7 Mistakes Students Make During MBBS Counselling and How to Avoid Them
For most NEET aspirants, the examination feels like the biggest challenge. But here's the reality: Clearing NEET is only the first step. The real admission process begins during MBBS counselling. Every year, thousands of students with good NEET scores fail to secure the best possible college — not because of low marks, but because they make avoidable mistakes during counselling. A single wrong decision while filling choices, selecting colleges, or understanding counselling rules can cost you a Government MBBS seat. Here are the seven most common mistakes and how you can avoid them.
One of the biggest mistakes students make is selecting colleges based only on popularity or suggestions from friends. Every medical college is different.
Before filling your choices, you should compare:
- Previous year closing ranks
- Fee structure
- Hospital patient load
- Internship opportunities
- Faculty and infrastructure
- Location
- Bond policies
- Hostel facilities
Many students register only for All India Quota counselling and completely ignore their State Counselling. This can be a costly mistake.
Nearly 85% of Government MBBS seats are filled through State Quota, while only 15% are available through the All India Quota.
Many students simply arrange colleges randomly. This is one of the biggest reasons why students miss better colleges.
A proper choice filling strategy should include:
- Dream colleges
- Safe colleges
- Backup colleges
- Government colleges
- Private colleges (if budget permits)
Many students think only about Government MBBS. If they don't get one, they stop participating in counselling. This is a mistake.
Medical careers offer multiple excellent options, including:
- BDS
- BAMS
- BHMS
- BUMS
- Physiotherapy
- Nursing
- Occupational Therapy
- Medical Laboratory Technology
- Radiology
- Other Allied Health Science Courses
Every year, students lose admission opportunities because they forget important dates. Commonly missed deadlines include:
- Registration
- Document verification
- Choice filling
- Choice locking
- Fee payment
- Reporting to allotted college
Some students participate only in Round 1. If they don't get the desired college, they simply quit. This is another major mistake.
Many seats become available during:
- Round 2
- Mop Up Round
- Stray Vacancy Round
Students resign from colleges, upgrade seats, or withdraw from counselling, creating fresh opportunities for others.
After NEET results, social media becomes flooded with WhatsApp forwards, YouTube predictions, Telegram groups, Instagram reels, and unverified cutoff lists. Unfortunately, much of this information is inaccurate or incomplete.
Students often make important admission decisions based on rumors rather than official counselling data.
Bonus Tip: Don't Focus Only on Marks
Many students keep asking: "I scored 590 marks. Can I get MBBS?" This is not the right question.
Instead ask:
- What is my All India Rank?
- What is my State Merit Rank?
- Which counselling am I eligible for?
- Which colleges closed at my rank last year?
- What are my realistic admission options?
How Expert Counselling Makes a Difference
Every year, two students with similar NEET ranks often get completely different colleges. Why? Because one student follows a proper counselling strategy while the other relies on guesswork.
Professional counselling helps students:
- Build the right preference list
- Avoid costly mistakes
- Understand every counselling round
- Maximize admission opportunities
- Choose the best college according to rank and budget
Final Thoughts
Your NEET score opens the door. Your counselling decisions determine which college you actually enter. Do not let months of hard work go to waste because of avoidable counselling mistakes.
Research carefully. Participate in every counselling round. Verify every piece of information. And most importantly, make informed decisions instead of emotional ones.
Remember, successful admissions are not just about scoring well in NEET. They are about making the right choices at the right time.
Disclaimer: The counselling mistakes and strategies discussed in this blog are based on expert analysis and common trends observed during MBBS admissions. Students are advised to refer to official counselling authority notifications for accurate deadlines, seat matrices, and policies. SREC provides guidance and support to help aspirants make informed counselling decisions.

