Loading latest updates...

Best NEET College Predictor Tools in 2026 – Ranked and Reviewed

Manisha
Manisha Author
25 June 2026
16 minutes read
Best NEET College Predictor Tools 2026 – Compare and Choose
Click to enlarge

Introduction

Every year, over 22 lakh students sit for NEET. And every year, thousands of them walk into counselling without any real plan — because they never figured out where their rank actually stands. That is exactly the gap a good NEET college predictor fills. It takes your rank, your category, and your state, and gives you a realistic map of which MBBS, BDS, and AYUSH colleges are genuinely within reach — before you ever open a choice filling portal. In 2026, the tools have gotten sharper, the data more current, and the difference between using one well versus not using one at all is the difference between a confident counselling strategy and a last-minute panic. This guide ranks and reviews the best NEET college predictor tools available in 2026, explains what separates a good predictor from a misleading one, and shows you exactly how to use the right tool at the right stage of your counselling journey. Start with the NEET UG counselling 2026 complete guide to understand where the predictor fits in the full admission process.

What Is a NEET College Predictor and How Does It Work?

A NEET college predictor is an online tool that takes your All India Rank (AIR), category, quota type, and state of domicile as inputs and returns a list of medical colleges where your admission probability is High, Moderate, or Low — based on previous year counselling data. The better tools pull from real MCC closing rank data, state counselling closing ranks, and seat matrices. They do not guess — they compare your rank against what actually happened at each college in the last 2 to 5 counselling cycles and flag where you sit relative to that range. A rank predictor is a slightly different but related tool. It takes your expected marks (before results are declared) and estimates your probable AIR using historical mark-vs-rank data and normalisation for the current year's difficulty level. Most serious platforms offer both. To understand the mark-to-rank conversion in detail, read the NEET 2026 rank predictor guide. The key rule to remember: always input your AIR, not your marks, into a college predictor. The two tools serve different purposes and conflating them gives you inaccurate college shortlists.

What Makes a NEET College Predictor Actually Good in 2026?

Not all predictors are equal. Many popular tools on coaching institute websites use outdated datasets, show only AIQ results, or fail to account for category-specific cutoffs. Before you trust any predictor's output, check for these features. Understanding the difference between AIQ and state quota counselling will help you immediately spot which predictors are incomplete — any tool that does not let you switch between AIQ and state quota separately is giving you only half the picture.
  • Uses real MCC closing rank data from the last 3–5 counselling years, not just one year
  • Covers both AIQ (MCC) and state quota — separately, with different results for each
  • Filters by category: General, OBC-NCL, SC, ST, EWS, PwD — reserved categories have very different closing ranks
  • Shows admission probability labels (High / Moderate / Low) per college, not just a raw list
  • Covers all major states — not just a handful of states with government college data
  • Includes private and deemed university seats, not just government colleges
  • No login required for basic predictions — login walls reduce accessibility without improving accuracy
  • Updated for 2026 seat matrix changes — new AIIMS campuses, NMC approvals, seat additions

1. CaderaEdu Free NEET UG College Predictor 2026 — Best Overall

The CaderaEdu free NEET UG college predictor is the most comprehensive tool available for NEET 2026 aspirants in India. It pulls from real previous-year counselling data across both MCC AIQ and all major state counselling authorities — no login, no signup, completely free. You enter your rank, select your category (UR, OBC, SC, ST, EWS, PwD), choose AIQ or state quota, and instantly get a filtered college list showing opening and closing ranks alongside admission probability labels. What sets it apart from most competitors is the state-level granularity. It covers Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, UP, Karnataka, Delhi, Kerala, Rajasthan, Gujarat, West Bengal, and MP under state counselling — meaning you can run two completely separate predictions for AIQ and your home state and build a side-by-side comparison before choice filling opens. The predictor also covers MBBS, BDS, and AYUSH seats — so if your rank puts government MBBS out of reach, you can immediately pivot to BDS and AYUSH options in the same session. For OBC, SC, ST, and EWS candidates, the tool specifically uses category-rank data rather than general merit ranks — which means a rank of 1,50,000 under OBC-NCL correctly shows government MBBS options that a general merit search would never surface. Run this predictor twice: once for AIQ and once for state quota. The results will be meaningfully different, and that difference is the strategic insight you need going into counselling.
A college predictor is only as useful as the inputs you give it. Always use your AIR — not your marks. Select your correct category. Run it separately for AIQ and state quota. The predictor cannot do the thinking for you, but it removes the guesswork entirely.

