The Supreme Court’s solid posture against reducing NEET eligibility rules sends an indisputable message: merit in medical education cannot be compromised. By charging a ₹100-crore fine on 10 dental colleges for unlawful BDS admissions, the Court has fortified that states and institutions have no power to detour nationally mandated standards.
NEET was introduced to bring consistency, translucency and fairness to medical and dental admissions all over India. Allowing states to lessen eligibility norms would shatter this system, resuscitate backdoor admissions, and erode equal opportunity for students nationwide. Healthcare education, unlike other disciplines, directly effects public security and quality of care, making stern entry standards non-negotiable.
The pronouncement also reflects the limits of state power in professional education. While states can manage administrative aspects, academic eligibility falls precisely within the national framework governed by central laws and regulatory bodies. Any difference not only breaches the law but undermines trust in the system.
Most significantly, the ruling safeguards students. Unlawful admissions often leave young aspirants endangered- degrees questioned, careers obstructed, and years lost. By holding colleges financially accountable, the Court has placed accountability where it belongs.
In quintessence, this verdict is not just corrective—it is obstructive. It asserts that NEET is the single, irrevocable gateway to medical and dental education in India, ensuring that the future of healthcare rests on quality, not manipulation.
NEET Is Non-Negotiable: Why States Cannot Dilute National Eligibility Standards
Date:

