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NEET UG 2026 600 Marks: Expected Rank, Rajasthan MBBS Colleges & Admission Chances

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16 June 2026
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NEET UG 2026 600 marks expected rank and Rajasthan MBBS colleges guide
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NEET UG 2026 600 Marks: Expected Rank, Rajasthan MBBS Colleges & Admission Chances

Introduction

Scoring 600 marks in NEET UG 2026 puts a candidate in a genuinely competitive bracket, but not automatically in the safest zone for a government MBBS seat. With the re-conducted Re-NEET 2026 exam now part of this year's admission cycle, candidates evaluating a 600-mark score need an updated, realistic picture of where they stand, especially if Rajasthan is their target state for MBBS admission.
This guide breaks down what 600 marks in NEET UG 2026 means in terms of expected All India Rank, percentile, and category-wise admission probability, with a specific focus on Rajasthan's government and private medical colleges. Whether you are aiming for a state quota seat through RUHS or weighing private college options, this article gives you the numbers and the strategy to plan your next move.
Before going further, if you have not yet read about the background of this year's admission cycle, it helps to first check NEET UG 2026 Cancelled: Everything You Need to Know and Re-NEET 2026 Exam Date Announced: June 21 — Full Details, since the cancellation and re-exam directly affect how this year's rank and cutoff trends should be interpreted.
It is worth keeping in mind that NEET marks-to-rank conversion is never a fixed formula. It depends on how many students attempt the exam, how the overall paper difficulty plays out, and how scores are distributed across the 720-mark scale. A 600-mark score in a tougher year can correspond to a meaningfully better rank than the same score in an easier year, since fewer candidates cluster near the top end of the scale. This is precisely why this year's analysis needs to factor in the Re-NEET 2026 situation rather than relying purely on previous years' static tables.

NEET UG 2026: Overview

NEET UG 2026 was originally conducted on May 3, 2026, but the exam was cancelled by the National Testing Agency on May 12, 2026 following a confirmed question paper leak. A re-examination, popularly referred to as Re-NEET 2026, was subsequently scheduled for June 21, 2026, with the same syllabus, pattern, and marking scheme as the original exam.
Table
ParameterDetails
Conducting BodyNational Testing Agency (NTA)
Original Exam DateMay 3, 2026 (Cancelled)
Re-NEET 2026 DateJune 21, 2026
Total Marks720 (200 questions, 180 to be attempted)
Marking Scheme+4 for correct, -1 for incorrect
Expected CandidatesApprox. 22.79 lakh (projected)
Expected ResultJuly 2026
2 columns · 8 rows
For a deeper category-wise breakdown of qualifying and admission cutoffs, refer to the NEET 2026 Expected Cutoff Category Wise guide, and for a full rank-vs-score breakdown across all marks brackets, see the NEET 2026 Score vs Rank Analysis on CaderaEdu. For a structured explanation of how AIR is actually calculated, the NEET 2026 Rank Predictor Guide walks through percentile, category rank, and how seat matrix data feeds into realistic college predictions.
It also helps to understand the difference between the qualifying cutoff and the admission cutoff before reading the rest of this guide. The qualifying cutoff is simply the minimum percentile NTA requires for a candidate to be eligible to sit in counselling at all; General category candidates need the 50th percentile, while OBC, SC, and ST candidates need the 40th percentile. The admission cutoff, on the other hand, is the actual score needed to secure a seat in a specific college and course, and this is where the real competition begins. A 600-mark score comfortably clears the qualifying cutoff for every category, but admission cutoff is the number that determines whether a Rajasthan government college seat is realistic.

Expected Rank for 600 Marks in NEET UG 2026

Based on previous-year marks-to-rank conversion patterns and the projected 2026 candidate pool, a score of 600 marks in NEET UG 2026 is expected to correspond to an All India Rank in the range of 14,000 to 20,000 for the General category. This range can shift depending on how the actual Re-NEET 2026 paper difficulty compares to the originally leaked May 3 paper, and how densely candidates are clustered in the 580-630 mark band.
Table
CategoryExpected AIR Range (600 Marks)Approx. Percentile
General / EWS14,000 – 20,00099.1 – 99.4
OBC10,000 – 16,00099.3 – 99.5
SC3,000 – 6,00099.6 – 99.8
ST1,500 – 3,50099.7 – 99.9
3 columns · 5 rows
These figures are indicative estimates and not official NTA data. Small differences of even 5-10 marks around the 600 mark can shift All India Rank by a few thousand positions, so candidates should treat this as a planning range rather than an exact prediction. Rank inflation or compression can also occur depending on whether more or fewer candidates cluster in this score band after the Re-NEET 2026 results are declared.
There is a useful way to sanity-check this range using NEET's own scoring formula. Since each correct answer is worth +4 and each incorrect answer costs -1, a 600-mark score can be reached through several different combinations of correct, incorrect, and unattempted questions. A candidate who attempts fewer questions but answers almost all of them correctly may land at exactly the same 600-mark total as a candidate who attempts more questions with a slightly higher error rate, yet their underlying preparation and risk profile are quite different. This nuance does not change the rank corresponding to 600 marks, but it is worth keeping in mind when comparing your own preparation strategy against typical 600-mark scorers from previous years.

What 600 Marks Means in the Competition Landscape

With close to 22.79 lakh candidates expected to compete for roughly 1.1 lakh MBBS seats nationwide, a 600-mark score places a candidate in approximately the top 1% of all NEET UG 2026 aspirants. This is a strong position, but government medical college seats, especially in sought-after states, remain extremely competitive even within this top percentile band.
  • 600 marks is generally well above the qualifying cutoff for all categories.
  • It offers a strong probability of a government MBBS seat through state quota in many states, including Rajasthan.
  • All India Quota (15%) government seats at this score are realistic mainly for OBC, SC, and ST candidates; General category candidates may find AIQ government MBBS seats more competitive.
  • Private medical colleges and deemed universities remain comfortably accessible at this score across almost all states.
It also helps to compare Rajasthan against neighbouring and other major states at the same score, since state quota competition pools differ significantly in size. The NEET 2026 State Wise Cutoff guide shows that smaller state quota pools, such as Uttarakhand, tend to have comparatively lower closing marks than larger, more competitive states. Rajasthan sits in the middle of this spectrum: its state quota pool is large enough to remain competitive, but state-only competition is still considerably less intense than the nationwide AIQ pool.
Rajasthan runs one of the largest state-level medical counselling systems in India, conducted by the Rajasthan University of Health Sciences (RUHS), Jaipur, covering both the 85% state quota seats in government colleges and 100% of seats in private medical colleges. Top Rajasthan government medical colleges have historically required scores well above 600 for general category state quota seats, while reserved category candidates have considerably more headroom.
Table
CategoryApprox. Government MBBS Cutoff (Rajasthan State Quota)
General620 – 660+ marks
OBC590 – 630 marks
SC500 – 560 marks
ST460 – 520 marks
2 columns · 5 rows
At exactly 600 marks, a General category candidate sits just below the typical cutoff range for the most sought-after Rajasthan government colleges, but remains competitive for several mid-tier government colleges and almost all private medical colleges in the state. OBC, SC, and ST candidates at 600 marks are generally well-positioned for government seats across most Rajasthan colleges, including some of the higher-ranked ones.

Rajasthan MBBS Colleges: Realistic Options at 600 Marks

Rajasthan has a mix of central institutions, state government medical colleges, and private medical colleges. At a 600-mark score, candidates should evaluate options across all three tiers depending on their category and quota eligibility.

