NEET Rank Predictor

What Is a NEET Rank Predictor?

A NEET Rank Predictor is a statistical tool that converts your NEET-UG marks (out of 720) into an estimated All India Rank (AIR), category rank, and likely college tier. To predict your NEET rank, use a marks-vs-rank lookup based on past NEET data: 720 marks = AIR 1, 700 ≈ AIR 150, 650 ≈ AIR 3,000, 600 ≈ AIR 12,000, 550 ≈ AIR 30,000. For example, if you scored 620 in NEET 2025 with about 24 lakh candidates, your expected AIR would be approximately 7,500 — eligible for top government MBBS through 15% All India Quota. This NEET rank predictor is used by NEET-UG aspirants for MCC and state counselling planning.

NEET Marks to Rank Calculation Method

NEET ranks are predicted using piecewise linear interpolation between known anchor points from official NEET-UG results:

NEET-UG Total Marks = 720 (Physics 180 + Chemistry 180 + Biology 360)
Rank ≈ Linear Interpolation (Marks → AIR) using past-year anchor table

Tie-breaker order: Biology marks → Chemistry marks → Physics marks → fewer wrong attempts → older age. Category rank is approximately AIR × (reservation %).

Example Calculation

Example: Predicting NEET 2025 Rank

Input:

• NEET-UG Marks: 650 / 720

• Category: General

Calculation:

650 marks falls between anchors: 700→150 and 600→12,000

Linear interpolation: AIR ≈ 150 + ((700−650)/(700−600)) × (12000−150) = 150 + 0.5 × 11850 ≈ 6,075

Expected AIR: ~6,000 • Top Government MBBS via AIQ likely • AIIMS borderline

Enter Your NEET Score

Expected All India Rank
--
NEET Marks--
Percentage--
Category Rank--
Likely College Tier--
Note: NEET 2024 had ~24 lakh candidates. Qualifying cut-off: 50th percentile for General.

When to Use This NEET Rank Predictor

🏥
MBBS Admission Planning

Estimate your eligibility for AIIMS, JIPMER, government MBBS, or private deemed universities.

🗳️
MCC & State Counselling

Plan choice filling for 15% AIQ (MCC) and 85% state quota counselling.

🦷
BDS / AYUSH / Veterinary Options

If MBBS rank is borderline, evaluate BDS, BAMS, BHMS, B.V.Sc options.

📅
Drop Year Decision

Compare current rank to target colleges to decide on a NEET 2026 drop year.

NEET 2024 Marks vs Rank Reference (General Category)

NEET MarksApprox AIR (General)College Tier Likely
720 – 7051 – 100AIIMS Delhi, JIPMER Puducherry
700 – 670100 – 1,500AIIMS New AIIMS, top govt MBBS
670 – 6401,500 – 5,000Top State govt MBBS (AIQ)
640 – 6005,000 – 12,000Govt MBBS via 15% AIQ
600 – 55012,000 – 30,000State govt MBBS / good Pvt MBBS
550 – 50030,000 – 70,000BDS, AYUSH, lower Pvt MBBS
500 – 45070,000 – 1,40,000BAMS, BHMS, B.V.Sc, deemed BDS
450 – 3501,40,000 – 4,00,000Private AYUSH, paramedical
Below 3504,00,000+Below qualifying for many states