2. CaderaEdu NEET UG MBBS Medical Predictor — Best for Detailed College Research

For students who want more than a rank-filtered list and need detailed college-level data alongside their prediction, the NEET UG MBBS medical predictor goes deeper. It covers MBBS, BDS, AIIMS, and AYUSH colleges with filters for rank, category, and state — and links directly to individual college profile pages where you can check fee structure, hospital bed strength, NIRF rankings, infrastructure details, and round-wise cutoff history year by year. This matters enormously when you are trying to distinguish between two colleges with similar cutoffs. A college that closes at rank 80,000 with a 200-bed hospital is a very different proposition from one that closes at rank 80,000 with a 1,200-bed tertiary hospital. The predictor surfaces this difference where a basic rank filter cannot. Use this tool for the research phase after you have run the basic predictor and have a rough shortlist. It is particularly useful when evaluating private medical colleges where fees, hospital quality, and NMC approval status vary widely. Check individual college pages — for example, the profile of AIIMS Kalyani shows round-wise closing ranks across all categories, total fee for the entire 5.5-year MBBS program, and hostel information — all of which you need before making a final choice.

3. CaderaEdu NEET PG Predictor — Best for Long-Term Planning

Most MBBS aspirants in 2026 are not thinking about NEET PG yet. They should be — at least enough to factor it into their college choice today. The NEET PG college predictor helps you understand how the MBBS college you choose now affects your MD/MS admission chances five years later. Colleges with strong teaching hospitals, regular clinical exposure, and competitive academic environments produce graduates who consistently perform better in NEET PG. A lower-ranked private MBBS college with poor clinical training will put you at a measurable disadvantage when competing for MD/MS seats. Use the NEET PG predictor as a reverse lens during your MBBS college shortlisting — look at which PG specialties and institutions your prospective MBBS college sends its graduates to. That data tells you more about a college's real quality than any ranking number.

How to Use a NEET College Predictor Step by Step

Using a predictor wrong is almost as bad as not using one. Here is the exact process to follow, based on the NEET 2026 rank predictor guide and counselling best practices. The goal is not just to generate a list — it is to build a structured choice-filling strategy from that list before the portal opens.
  1. Step 1 — Get your AIR: Download your NEET 2026 scorecard from neet.nta.nic.in. Your AIR is printed on it. Do not use marks — use the rank.
  2. Step 2 — Run AIQ prediction first: Go to the predictor, select 'All India Quota (MCC)', enter your AIR and category. Note every college where admission probability is High or Moderate.
  3. Step 3 — Run state quota prediction separately: Switch to 'State Counselling', select your home state, enter the same AIR and category. Note the state-specific results — they will be different and often more optimistic.
  4. Step 4 — Sort results into three tiers: Reach (closing rank slightly better than yours), Realistic (closing rank close to yours), Safe (closing rank comfortably below yours). Target 5 colleges per tier minimum.
  5. Step 5 — Research each shortlisted college: Click through to individual college pages. Check hospital bed strength, fee structure, NIRF rank, and round-wise closing rank history.
  6. Step 6 — Screenshot or export your list: Do this before choice filling opens. Portal traffic near deadlines can crash your session.
  7. Step 7 — Register for both portals simultaneously: mcc.nic.in for AIQ and your state's DME portal for state quota. Both run in parallel — missing state quota registration while waiting for AIQ results is one of the most common and costly mistakes.

Predictor Results by Score Range — What to Expect

The predictor output looks very different depending on your score band. Here is what each band typically sees, based on NEET 2026 score vs rank analysis and real closing rank data. For reserved category candidates, these ranges shift significantly — OBC-NCL, SC, ST, and EWS candidates consistently access the same colleges at 30,000 to 80,000 AIR lower than General category benchmarks. Always check the NEET 2026 category-wise cutoff guide to calibrate your expectations by category before you interpret predictor output.
Table
Score RangeApprox AIR (General)What Predictor ShowsPrimary Strategy
690–720Top 100AIIMS Delhi, JIPMER — very few options but all eliteAIQ only; state quota rarely needed
650–689100–5,000Other AIIMS campuses, top govt colleges — strong AIQ listAIQ primary; state quota as backup
600–6495,000–20,000Good govt colleges AIQ + excellent state quota optionsRun both tracks equally
540–59920,000–60,000State quota govt colleges; private deemed via AIQState quota primary; AIQ deemed secondary
480–53960,000–1,50,000Private MBBS deemed universities; BDS govt collegesState quota private + AIQ deemed
380–4791,50,000–5,00,000Private MBBS management quota; AYUSH govtState quota private; AYUSH; BDS
4 columns · 7 rows

