Key Points

Medical aspirants from Tamil Nadu are facing significant challenges with distant NEET-PG exam centres in Andhra Pradesh. The National Board of Examinations continues to allocate centres far from candidates' home locations, creating substantial travel and logistical burdens. The Doctors' Association for Social Equality has highlighted that over 1,000 candidates are affected by these allocations. Students are now seeking intervention similar to the successful centre reallocation in 2024, hoping for a more convenient examination process.

Key Points: NEET-PG Tamil Nadu Candidates Slam Distant Andhra Pradesh Exam Centres

  • 1,000 TN candidates allocated exam centres outside state
  • Centres located up to 600 km from home
  • DASE demands state government intervention
  • Women candidates face additional travel safety challenges
2 min read

NEET-PG aspirants from TN raise concern over allotment of exam centres in Andhra Pradesh

TN medical aspirants protest NEET-PG exam centres 600 km away, citing travel hardships and logistical challenges

"We're forced to travel at least two days in advance, book tickets, and make stay arrangements. - Arjun Ramkumar, NEET-PG Aspirant"

Chennai, July 23

Several NEET-PG aspirants from Tamil Nadu have voiced their frustration over being allotted examination centres in Andhra Pradesh for the upcoming test scheduled on August 3.

Despite repeated representations in the past, the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS) has continued this practice, candidates alleged.

Arjun Ramkumar, a PG aspirant, said he was shocked to see his exam centre listed as Narasaraopet in Andhra Pradesh.

"Some of my friends have been allotted Rajahmundry, which is about 600 km from Chennai. This happens every year. We're forced to travel at least two days in advance, book tickets, and make stay arrangements. It's an added burden during an already stressful period," he said.

According to the Doctors' Association for Social Equality (DASE), around 1,000 candidates from Tamil Nadu have been allotted exam centres outside the state this year.

"Over 60,000 candidates from Tamil Nadu apply for NEET-PG annually. The state has enough government and private medical colleges to accommodate them. The state government must step in and press for re-allotment of centres," said G.R. Ravindranath, General Secretary of DASE.

He also pointed out that long-distance travel is particularly challenging for women candidates, who often need an escort for safety and support, adding to their financial and logistical strain.

Another aspirant, R. Saran Kumar, echoed similar concerns. "I, too, have been assigned Narasaraopet as my exam centre. Many of my peers are in the same situation. It's unfair."

According to NBEMS, there are 24 exam centres in Tamil Nadu for NEET-PG 2025, including Chennai, Kancheepuram, Coimbatore, Madurai, Krishnagiri, and Karur.

This year, over 2.42 lakh candidates have registered for the exam across India.

In 2024, exam centre reallocation was made possible after Dindigul MP R. Sachithanantham and Kerala MP Shashi Tharoor raised the issue with the Union Health Ministry.

Following their intervention, many candidates previously assigned to Andhra Pradesh were reassigned to Tamil Nadu centres. Candidates are now urging a similar intervention to ensure a fair and convenient testing process.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As a female candidate who faced this last year, I completely understand. Had to take my father along for safety, which doubled our expenses. NBEMS should at least give preference to women candidates for centers near their hometowns. #NEETPGStruggles
R
Rohit P
Maybe NBEMS is trying to balance candidate distribution across states? But 600km is too much yaar. At least keep it within 200-300km radius. Hope MPs intervene again this time 🤞
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Sarah B
While I sympathize with the students, I wonder if there's more to this story. Are Tamil Nadu centers already at full capacity? NBEMS should transparently explain their allocation process instead of leaving candidates frustrated.
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Vikram M
Same problem every year! Last minute center changes create so much tension. NBEMS should implement a preference system where candidates can choose 3 nearby centers during registration. Simple solution no?
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Kavya N
My brother got Vijayawada center last year. Spent ₹15k just on travel+stay! For middle class families, this is huge burden. Government talks about medical education reforms but can't solve basic logistics? Shame!
M
Michael C
This seems like an administrative failure. In other countries, standardized tests always

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