Key Points

Karnataka's government has firmly decided against increasing medical and dental course fees for the upcoming academic year. Minister Sharan Prakash Patil rejected private colleges' requests for a 10-15% fee hike, emphasizing affordability for students. The minister also plans to expand medical seat availability and establish a regulatory committee to monitor college fee structures. This decision reflects the government's commitment to accessible healthcare education.

Key Points: Karnataka Blocks Medical College Fee Hike Sharan Patil Announces

  • Karnataka maintains existing medical course fee structure
  • Minister rejects private colleges' fee increase demand
  • Patil seeks more medical seats for underprivileged
  • Regulatory committee monitors college fee standards
2 min read

No hike for medical, dental courses: Karnataka govt

Karnataka govt halts fee increase for medical and dental courses, supports affordable education for students

"No fee hike will be permitted this year - Sharan Prakash Patil, Medical Education Minister"

Bengaluru, May 17

Karnataka government has declared that there will be no increase in fee structure for medical and dental courses in the upcoming academic year, despite pressure from private medical colleges.

After holding a meeting with office bearers of private medical and dental college managements, Minister for Medical Education, Skill Development, Livelihood and the district in-charge minister for Raichur, Sharan Prakash Patil, clarified on Saturday.

Private colleges had appealed for a 10 per cent to 15 per cent hike in fees. However, the minister stated that although the government had allowed a 10 per cent increase last year, no fee hike will be permitted this year.

Responding promptly to the matter raised during the meeting, Minister Patil reiterated that last year's 10 per cent hike was sufficient and emphasised that there will be no fee hike this year. He added that an agreement formalising this decision will be signed soon.

Minister Patil has appealed to the National Medical Council (NMC) to increase the number of postgraduate seats in medicine from 600 to 700 and undergraduate seats to 800 in the interest of the poor and the needy.

In September 2024, Minister Sharan Prakash Patil ordered the formation of a fee regulatory committee to monitor and regulate the fee structures of nursing colleges across the state following the complaints about exorbitant fees allegedly charged by them.

The five-member fee regulatory committee is headed by the Joint Secretary of the Medical Education Department.

Patil had also instructed to withdraw the Essential and Feasibility Certificate (EC & FC) of any nursing college found imposing fees beyond government-prescribed limits.

In a move against substandard para-medical colleges, Minister Patil had also directed officials to withdraw affiliations and shut down institutions failing to meet infrastructure and teaching standards.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Good decision by Karnataka govt! Medical education was becoming too expensive for middle-class families. Private colleges always want to increase fees but don't improve facilities. Hope other states follow this example 👍
P
Priya M.
As a parent whose child is preparing for NEET, this is such a relief! But I wish they would also regulate the donation system in private colleges. The real problem is capitation fees which run into lakhs...
S
Sanjay T.
While no fee hike is good, what about increasing government medical seats? 800 UG seats for entire Karnataka is too less. We need more affordable government colleges rather than depending on private institutions.
A
Ananya R.
Finally some good news! But the government should also monitor the quality of education. Many private colleges charge high fees but don't have proper labs or qualified teachers. Regulation must work both ways.
V
Vikram J.
The move to increase PG seats is more important than fee freeze. Our country needs more specialists. Hope NMC approves the request soon. Also, why only 700? We should aim for at least 1000 seats!
N
Neha P.
Good step but implementation is key. Last time also rules were made but many colleges found loopholes. Strict action against violators is needed. Shutting down substandard colleges is the right approach 💯

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