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New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 29 Views

N
nishwa Nm

Contributor-Level 10

It will be challenging to get an admission in an fully government college with this score, but it is not impossible.your chance of getting an admission depends upon the subject you are aiming and the category you belong.You may get admission in colleges which have low cut off marks.If you belong to any reserved category there is a chance.

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 7 Views

S
Sukrati Shukla

Contributor-Level 9

With an ST category rank of 6025 in NEET PG 2025, your chances of getting a seat depend on the cutoff scores and seat availability in reserved quotas of specific colleges. Generally, for ST candidates, the NEET PG qualifying cutoff score ranges between 230 to 255 marks, corresponding to roughly the 40th percentile. In short, at rank 6025, there is a reasonable chance to get admission under the ST category in NEET PG through reserved seats, but you must confirm with counseling authorities and keep alternatives ready.

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 17 Views

A
Aman Kumar

Contributor-Level 9

At around the ninety-second percentile (rank ~ seventy to eighty thousand), NITs/IIITs for CSE are hard, but lower demand branches (Civil, Metallurgy, Production) at select GFTIs or newer NITs may open in later rounds, especially with home state/category leverage. Strong private options: IIIT Hyderabad excluded, but Thapar (via its own process), VIT (VITEEE), Manipal (MET), Amrita (AEEE), SRM (SRMJEEE); state colleges via COMEDK, MHT CET, WBJEE, REAP, etc. If flexible on branch/campus, lock a good institute brand first, then branch change/minor/specialisation later.

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 12 Views

A
Aman Kumar

Contributor-Level 9

With this percentile/rank, top NITs/IIITs and most government Maharashtra colleges are unrealistic, but you still have meaningful options through SC category + institute level/management seats. Shortlist: Mumbai University–affiliated private colleges (e.g., Atharva, Vidyalankar, Shah & Anchor), Pune belt colleges (DY Patil Talegaon/AMB, PCCOER, JSPM group), Nagpur (KDK, Priyadarshini), Nashik/Aurangabad region institutes, and autonomous private universities that consider Class 12 + their own tests/counselling. Keep MHT CET counselling (CAP) Round 2/3, spot rounds, TFWS (if eligible), and diploma/B.Voc lateral ladders as safety nets.

...more

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 6 Views

K
Khushi Jaiswal

Contributor-Level 10

With an OBC of 11777 in JEE main 2025 you might have a chance to get into an integrated M.Sc in Chemistry at some National Institute of Technology based on previous Trends especially if the cutoff for that specific course and your category remain similar to increase slightly

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 12 Views

S
Sonali Samal

Contributor-Level 9

Using a college predictor after JEE? Always plug in your CRL (Common Rank List) or All India Rank—that's the real MVP. Only throw in your category rank if the tool specifically asks for it. Also, select your category (OBC/SC/EWS etc.) so it adjusts cutoffs properly. Bottom line: CRL is your golden ticket unless told otherwise.

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 13 Views

L
Lakshmi

Contributor-Level 8

Yes, you can give JEE Mains with a 65% in your 12th board exams. While a minimum of 75% aggregate marks in Class 12 (or being in the top 20 percentile) is required for admission to NITs, IIITs, and GFTIs, there is no minimum percentage required to appear for the JEE Main exam itself

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 13 Views

S
Sonali Samal

Contributor-Level 9

With an EWS girl rank of 26,982, getting into the A-list NITs for CSE or ECE is kinda tough. But don't lose hope—newer NITs, some IIITs, and GFTIs could still be in play for lesser-hyped branches. Keep all options open during JoSAA rounds. And yeah, if you've got home-state advantage, that's a win. Be ready to hustle through the rounds and grab what you can.

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 8 Views

S
Sonali Samal

Contributor-Level 9

Okay, with a 48,597 EWS rank, the OG NITs might be out of reach for hotshot branches like CSE. But hey, you've got decent chances in newer NITs like Mizoram, Sikkim, Meghalaya, etc., especially in Civil, Chemical, or Metallurgy. Keep an eye on later rounds—cutoffs slide. Also, if you've got a home state quota, that could be your lucky ticket. Not glamorous, but it's a solid start!

New answer posted

9 months ago

0 Follower 6 Views

L
Lakshmi

Contributor-Level 8

With a 97.119 percentile in JEE Mains for the General category, you can expect to get admission into NITs like NIT Agartala, NIT Manipur, NIT Jalandhar, NIT Goa, NIT Nagaland, and NIT Warangal. You might also be able to get into some IIITs and other government-funded technical institutes (GFTIs). Specifically, at NIT Agartala, you could potentially get into Civil Engineering. The specific branch and college will depend on the specific cutoff trends for each institution and branch. 

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