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Medical education in Tamil Nadu becomes costlier as management quota fees see sharp hike

From 2025, MBBS fees in Tamil Nadu's self-financing colleges will rise by Rs 1.5 lakh to Rs 15 lakh per year under the management quota, while NRI fees will increase to Rs 27 lakh. The NRI lapsed seat category has been scrapped; unfilled NRI seats will now be transferred to the management quota, with fees at least 30% lower. Government quota fees remain unchanged.

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| Updated on: Jul 15, 2025 | 03:40 PM
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Chennai: Aspiring medical students in Tamil Nadu are facing a financial shock as private medical colleges have implemented a significant increase in tuition fees for the 2025-26 academic year. The fee regulatory committee has approved a Rs 1.5 lakh annual increase for management quota MBBS seats, taking the yearly fee from Rs 13.5 lakh to Rs 15 lakh. The NRI quota sees an even steeper price tag of Rs 27 lakh per annum.

The hike affects all 21 self-financing medical colleges and four private medical universities in the state. While government quota seats remain relatively affordable at Rs 4.34-4.5 lakh in colleges and Rs 5.4 lakh in universities, the widening gap between government and management quota fees is raising concerns about equitable access to medical education. The revised fee structure includes all academic charges but permits an additional ₹60,000 as a development fee. The Directorate of Medical Education has advised students to carefully evaluate costs before selecting colleges during counselling.

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The fee revision was finalized by a high-powered committee chaired by Justice R. Pongiappan after thorough deliberations. With 3,450 MBBS seats available in self-financing colleges and 550 in private universities, the allocation follows a 65:35 ratio between government and management quotas. The committee has mandated complete fee transparency, requiring institutions to disclose all charges upfront during centralized counselling.

However, the substantial increase has drawn sharp criticism from student organizations. "This yearly fee escalation is making medical education increasingly inaccessible for middle-class families," said a representative of the Tamil Nadu Medical Students Association. Reports have also emerged about some colleges allegedly collecting fifth-year houseman ship fees prematurely and maintaining unclear hostel charges. The government has warned of strict action, including potential derecognition, for institutions found violating the prescribed fee structure or demanding capitation fees.

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