AIQ vs State Quota — Why You Must Run the Predictor Twice

This is the single most important thing to understand about using any college predictor in 2026. AIQ and state quota counselling are completely separate admission processes with different seat pools, different cutoffs, and different competition levels. A student with a rank of 50,000 in General category may not find a single viable AIQ government college in the predictor — but may see 10 to 15 realistic government MBBS options under state quota if their home state is UP or Rajasthan. State quota cutoffs run 50–70 marks below AIQ cutoffs for the same college because you are competing only against domicile candidates from your state — not all 22 lakh NEET qualifiers nationally. Read the full AIQ vs state quota counselling strategy guide to understand the full difference before you start interpreting predictor results. Running the predictor for only one track is a strategic error — it means you are planning with incomplete information. Both registrations can run simultaneously, and getting allotments in both means you simply choose the better option and withdraw from the other.

State-Wise Predictor Accuracy — What the Data Shows

College predictor accuracy varies by state, mainly because data quality differs across state counselling bodies. States with centralised, well-documented counselling processes — UP, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Delhi, Karnataka — tend to produce the most accurate predictor results because their historical closing rank data is clean and consistently published. Smaller or less standardised states may show wider variance. For UP, the most seat-rich state in India with over 7,000 MBBS seats, the NEET 2026 state wise cutoff guide gives you the granular closing rank data that backs up what the predictor shows. Cross-referencing the predictor output against that guide is a smart double-check before you finalise your choice list.

Common Predictor Mistakes Students Make

Even with a good tool, students make avoidable errors that produce misleading results. Here are the ones that come up most often, and the fix for each. Once your results are out, use the NEET 2026 result date and action plan guide to time your predictor usage correctly relative to counselling registration deadlines.
  • Entering marks instead of rank — predictors run on AIR, not marks. Convert first using score-vs-rank data, then input the rank.
  • Selecting General category when you qualify for OBC/SC/ST/EWS — this inflates the cutoffs you see and makes your shortlist unrealistically hard.
  • Running only AIQ prediction and ignoring state quota — you miss 85% of available government MBBS seats.
  • Treating High probability as guaranteed — predictor labels are based on historical data; cutoffs shift year to year. Always include Safe colleges too.
  • Using a predictor that only shows one counselling year's data — single-year data misses cutoff fluctuations. Five-year trend data is far more reliable.
  • Not cross-checking predictor output with individual college cutoff pages — the college page shows round-wise data that a list view summarises.
  • Waiting until choice filling opens to run the predictor — run it now, research colleges now, screenshot results now. Portal crashes near deadlines are routine.

Predictor Tool Feature Comparison

Use this table to evaluate any NEET college predictor tool before relying on it for choice filling. The features listed here are the non-negotiable minimum for a predictor to be genuinely useful in 2026. Tools that fail on multiple criteria will give you an inaccurate or incomplete shortlist that may cost you a seat.
Table
FeatureWhy It MattersCaderaEdu Predictor
AIQ + State Quota both covered85% of govt seats are state quota — AIQ-only is incomplete✓ Both covered
Category-specific cutoffsOBC/SC/ST/EWS have very different closing ranks✓ All 6 categories
Multi-year historical dataSingle-year data misses cutoff fluctuations✓ 3–5 years data
Admission probability labelsHigh/Moderate/Low tells you risk level per college✓ Included
MBBS + BDS + AYUSHBDS and AYUSH are real options for mid-range ranks✓ All three
No login requiredLogin walls add friction; free access = more useful✓ No login needed
Links to college profile pagesFee, hospital, NIRF data needed before choice filling✓ Direct links
Updated 2026 seat matrixNew campuses and seat additions change cutoffs✓ 2026 updated
3 columns · 9 rows

When Should You Use a Predictor — Timeline

The predictor is most powerful when used at the right moments. Using it too early (before answer keys) gives rough estimates. Using it too late (after choice filling opens) leaves no time to research shortlisted colleges properly. Here is the recommended timeline. For an understanding of how results feed into the overall counselling calendar, read the NEET 2026 result date guide.
  • NEET 2026 Predictor Usage Timeline
  • After answer key release (pre-result)
  • → Use rank predictor to estimate AIR from expected marks
  • → Run college predictor with estimated rank to pre-shortlist colleges
  • → Begin researching individual college pages — fees, hospitals, cutoffs
  • After result declaration (AIR confirmed)
  • → Re-run college predictor with actual AIR — this is your definitive shortlist
  • → Run separately for AIQ and state quota
  • → Build 3-tier choice list: Reach / Realistic / Safe
  • → Screenshot results before portals open
  • During MCC registration (Round 1 opens)
  • → Cross-reference predictor shortlist against current year's opening ranks
  • → Do not add colleges mid-session under deadline pressure — use pre-built list
  • → Lock choices before deadline
  • After Round 1 allotment
  • → Re-run predictor with Round 2 parameters for upgrade check
  • → Hold Round 1 seat while evaluating Round 2 options

