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Securing an MBBS seat in Tamil Nadu is set to become heavily competitive-and far more costly-for the upcoming academic term. Institutional changes across several prominent medical colleges are dramatically reducing the number of seats available under the state quota, leaving medical hopefuls facing steeper tuition costs and tougher selection hurdles.
The state counselling pool stands to instantly lose roughly 650 medical seats. Health department representatives warn that this deficit could surge past 1,300 slots if ongoing institutional upgrades receive official clearance.
According to updated registries from the National Medical Commission (NMC), major medical hubs-specifically St. Peter’s Medical College (holding 250 seats) alongside Dhanalakshmi Srinivasan Institute of Medical Sciences and Srinivasan Medical College (accounting for 400 seats combined)-have successfully shifted to operating as Deemed Universities.
Prior to this transition, these self-financed organizations operated under Tamil Nadu Dr. MGR Medical University. That affiliation required them to reserve half to nearly two-thirds of their enrollment capacity for the state’s centralized admissions, which directly supported local reservation metrics-including the vital 7.5% allotment designated for government school graduates.
| Admission Category | Former State-Affiliated Cost | New Deemed University Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Government Quota | ₹4.35 Lakh – ₹5.40 Lakh / year | Discontinued (Absorbed by All-India Pool) |
| Management Quota | ₹15.00 Lakh – ₹16.20 Lakh / year | ₹20.00 Lakh – ₹35.00 Lakh / year |
By gaining autonomy as Deemed institutions, these campuses no longer fall under the jurisdiction of the state selection committee. Instead, seat distribution shifts entirely to the central Medical Counselling Committee (MCC). This means local applicants lose their regional priority privileges and must vie for these spots on a nationwide stage against students from all parts of India.
“This modification results in an immediate deficit of roughly 350 seats previously set aside for the state government quota, which directly compromises about 25 spots meant for underprivileged public school candidates under the 7.5% native rule. Should subsequent institutions gain similar approval, the state stands to lose upwards of 700 standard government allocations.”
– Representative, Tamil Nadu State Health Department
The policy change has ignited significant friction between state authorities and private campus administrators. Government health coordinators argue that standard protocols were bypassed, emphasizing that explicit No Objection Certificates (NOCs) from Tamil Nadu Dr. MGR Medical University are required for such structural shifts-yet no clearances were officially granted by the active managing board.
On the other side, institutional operators clarify that their autonomous status was cleared via judicial pathways. A recent Delhi High Court decision regarding St. Peter’s Institute favored the medical college on a specific technical timeline rule. Because the state university’s formal objection notice arrived six days after a rigid 60-day legal window concluded, the court declared the university’s consent as granted by default. State officials are actively appealing this verdict.
In an effort to balance the loss, the Tamil Nadu Health Department has formally approached the NMC to request intake expansions at existing public institutions. The state is seeking to add 50 seats each to government medical facilities located in Tiruvallur, Tirupur, and Namakkal. The requisite evaluations are finished, and regional officials are waiting for final approvals to recover part of the lost seat capacity.