Government and Central Institutions

Private and Deemed Institutions

At 600 marks, government college options for General category candidates are realistically concentrated in the mid-tier and newer government colleges rather than the flagship institutes like SMS Medical College or AIIMS Jodhpur, both of which typically close at notably higher scores for the unreserved category. Reserved category candidates have meaningfully broader access across this entire list.
Rajasthan also follows a horizontal and vertical reservation structure across its government medical seats, covering categories such as SC, ST, OBC, MBC, EWS, and various horizontal reservations including persons with disabilities, defence personnel dependents, and sportspersons. Candidates eligible under multiple categories should always check which combination gives them the most favourable merit position, since RUHS counselling allows candidates to be considered under more than one applicable category during seat allotment, subject to official eligibility rules.
Domicile verification is another point Rajasthan candidates should not overlook. State quota seats are reserved exclusively for candidates who meet Rajasthan's domicile criteria, typically based on long-term residence, parental government service in the state, or having completed schooling within Rajasthan for a specified number of years. Candidates uncertain about their domicile eligibility should verify this early, well before counselling registration opens, since domicile disputes discovered late in the process can result in seat cancellation.

Counselling Strategy for 600 Marks Candidates

Candidates scoring around 600 marks should run a dual-track counselling strategy: register for the All India Quota (AIQ) counselling conducted by the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC) for the 15% central pool seats, and simultaneously register for Rajasthan state quota counselling through RUHS for the 85% state pool, since both tracks run independently and require separate registration and choice-filling.
  1. Step 1: Register for MCC AIQ counselling immediately after Re-NEET 2026 results are declared.
  2. Step 2: Register separately for Rajasthan RUHS state counselling if you hold Rajasthan domicile.
  3. Step 3: Use a NEET college predictor to build a realistic, ranked list of government and private college options at your score.
  4. Step 4: Fill a broad choice list covering both government and private colleges, ordered by genuine preference rather than guesswork.
  5. Step 5: Participate in all eligible rounds, including mop-up rounds, before considering a private college fallback.
Candidates can pre-shortlist realistic options using the CaderaEdu NEET UG College Predictor, which factors in rank, category, quota, and state to generate a data-backed college shortlist. The full counselling timeline and round-by-round process is covered separately in the NEET UG Counselling 2026 Complete Guide.
Choice order matters more than most candidates realise. Rather than ranking colleges purely by reputation, a 600-mark candidate should build their list in three tiers: a few ambitious options where allotment is possible but not guaranteed, a larger middle tier of realistic options matching the expected rank range, and a handful of safe options where admission is highly likely even in a worse-than-expected rank scenario. This tiered approach prevents both the regret of an overly conservative list and the risk of an empty result from an overly ambitious one.

How the Re-NEET 2026 Situation Affects 600-Mark Candidates

Because the original May 3 exam was cancelled and a fresh Re-NEET 2026 paper is being held on June 21, 2026, all marks-to-rank estimates for this cycle, including those for a 600-mark score, should be treated as more uncertain than in a normal year. The candidate pool, score distribution, and overall difficulty level of the re-conducted paper could shift the rank corresponding to 600 marks slightly compared to a typical year's trend.
NTA has confirmed that the syllabus, exam pattern, and marking scheme remain unchanged for Re-NEET 2026, as detailed in Re-NEET 2026 Syllabus Change? Official NTA Answer. This means candidates can rely on their existing preparation, but should still expect the admission calendar to be compressed, with results expected in July 2026 and MCC counselling likely beginning in August 2026.

Common Mistakes 600-Mark Candidates Should Avoid

Every counselling cycle, a predictable set of mistakes costs otherwise well-prepared candidates a better seat than they could have secured. Being aware of these pitfalls in advance is often as valuable as the rank prediction itself.
  • Filling a very short choice list out of overconfidence, which leaves no backup if the first few preferences are not allotted.
  • Ignoring state quota counselling entirely while focusing only on AIQ, even though state quota seats can be considerably more accessible for domicile-holders.
  • Withdrawing from counselling too early after a first-round allotment without checking how upgrade and mop-up rounds typically move at this score band.
  • Assuming a private college seat is automatically a downgrade; some private and deemed colleges in Rajasthan offer strong clinical exposure despite higher fees.
  • Not preparing documents (domicile certificate, category certificate, NEET scorecard, identity proof) in advance, which can cause last-minute reporting delays.
  • Relying on unverified WhatsApp forwards for cutoff numbers instead of official RUHS and MCC notifications.
A well-prepared 600-mark candidate who avoids these mistakes typically ends up with a meaningfully better final seat than one who rushes through counselling without a structured plan, even when both candidates start with an identical rank.