Using the Predictor for BDS and AYUSH — Not Just MBBS

A common misconception is that college predictors only matter for MBBS. The same tools cover BDS and AYUSH admissions — and for students in the 380–550 marks range, this matters a lot. BDS admissions use the exact same NEET 2026 scorecard and rank — no separate exam. The AIQ closing rank for government BDS colleges typically falls in the 60,000–1,40,000 range for General category. For private BDS, scores of 380–520 marks have historically secured good dental colleges. Run the predictor with BDS filter active if your MBBS options look thin. Treating BDS as a fallback to explore during counselling — rather than planning for it in advance — means missing early rounds where the better BDS seats go. The predictor removes that blind spot. For a detailed breakdown, check the NEET 2026 cutoff guide covering BDS and AYUSH ranges category by category.

Final Checklist Before You Start Using the Predictor

  1. Confirm your AIR from the official NEET 2026 scorecard at neet.nta.nic.in
  2. Identify your category: General / OBC-NCL / SC / ST / EWS / PwD
  3. Note your state of domicile for state quota filtering
  4. Decide whether you need MBBS, BDS, AYUSH — or all three — in the results
  5. Run the CaderaEdu predictor for AIQ first, then state quota separately
  6. For each run, note colleges with High and Moderate probability labels
  7. Click through to individual college profile pages for fee and hospital data
  8. Build your 3-tier list: Reach, Realistic, Safe — minimum 5 colleges per tier
  9. Screenshot your shortlist and save it offline before counselling opens
  10. Register on mcc.nic.in and your state DME portal simultaneously — do not wait
The best NEET college predictor tool in 2026 is the one you actually use — correctly, at the right time, for both AIQ and state quota. The CaderaEdu free NEET UG predictor requires no login, covers all categories and states, and gives you probability labels per college — not just a raw list. That is the starting point for every counselling decision you will make this year. Pair it with the full counselling process guide and the score vs rank analysis to go into counselling with a complete, data-backed plan.

The Lists of Colleges

and the many colleges are available , you can visit this site Colleges

Share this article

Copy

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most accurate NEET college predictor in 2026?

The CaderaEdu free NEET UG college predictor is widely regarded as the most comprehensive option in 2026. It uses real MCC and state counselling closing rank data, covers all categories including OBC/SC/ST/EWS, supports both AIQ and state quota predictions separately, and requires no login. It covers MBBS, BDS, and AYUSH across all major states.

Should I enter my marks or my rank in the college predictor?

Always enter your All India Rank (AIR) — not your marks. College predictors work on rank, not raw scores. Your AIR is printed on your official NEET 2026 scorecard. If you are using the predictor before results (based on answer key), first convert your expected marks to an estimated rank using a rank predictor, then use that estimated rank in the college predictor.

Do I need to run the predictor separately for AIQ and state quota?

Yes — and this is one of the most important things to do. AIQ and state quota have completely different seat pools, different cutoffs, and different competition levels. A rank that shows no viable options under AIQ may show 10 to 15 government MBBS options under your home state quota. Always run both separately and compare the outputs before building your choice list.

How accurate are NEET college predictors?

Good predictors are accurate within a margin of ±500 to 2,000 ranks depending on your score range. They are more accurate for middle score ranges (500–600 marks) and less precise at the extremes. Treat predictor output as a well-informed probability range — not a guaranteed outcome. Cutoffs shift every year based on total candidates, paper difficulty, and seat matrix changes.

Can the predictor help me with BDS and AYUSH choices too?

Yes. The CaderaEdu predictor covers MBBS, BDS, and AYUSH seats. For students in the 380–550 marks range where government MBBS through AIQ is unlikely, running the predictor with BDS and AYUSH filters active opens up a realistic set of options that many students miss by focusing exclusively on MBBS.

When is the best time to use the NEET college predictor?

Use it twice. First, right after the answer key release — input your estimated rank to pre-shortlist colleges and start researching them. Second, after your official NEET result is declared — run it with your confirmed AIR to build the definitive choice list. Do not wait until choice filling opens to run the predictor for the first time, as that leaves no time to research colleges properly.

Get Free Counselling

Fill in your details and our experts will get back to you shortly.

We respect your privacy. No spam calls or emails.

Explore Top Medical Colleges

You Might Also Like

Book Free Session