SC to Hear Challenge Against NEET-PG Cut-Off Reduction Today

The Supreme Court will hear a PIL challenging the reduction of NEET-PG qualifying percentiles for 2025-26. Petitioners argue the move is arbitrary and could compromise patient safety. The Centre defends the decision to fill vacant postgraduate seats, citing expert consultations. The court will examine the constitutional validity of the change.

Key Points: SC to Hear PIL on NEET-PG Cut-Off Reduction

  • SC to hear PIL on NEET-PG cut-off reduction today
  • Petitioners argue reduction is arbitrary and unconstitutional
  • Centre defends move to fill vacant postgraduate seats
  • Over 1 lakh additional candidates become eligible for counselling
3 min read

SC to hear PIL challenging reduction in qualifying percentiles for NEET-PG today

Supreme Court to hear PIL challenging reduction of NEET-PG qualifying percentiles. Petitioners argue move is arbitrary and compromises medical standards.

"rules of the game cannot be altered after the selection process has commenced - Satyam Singh Rajput"

New Delhi, April 28

The Supreme Court, on Tuesday, will hear a batch of pleas challenging the reduction in the qualifying cut-off percentile for the NEET-PG 2025-26 examination.

During a brief hearing, senior advocate Gopal Sankarnarayanan, appearing for the petitioners, earlier submitted that a sufficient number of candidates had already qualified the NEET-PG examination to fill all available postgraduate seats, and that a reduction in the cut-off was unwarranted.

He argued that vacant seats persisted not due to a lack of eligible candidates, but because many qualified aspirants were unable to take admission owing to high fees.

On the other hand, senior advocate D.S. Naidu, appearing for a candidate supporting the cut-off reduction, backed the Centre's stand and contended that lowering the percentile would not dilute academic standards, as all candidates are required to clear the MBBS qualification examination.

However, the bench of Justices P.S. Narasimha and Alok Aradhe did not go into the merits of the controversy and posted the matter for detailed hearing on Tuesday.

The issue stems from a public interest litigation (PIL) challenging the decision to drastically reduce the qualifying cut-off percentiles for NEET-PG 2025-26.

Earlier, the Justice Narasimha-led Bench had issued notice to the Union government, the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS), the National Medical Commission (NMC), and the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC).

The plea, filed by advocate Satyam Singh Rajput, contended that the decision to lower qualifying standards to abnormally low, zero, or even negative percentiles after declaration of results and completion of two rounds of counselling is arbitrary and unconstitutional, violating Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution.

It cautioned that allowing candidates with such scores to enter postgraduate medical training could compromise patient safety, public health, and the integrity of medical education.

Describing the move as "unprecedented and extreme", the petition argued that NEET-PG, meant to act as a national screening mechanism, had been reduced to "an instrument certifying failure as eligibility" and further contended that the "rules of the game" cannot be altered after the selection process has commenced.

Defending the decision, the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare told the Supreme Court that the cut-off reduction was taken after detailed deliberations by expert bodies in view of a large number of vacant postgraduate seats and to ensure optimal utilisation of healthcare infrastructure.

In an affidavit, the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) said the challenge was misconceived as it pertained to an academic and policy decision taken within the statutory framework of the National Medical Commission Act, 2019.

Placing data on record, the Centre said that for the academic session 2025-26, around 70,000 seats were available, including 31,742 under the All-India Quota (AIQ), of which 9,621 remained vacant after the second round of counselling.

It added that nearly 20,000 postgraduate seats were likely to remain unfilled nationwide, prompting a review of the cut-off.

According to the Union government, the decision rendered over one lakh additional candidates eligible for the third round of counselling, without altering inter se merit or compromising standards.

It also highlighted that similar reductions had been undertaken in previous years, including lowering the qualifying percentile to zero across categories in 2023.

Arguing that courts should refrain from interfering in academic and policy matters unless decisions are shown to be arbitrary or unconstitutional, the Centre urged dismissal of the petition as devoid of merit.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I don't think the PIL is without merit. Allowing candidates with negative percentiles into PG courses is a dangerous precedent. My brother is a doctor and he says clinical competence matters—you can't just hand out seats to fill vacancies. Patient safety should be paramount. The government's argument about 'optimal utilisation' sounds nice on paper, but what about the quality of doctors we're producing? 😤
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Sarah B
This is such a complex issue. The government says they've done this before in 2023 with zero percentile, so why the fuss now? But every batch of doctors matters. If we're just filling seats to say we have no vacancies, we're compromising on quality. The real solution is to increase PG seats in government colleges and regulate private college fees. Lowering standards is just a band-aid fix. 🇮🇳
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Vikram M
As someone who appeared for NEET-PG this year, I feel the reduction is welcome. I scored 50th percentile, but if seats are vacant and I can serve in a rural or underserved area, why not give me a chance? The elitist mindset that only top scorers deserve seats needs to go. Plus, MBBS itself is a rigorous course—clearing it means you have basic competence. Let's not gatekeep PG seats when patients are dying for lack of specialists. 👨‍⚕️
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Ananya R
I'm concerned about the PIL's argument on 'rules of the game.' Changing qualifying criteria after results are announced does seem arbitrary. Students prepared and competed under one set of rules; changing them midway undermines the process. However, I also understand the government's dilemma—thousands of vacant seats, especially in remote areas, is a crisis. Maybe the court can direct a middle path: lower cut-offs but with mandatory rural service bonds for those admitted through relaxed norms. 🤔

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