With the NEET UG 2026 results announced following the alleged paper leak that declared a re-exam, over 11 lakh MBBS aspirants will now proceed to the next phase, counselling. Many students and parents become confused at this point because the procedure involves many authorities, quotas, and rounds, each with its own set of rules and deadlines.
Here’s an overview of how NEET UG counselling works, who performs it, what quotas apply, and what to look out for.
Eligibility criteria for NEET counselling
To participate in NEET UG counselling, candidates must meet a set of baseline eligibility requirements:
–They must have qualified NEET UG with the minimum percentile prescribed for their category (typically the 50th percentile for General/EWS candidates and the 40th percentile for SC/ST/OBC candidates).
–Candidates must be at least 17 years old by December 31 of the admission year, and must have passed Class 12 with Physics, Chemistry, Biology/Biotechnology, and English as core subjects.
–Indian nationals, NRIs, OCIs, and PIOs are eligible for counselling under specific seat categories.
–Candidates from the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir are eligible to participate in counselling for AIQ seats and deemed universities, though their broader participation in AIQ counselling has historically followed slightly different rules compared to other states.
Who conducts NEET counselling: MCC vs State authorities
A single body does not conduct NEET UG counselling. It runs on two parallel tracks:
Medical Counselling Committee
The Medical Counselling Committee (MCC), which reports to the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, conducts counselling for the 15% All India Quota (AIQ) seats in government medical colleges.
Along with 100% of seats in central universities (such as Banaras Hindu University, Aligarh Muslim University, the University of Delhi’s Faculty of Dentistry at Jamia Millia Islamia), deemed universities, AIIMS, JIPMER, ESIC institutes, and the Armed Forces Medical College (AFMC) in Pune.
State Counselling Authorities
State Counselling Authorities provide counseling for the remaining 85% of state-quota seats in government universities, as well as 100% of seats in state-run private medical colleges. Each state has its own counselling body, site, and schedule that differs from MCCs.
Depending on the seats they want to compete for, a student may need to register on both the MCC portal (mcc.nic.in) and their state counselling portal.
MCC counselling: Round-by-round breakdown
MCC counselling for AIQ seats is typically conducted in four stages:
Round 1 and round 2 are the main rounds, open to all eligible registered candidates. In each round, candidates register, pay the counselling fee, fill and lock their choices of colleges and courses, and receive a seat allotment result based on their rank, category, and preferences.
Candidates allotted a seat in round 1 can choose to accept and freeze it, accept it and still try to upgrade in round 2, or exercise a free exit and sit out of round 1 without penalty. Those who did not participate in round 1, or who exited it, become eligible to join fresh in round 2.
A key rule to note: no AIQ seats are reverted to the states after round 2 is completed, which is why students who skip both main rounds may find themselves with fewer options later.
Round 3 (Mop-Up Round) follows, largely for candidates who have not yet secured a seat or who wish to try again for a better option among remaining vacancies. Exits at this stage typically come with a forfeiture of the security deposit, unlike the free exit allowed after round 1.
Stray Vacancy Round, the final stage, fills any seats still lying vacant after the earlier rounds. This round works differently: seat allotment results are released directly, without a separate registration or choice-filling stage for already-registered candidates. Importantly, no fresh registration is permitted for deemed university seats at this stage. If a candidate accepts a stray vacancy seat and then fails to join the allotted college, their security deposit may be forfeited along with other penalties.
The number of rounds actually held in a given year can vary depending on how many seats remain vacant; MCC has, in some past cycles, added extra rounds specifically for BDS or BSc Nursing seats after the standard MBBS and BDS rounds conclude.
How choice filling works
Candidates enter the choice-filling stage after they have registered and received the seat matrix for a round. This is also the stage at which most blunders occur. A applicant may name an unlimited number of colleges and courses. MCC advises students to identify every choice they would actually accept in exact order of preference, as allotment is based on rank, category, and this ordered list.
Choices must be actively locked before the deadline; if a candidate forgets to lock them, the system will automatically lock the last saved.
Document verification and reporting to the allotted institute
After a seat allotment result is announced, candidates must report to the allotted institute within the specified window to complete document verification and confirm admission. This typically requires carrying both original documents and photocopies, including:
–NEET admit card
–Rank letter
–MCC provisional allotment letter
–Class 10 and Class 12 certificates and marksheets
–A valid photo ID
–Category certificates (for OBC-NCL, SC, ST, EWS, or PwD candidates claiming reserved seats). Category certificates must be submitted for verification at the reporting stage to claim reservation benefits; candidates registering under a reserved category but unable to produce valid certificates risk being treated as General category candidates for admission purposes.
— Four to five passport-size photographs.
—Institutes may specify additional requirements, so candidates are advised to check the allotted college’s own reporting instructions as well. Failure to report and complete verification within the given timeline generally results in forfeiture of the allotted seat.
Quota and reservation structure explained
Within the 15% All India Quota seats, the Government of India has implemented specific reservations:
— 27% for OBC candidates under the Non-Creamy Layer category
— 10% for candidates under the Economically Weaker Section (EWS) category, in addition to existing SC, ST, and PwD reservations.
Since AIQ seats are drawn from what individual states set aside from their own MBBS/BDS seats, a candidate’s home state doesn’t determine which AIQ seats they can compete for. AIQ counselling is open, merit-based, and nationwide, distinct from the domicile-based state quota seats.
Common mistakes to avoid
Based on patterns from previous counselling cycles, some of the most frequent errors include:
–Entering personal or academic details that don’t exactly match certificates, which can cause rejection at verification
–Forgetting to lock choices before the deadline
–Skipping Round 1 entirely under the assumption that better options will appear later, without accounting for the rule that seats aren’t reverted after Round 2
–Missing the reporting window after allotment
–Attempting to change category details after registration, which is generally not permitted once the process is underway.
Candidates should rely solely on the official MCC website, mcc.nic.in, for confirmed dates and updates, rather than provisional deadlines circulating elsewhere. They can get additional information by visiting the IE Education Portal.
Source: IE





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