Welcome to Admizion #1 Your Gateway to Global Education – Apply, Study, Succeed!
If you’re reading this, you’ve likely spent the last few months staring at NEET scorecards, scrolling through endless college brochures, and perhaps having a few stressful dinner-table conversations about “what comes next.”
I see it every day at our office here in Chandigarh. Parents walk in with a mix of pride and anxiety. Their child has qualified for NEET-which is a massive achievement in itself-but that score of 450 or 520 sits in that “gray zone.” It’s high enough to dream, but often not high enough for a government seat in India.
Now, you’re at a crossroads. Do you shell out ₹80 Lakhs to ₹1.2 Crores for an Indian private medical college, or do you look at Top Government Universities in Georgia or Russia?
As someone who has provided career counselling in Chandigarh for years, I’m going to skip the sugar-coated sales pitch. Let’s talk about the “hidden truths” of the medical roadmap in 2026.
Let’s be honest: doing an MBBS in India is the dream. No visa hassles, familiar food, and you’re close to home. But for the middle-class family, the financial reality is a hard pill to swallow.
This is where the conversation gets interesting. Over the last decade, MBBS admission in Russia and MBBS admission in Georgia have moved from being “backup plans” to “first-choice strategies” for smart students.
Russia has been training Indian doctors for over 30 years. When we talk about MBBS admission in Russia, we are talking about massive, century-old government universities like I.M. Sechenov or Kazan Federal.
MBBS admission in Georgia has seen a massive spike in Chandigarh and Punjab recently. Why?
| Feature | Indian Private Colleges | Govt. Universities (Russia/Georgia) |
| Total Budget | ₹80 Lakhs – ₹1.2 Crore | ₹25 Lakhs – ₹45 Lakhs (Total) |
| Entrance | NEET + High Score/Management | NEET Qualified |
| Infrastructure | Varies (Can be Average) | High-end Govt. Research Labs |
| Global Recognition | High (in India) | WHO, ECFMG, & NMC Approved |
| The “Hidden” Cost | Capitation/Donation (sometimes) | Only Currency Fluctuations |
The biggest fear parents express during career counselling in Chandigarh is: “Will my child be able to practice in India after coming back?”
Here is the truth: The rules have changed. Previously, only foreign-educated students had to take the FMGE (Foreign Medical Graduate Exam). Now, with the implementation of the NExT (National Exit Test), every medical student-whether they studied in AIIMS Delhi, a private college in Pune, or a government university in Tbilisi-must pass the same exam to get their license and qualify for PG.
The Playing Field is Level. If your child studies at a top-tier university in Georgia or Russia, they are getting the same (or sometimes better) theoretical and clinical foundation to crack the NExT exam as a student in India.
Myth 1: “MBBS abroad is for students who aren’t ‘smart’ enough.” Reality: Absolutely false. Most students going to Georgia or Russia are high-scorers who simply refuse to let their parents go into massive debt for an Indian private seat. They are “finance-smart.”
Myth 2: “Language is a huge barrier.” Reality: Universities in Georgia and top-ranked Russian colleges offer fully English-medium programs for international students. You will learn the local language (Russian or Georgian) as a subject, but that’s mainly to talk to patients during clinical rotations.
Myth 3: “The degrees aren’t valid.” Reality: As long as you choose a university that is NMC (National Medical Commission) and WHO recognized, your degree is globally valid. This is where expert guidance is crucial-not every university is a good one.
You can find a lot of information online, but medicine is a 6-year commitment. You aren’t just buying a plane ticket; you are planning a career.
When you seek career counselling in Chandigarh, you get:
The “Hidden Truth” isn’t that one is bad and the other is good. The truth is that medical education has gone global. Don’t let a NEET score define your child’s potential. If the front door (Indian Govt. Seats) is crowded, the side door (International Govt. Universities) is wide open and leads to the same destination: a successful career as a Doctor.