS colleges, 620–650+ marks are currently considered a comfortable target. However, the final admission scenario will depend on the number of candidates, difficulty level of the paper, available seats, reservation policy, and counselling outcomes.
A Safe Score for Re-NEET 2026 refers to the marks that can provide relatively better admission chances during counselling. Unlike the qualifying marks, a safe score is not officially declared by NTA or MCC.
It changes every year because of several factors, including:
Difficulty level of the examination
Number of candidates appearing
Overall performance of candidates
Total MBBS seats available
Reservation policy
All India Quota (AIQ) and State Quota cutoffs
Candidates should use these figures only for planning purposes until the official counselling process begins.
| Category | Expected Safe Score (Government MBBS)* |
| General (UR) | 620–650+ |
| EWS | 620+ |
| OBC | 600–630+ |
| SC | State-specific; generally lower than UR |
| ST | State-specific; generally lower than UR |
*These are expected planning ranges based on expert analyses. Actual admission depends on counselling, category, domicile, seat matrix, and official cutoffs.
Candidates targeting government medical colleges should understand that admission chances differ significantly between AIQ and State Quota seats.
Generally:
AIQ (15%) is more competitive.
State Quota (85%) varies depending on domicile and state-specific competition.
Government colleges in states with a large number of medical seats may have comparatively lower closing scores than highly competitive states.
Candidates should analyse both AIQ and their respective state counselling before estimating admission chances.
| Admission Type | Expected Safe Score |
| 15% AIQ | Higher competition; generally higher score required |
| 85% State Quota | Varies according to state |
| Deemed Universities | Often lower than AIQ in many counselling rounds |
| Private Medical Colleges | Depends on college, fee structure, and state |
Many candidates confuse these three terms.
Minimum marks required to qualify for counselling.
Declared officially by NTA.
Closing marks for admission into a particular college.
Varies across institutes and counselling rounds.
Estimated score considered comfortable for admission planning.
Based on previous trends and expert analysis.
Not officially announced.
This is why a candidate may qualify for NEET but still not secure an MBBS seat.
Several factors influence the final safe score every year:
Overall paper difficulty
Number of candidates appearing
Number of MBBS seats available
Reservation policy
AIQ counselling
State counselling
Previous year's admission trends
Seat additions in new medical colleges
Even a slight change in any of these factors can affect admission cutoffs.
| Marks | Admission Outlook |
| 680+ | Excellent chances in top government medical colleges |
| 650–679 | Strong prospects for government MBBS admission |
| 620–649 | Safe range for many government MBBS colleges |
| 580–619 | Borderline; depends on category and state |
| 550–579 | Better chances in private MBBS, BDS, AYUSH |
| Below 550 | Consider private colleges, Nursing, AYUSH, Allied Health Sciences and other options |
Scoring 600 marks can still be competitive, but admission chances vary.
May be borderline for AIQ government MBBS.
Better prospects through certain state quotas.
Can offer good opportunities in several states.
Counselling trends will play a major role.
Admission chances improve considerably depending on state reservation policies.
Candidates scoring around 600 should participate in both AIQ and State counselling to maximise opportunities.
Yes. 650 marks is generally considered a strong score.
With this score, candidates may have:
Better chances in government medical colleges.
Competitive opportunities through AIQ counselling.
Strong prospects under State Quota in many states.
Greater flexibility during multiple counselling rounds.
However, highly sought-after colleges may still require higher marks depending on competition.
| Marks | Expected Rank Trend | Admission Outlook |
| 650 | High-performing AIR range | Strong government MBBS chances |
| 620 | Competitive AIR | Good government college opportunities |
| 600 | Mid competitive range | Depends on state and category |
| 580 | Moderate AIR | Borderline government, better private options |
| 550 | Higher AIR | Private colleges, BDS, AYUSH and allied courses |
Expected ranks are indicative only and may change depending on the overall performance of candidates.
A lower score does not end your medical career aspirations.
Candidates can explore:
Private MBBS colleges
BDS admissions
BAMS
BHMS
BUMS
B.Sc. Nursing
Allied Health Science courses
Physiotherapy
Occupational Therapy
Medical laboratory courses
MBBS abroad (after verifying recognition and eligibility)
Participating in every counselling round is important because cutoffs often change as seats are upgraded and surrendered.