Government vs Private MBBS in Rajasthan: Fee Snapshot

One of the most consequential decisions a 600-mark candidate faces is whether to wait for a possible government seat in a later round or accept an earlier private college offer. Fee differences between these two paths in Rajasthan are substantial, and understanding the scale of that gap helps make a more informed choice during counselling.
Table
College TypeApprox. Annual Fee RangeTotal MBBS Course Fee (Approx.)
Government Medical College (State Quota)₹15,000 – ₹50,000₹75,000 – ₹2,50,000
Government Medical College (Management/NRI Quota)₹3,00,000 – ₹6,00,000₹15,00,000 – ₹27,00,000
Private/Deemed Medical College₹15,00,000 – ₹25,00,000₹75,00,000 – ₹1,25,00,000
3 columns · 4 rows
This gap is precisely why most counselling advisors recommend exhausting every government counselling round, including mop-up rounds, before locking in a private seat, unless the candidate's family has already budgeted for the private fee structure from the outset. A 600-mark candidate sitting close to the cutoff line for a mid-tier government college may find that patience through additional rounds pays off significantly compared to an early private commitment.

What Happens After Admission: A Quick Look Ahead

Once a seat is confirmed, MBBS in Rajasthan, like elsewhere in India, follows a 4.5-year structure comprising pre-clinical, para-clinical, and clinical phases, followed by a mandatory one-year compulsory rotatory internship. Government college graduates often have an advantage in terms of patient exposure, since government hospitals attached to these colleges typically handle a higher patient load, which translates into more hands-on clinical learning during the internship year.
Beyond the MBBS degree itself, most candidates eventually appear for NEET PG to pursue specialisation. A college's research output, faculty strength, and hospital infrastructure during the MBBS years can meaningfully influence how well-prepared a student is for postgraduate entrance exams later, which is another factor worth weighing beyond just the admission cutoff when comparing Rajasthan's available options.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 600 marks a good score in NEET UG 2026?

Yes, 600 marks places a candidate in approximately the top 1% of all NEET UG 2026 aspirants, making it a strong score, though not automatically sufficient for the most sought-after government medical colleges in the General category.

What rank can I expect with 600 marks in NEET UG 2026?

Based on previous-year trends and the projected 2026 candidate pool, 600 marks is expected to correspond to an All India Rank of approximately 14,000-20,000 for General category candidates, with better ranks for OBC, SC, and ST categories.

Can I get a government MBBS seat in Rajasthan with 600 marks?

General category candidates at 600 marks have realistic chances at several mid-tier Rajasthan government colleges, though flagship institutions like SMS Medical College Jaipur or AIIMS Jodhpur are typically more competitive. Reserved category candidates have considerably stronger chances.

Does the Re-NEET 2026 exam change rank predictions for 600 marks?

The rank corresponding to 600 marks could shift slightly because the candidate pool and paper difficulty for the re-conducted exam may differ from a typical year, even though the syllabus and pattern remain unchanged.

Should I apply for both AIQ and Rajasthan state quota counselling?

Yes, since AIQ and state quota counselling are independent processes, candidates with Rajasthan domicile should register for both to maximise their seat options.

What is the expected percentile for 600 marks in NEET UG 2026?

600 marks is expected to correspond to a percentile of approximately 99.1 to 99.5, depending on category and final score distribution after Re-NEET 2026.

Are private medical colleges in Rajasthan accessible at 600 marks?

Yes, private and deemed medical colleges in Rajasthan generally have lower cutoffs than government colleges, making them comfortably accessible at a 600-mark score, though tuition fees are significantly higher.

