The NMC's Latest Directive on MBBS Fees
In a significant move to protect aspiring doctors from financial exploitation, the National Medical Commission (NMC) has issued a clear directive mandating that all medical colleges in India charge MBBS fees strictly for the 4.5-year academic duration. This excludes the mandatory one-year Compulsory Rotating Medical Internship (CRMI), during which no formal classroom teaching occurs. The clarification, dated April 7, 2026, addresses widespread complaints about institutions collecting fees for the full 5.5-year course period, imposing undue burdens on students and their families.
This policy aligns with the core structure of the Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) program under the Graduate Medical Education Regulations (GMER) and Competency-Based Medical Education (CBME) Guidelines 2024. By limiting fees to the academic phase, the NMC aims to ensure transparency and affordability in medical education, a critical sector where private college fees often exceed ₹1 crore for the entire course.
Breaking Down the MBBS Course Structure
The MBBS degree in India is designed as 5.5 years total: 4.5 years (or 54 months) of rigorous academic training divided into nine semesters, followed by a one-year CRMI. During the internship, students gain hands-on experience in various hospital departments, rotating through medicine, surgery, pediatrics, and more, but this is practical training, not structured academics.
Historically, some private medical colleges have bundled the internship into the fee structure, charging annually for five or even 5.5 years. This practice has now been deemed irregular, as fees must correspond directly to educational services provided. For context, government colleges charge nominal fees (₹10,000–₹2.5 lakh per year), while private ones range from ₹7–25 lakh annually, making the exclusion of even one year's fee a substantial saving—potentially ₹10–25 lakh per student.
Triggers for the Directive: Complaints and Regulatory Gaps
The NMC's action stems from numerous grievances received from students and parents, highlighting how colleges were extending fee liability beyond academics. In states like Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Uttar Pradesh, where private seats dominate, this added to the already high costs amid NEET UG competition (over 20 lakh aspirants for ~1 lakh seats annually).
Prior to this, fee hikes and opaque structures had drawn scrutiny, but the internship fee issue persisted. The directive reinforces that fees must be 'reasonable and non-exploitative,' preventing colleges from profiting from non-teaching phases.
Legal Backbone: NMC Act and Supreme Court Precedents
Rooted in the National Medical Commission Act, 2019, the policy echoes Supreme Court rulings emphasizing fee regulation. Landmark cases like T.M.A. Pai Foundation v. State of Karnataka (2002), Islamic Academy of Education v. State of Karnataka (2003), and P.A. Inamdar v. State of Maharashtra (2005) established that private institutions can charge higher fees than government ones but must tie them to infrastructure and teaching quality, not capitation or excess.
Recent observations in Abhishek Yadav v. Union of India flagged internship stipends and charges, prompting NMC intervention. Non-compliance invites penalties under NMC regulations, potentially including fines or recognition withdrawal. Read the full official notice here.
Financial Relief: What It Means for Students
For middle-class families, this caps total outlay at 4.5 years' fees. In Karnataka, private fees average ₹15–25 lakh/year (₹67.5–112.5 lakh total pre-directive); now, savings of ₹15–25 lakh. Maharashtra: ₹7–15 lakh/year; Uttar Pradesh: similar. Government quotas remain low-cost (e.g., AIIMS Delhi: ~₹5,800 total).
Existing students may seek refunds if overcharged; new NEET UG 2026 batches benefit directly. This promotes equity, easing access to quality medical training amid rising living costs.
Photo by Pratik Mohapatra on Unsplash
- Annual Savings Example: Private college at ₹20 lakh/year × 1 year internship = ₹20 lakh relief.
- Stipend During Internship: Many states mandate ₹20,000–30,000/month, offsetting costs further.
- Hostel/Misc Fees: Still applicable, but tuition capped.
State-Wise Private MBBS Fees Snapshot (2026)
Fees vary by state fee committees:
| State | Avg. Annual Fee (₹ Lakh) | 4.5-Year Total (₹ Lakh) |
|---|---|---|
| Karnataka | 15–25 | 67.5–112.5 |
| Maharashtra | 7–15 | 31.5–67.5 |
| Uttar Pradesh | 10–18 | 45–81 |
| Tamil Nadu | 4.5–13.5 | 20.25–60.75 |
| Kerala | 6–12 | 27–54 |
Data from state regulators; subject to annual revision. Deemed universities higher (~₹20–40 lakh/year).
Stakeholder Reactions and Compliance Trends
Students and parents hail it as 'big relief'; social media buzz positive. Colleges mixed: DY Patil Pune preemptively revised to 4.5 years, halting hikes. Associations urge clarity on refunds. Experts view it as step toward NEP 2020's affordability goals. For detailed coverage, see Times of India analysis.
Challenges for Medical Colleges and Enforcement
Private colleges, reliant on fees (70% revenue), face revenue dips but gain from regulated image. NMC monitoring via portals; violations trigger probes. Past non-compliance (e.g., stipend delays) led to SC interventions.
To adapt:
- Revise prospectuses for NEET 2026 counselling.
- Ensure stipend payments (₹25,000+/month in many states).
- Transparent fee committees per state acts.
Boosting Accessibility in Medical Education
This fosters inclusive higher education, aligning with India's doctor shortage (1:1456 WHO ratio). More affordable private seats could reduce abroad migration (20k+ yearly). Links to scholarships via National Scholarship Portal.
Advice for NEET Aspirants and Current Students
Verify fee structures on state portals/AMC during counselling. Current batches: approach NMC/grievance cells for refunds. Track updates via NMC site.
Photo by Pradeep Potter on Unsplash
Looking Ahead: NEET UG 2026 and Beyond
As NEET UG 2026 nears, expect stricter oversight. Potential for uniform fee caps? This directive signals NMC's commitment to ethical practices, enhancing India's medical ecosystem.







