NEET Rank Predictor 2026 — Predict Your AIR from Marks
Enter your NEET marks below to instantly get your predicted All India Rank, eligible countries, and suggested universities for MBBS abroad.
Enter Your NEET Marks
Based on NEET UG 2026 pattern — 720 maximum marks
Enter your NEET marks above to see your predicted rank, eligible countries, and university suggestions.
How NEET Rank Prediction Works
This predictor uses historical NEET data from 2019-2025 to estimate your All India Rank based on marks. The prediction includes a range because the actual rank depends on exam difficulty and total candidates in that year.
For MBBS abroad, your NEET rank matters less than your qualifying score. NMC requires you to clear the NEET qualifying cutoff (50th percentile for General, 40th for reserved) to be eligible for any foreign medical university. Most abroad universities do not rank students by NEET — they admit based on qualifying score + other criteria.
This means students with NEET scores of 250-400 — who may not get government college seats in India — can still access quality medical education abroad at NMC-approved universities with proven FMGE track records.
NEET Marks to Rank — Quick Reference
Use this approximate marks-to-rank guide to sanity-check your prediction. These are indicative ranges based on recent years; the exact rank for any score shifts a little each year with paper difficulty and candidate numbers.
| NEET Marks | Approx. All India Rank |
|---|---|
| 700+ | Under 100 |
| 650–700 | 100 – 5,000 |
| 600–650 | 5,000 – 20,000 |
| 550–600 | 20,000 – 50,000 |
| 500–550 | 50,000 – 80,000 |
| 450–500 | 80,000 – 1,20,000 |
| 400–450 | 1,20,000 – 2,00,000 |
| 300–400 | 2,00,000 – 5,00,000 |
| 200–300 | 5,00,000 – 10,00,000 |
Indicative only. Confirm your actual rank from the official NTA NEET result.
What Your Rank Means — India vs Abroad
In India, your rank is everything: government MBBS seats are allotted strictly in rank order, so even a few thousand places can be the difference between a government seat and a ₹1 crore private one. With roughly 1 lakh MBBS seats for over 20 lakh aspirants, the competition is brutal at every rank band.
Abroad, the maths is different. Because foreign universities admit on your qualifying NEET score rather than your rank, a score that wouldn't secure an Indian government seat can still open the door to a recognised, affordable MBBS overseas. That's why students in the 250–450 band increasingly look abroad — not as a fallback, but as a deliberate, cost-effective route to becoming a doctor.