When will Rajasthan NEET counselling 2026 begin?

Rajasthan state counselling, conducted by RUHS, is expected to begin shortly after the Re-NEET 2026 result, which is anticipated in July 2026, with counselling likely starting in August 2026.

Is AIIMS Jodhpur realistic for a General category candidate with 600 marks?

AIIMS Jodhpur is highly competitive, and 600 marks is typically on the lower end for General category AIQ admission; it is more realistic for OBC, SC, or ST category candidates at this score.

How accurate are NEET marks-vs-rank predictions for 2026?

These predictions are estimates based on historical trends and should be used as planning guidance rather than guaranteed outcomes, since the actual rank depends on the final candidate pool and paper difficulty of the re-conducted exam.

Conclusion

A 600-mark score in NEET UG 2026 represents a strong, top-percentile performance, but Rajasthan aspirants should approach counselling with realistic expectations rather than assuming automatic access to flagship government colleges. General category candidates are best positioned for mid-tier Rajasthan government colleges and a wide range of private institutions, while OBC, SC, and ST candidates have meaningfully broader government college access at this score. Given the ongoing Re-NEET 2026 situation, candidates should stay updated through official NTA channels and use data-backed tools like the CaderaEdu NEET College Predictor to build a realistic, well-prioritised choice list before counselling begins.

Official Resources

For verified and updated information, refer to the official NTA NEET UG portal, the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC) website for All India Quota seats, and the Rajasthan NEET UG Counselling (RUHS) portal for state quota seat allotment.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is 600 marks a good score in NEET UG 2026?

Yes, 600 marks places a candidate in approximately the top 1% of all NEET UG 2026 aspirants, making it a strong score, though not automatically sufficient for the most sought-after government medical colleges in the General category.

What rank can I expect with 600 marks in NEET UG 2026?

Based on previous-year trends and the projected 2026 candidate pool, 600 marks is expected to correspond to an All India Rank of approximately 14,000-20,000 for General category candidates, with better ranks for OBC, SC, and ST categories.

Can I get a government MBBS seat in Rajasthan with 600 marks?

General category candidates at 600 marks have realistic chances at several mid-tier Rajasthan government colleges, though flagship institutions like SMS Medical College Jaipur or AIIMS Jodhpur are typically more competitive. Reserved category candidates have considerably stronger chances.

Does the Re-NEET 2026 exam change rank predictions for 600 marks?

The rank corresponding to 600 marks could shift slightly because the candidate pool and paper difficulty for the re-conducted exam may differ from a typical year, even though the syllabus and pattern remain unchanged.

Should I apply for both AIQ and Rajasthan state quota counselling?

Yes, since AIQ and state quota counselling are independent processes, candidates with Rajasthan domicile should register for both to maximise their seat options.

What is the expected percentile for 600 marks in NEET UG 2026?

600 marks is expected to correspond to a percentile of approximately 99.1 to 99.5, depending on category and final score distribution after Re-NEET 2026.

Are private medical colleges in Rajasthan accessible at 600 marks?

Yes, private and deemed medical colleges in Rajasthan generally have lower cutoffs than government colleges, making them comfortably accessible at a 600-mark score, though tuition fees are significantly higher.

When will Rajasthan NEET counselling 2026 begin?

Rajasthan state counselling, conducted by RUHS, is expected to begin shortly after the Re-NEET 2026 result, which is anticipated in July 2026, with counselling likely starting in August 2026.

Is AIIMS Jodhpur realistic for a General category candidate with 600 marks?

AIIMS Jodhpur is highly competitive, and 600 marks is typically on the lower end for General category AIQ admission; it is more realistic for OBC, SC, or ST category candidates at this score.

How accurate are NEET marks-vs-rank predictions for 2026?

These predictions are estimates based on historical trends and should be used as planning guidance rather than guaranteed outcomes, since the actual rank depends on the final candidate pool and paper difficulty of the re-conducted exam.

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