Limitations and Notes

Frequently Asked Questions

A 1 lakh NEET rank is moderate, not highly competitive for government MBBS in the general category. Rank method: Let A = rank 1,00,000 and B = total candidates, for example 23,00,000. Approximate percentile = (1 - A / B) x 100 = 95.65%. That sounds high, but MBBS seats are limited and competition is intense. This rank may still help for some private colleges, BDS, AYUSH, state quota, or reserved categories. Always check MCC and state counselling cutoffs.
Yes, a NEET rank of 700 is excellent. Rank method: Let A = rank 700 and B = total candidates 23,00,000. Approximate percentile = (1 - A / B) x 100 = 99.97%. Such a rank usually gives strong chances for top government medical colleges, although exact allotment depends on category, state, AIQ/state quota, college preference, and counselling rules. Do not confuse rank 700 with score 700; both are excellent, but they mean different things.
NEET rank for 450 marks changes every year because it depends on paper difficulty and other students' scores. Score formula: Let A = correct answers, B = wrong answers. Score = 4A - B. If your final score is 450, historical rank ranges can be broad, often around the one-lakh-plus range in competitive years. It may be difficult for government MBBS in open category but can be useful for private colleges, BDS, AYUSH, and state/category options. Use the official result rank for counselling.
Yes, a 20,000 NEET UG rank is generally good. Rank method: Let A = rank 20,000 and B = total candidates 23,00,000. Approximate percentile = (1 - A / B) x 100 = 99.13%. This rank can provide meaningful government MBBS possibilities depending on category, AIQ versus state quota, state cutoff, and college preference. It may not guarantee the most famous colleges, but it is competitive. Always compare your rank with current MCC and state counselling opening and closing ranks.
A NEET score of 400 gives no fixed rank because rank depends on the whole year's score distribution. Score formula: Let A = correct answers and B = wrong answers. Score = 4A - B. For example, if A = 105 and B = 20, score = 420 - 20 = 400. In many years, 400 may fall around a few lakh rank range, but this can shift. Government MBBS chances for open category are usually low; explore BDS, AYUSH, private, state, and category options.
At 80,000 NEET rank, MBBS chances depend heavily on category, state quota, fee budget, and college type. Rank method: Let A = rank 80,000 and B = total candidates 23,00,000. Approximate percentile = (1 - A / B) x 100 = 96.52%. For open-category government MBBS, this rank is often difficult, but some private colleges, deemed universities, management seats, or reserved/state categories may be possible. Check MCC and state counselling data, not only general rank predictions.
A 90,000 NEET rank is respectable but usually not strong enough for many government MBBS seats in the open category. Rank method: Let A = 90,000 and B = 23,00,000. Approximate percentile = (1 - A / B) x 100 = 96.09%. It may still be useful for private MBBS, BDS, AYUSH, state quota, or category-based opportunities. Whether it is 'good' depends on your goal. For a top government medical college, it is generally not enough; for alternative medical courses, it may be useful.
There is no single NEET rank required for MBBS because seats are allotted by category, state quota, AIQ, college, and year. Method: Let A = your rank, B = college closing rank, and C = category/quota. If A is less than or equal to B for your C, you have a chance in that round. Top government colleges need very high ranks; private and deemed colleges may close lower depending on fees. Use current MCC and state counselling closing ranks as the real calculator.
A 60,000 NEET rank cannot be converted to fixed marks because marks-to-rank changes every year. Method: Let A = target rank 60,000, B = score distribution, and C = exam difficulty. Marks are found from the official result list, not a universal formula. In many competitive years, a 60,000 rank may require a score around the mid-to-high 500s, but this is only a rough idea. Use previous-year rank-versus-score tables for practice and official counselling data for decisions.
With 580 NEET marks, AIIMS chances depend on the year, category, and which AIIMS campus you target. Score formula: Let A = correct answers and B = wrong answers. Score = 4A - B. A score of 580 is good, but top AIIMS campuses usually require very high ranks and scores. Some newer AIIMS or category seats may be more realistic depending on counselling. Do not rely on marks alone; convert your score to official rank, then check MCC AIIMS closing ranks.
At 2 lakh NEET rank, government MBBS is generally difficult for open category, though category, state quota, and special circumstances can change outcomes. Rank method: Let A = rank 2,00,000 and B = total candidates 23,00,000. Approximate percentile = (1 - A / B) x 100 = 91.30%. This may still help for private colleges, deemed universities, BDS, AYUSH, or paramedical options, depending on fees and counselling. Check official state and MCC closing ranks before deciding.

Inputs Explained

Limitations & Notes

Sources & References

  1. National Testing Agency (NTA). "NEET-UG 2024 Result Statistics & Cut-offs." neet.nta.nic.in, 2024.
  2. Medical Counselling Committee (MCC). "MCC NEET-UG Counselling Information Bulletin." mcc.nic.in, 2024.
  3. National Medical Commission (NMC). "Graduate Medical Education Regulations." nmc.org.in, 2023.
  4. Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS). "All India Quota Rules." dghs.gov.in, 2024.
  5. AIIMS Delhi. "MBBS Admission Information Brochure." aiims.edu, 2024.
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